A year ago
Football is a game that brings people together. It is also a game that brings tears, laughter and celebration. Some players celebrate memorable titles in different ways. While some go on vacation and party, others celebrate with new and strange haircuts. We'll take a look at five of those players. Former Paris Saint-Germain star Christophe Jallet shocked the football world when he cut his hair when Paris Saint-Germain won the 2013 Ligue 1 title. The midfielder dyed his hair in the colors of the French flag (blue, white). and red).
When Spanish La Liga side Real Madrid won the Spanish La Liga title in 2017, former goalkeeper Keylor Navas was in celebratory mood when he cut one of the weirdest hairstyles in football history. stone to celebrate. This is shown in the figure below.
On loan, Manchester United star Alex Telles also got creative with his hair after Porto won the Portuguese league in 2020. The back side has blue dye sprinkled on the hair and also dyed the beard with white dye.
Another soccer star celebrating his team's success with an outlandish hairstyle is Real Madrid star Dani Carvajal. In 2014, after Real Madrid won the Champions League, the Spaniard full-back dyed his beard blonde while letting his hair down.
Napoli striker Giovanni Simeone is the latest soccer star to celebrate his team's win with an exotic hairstyle. The Argentine striker dyed a small part of his hair with blue dye before coloring part of it with the colors of the Italian flag (green, white and red).
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Adrián has called his Liverpool team-mate Alisson Becker the "most complete" goalkeeper he has ever seen, given the Brazilian's $80 million price tag.
Visionhaus/Getty Images' photo
Visionhaus/Getty Images' photo
Liverpool have not had a great campaign this season, and that may be an understatement. The Reds finished fifth in the Premier League table - meaning next season won't see Champions League football at Anfield - and left all cup competitions in mid-March.
Jürgen Klopp failed to bring home the silver trophy for Merseyside, but despite the overall drop in standards, one player who shone with Liverpool's Player of the Year award was Alisson Becker. The Brazilian goalkeeper is widely regarded as the best in his field and over the past 12 months he has proven exactly why. The South American has saved his teammates from trouble countless times, making important saves and even scoring a goal or two thanks to his adept ball distribution skills. Indeed, his performance caught the eye of Adrián, who has served as a reserve keeper at Anfield for the past few years.
“I have trained with many goalkeepers in my career, but Ali is the most complete,” the Spaniard told The Athletic. "As a goalkeeper, you can be very good in the air, use your feet well or have amazing reactions. Ali meets all the requirements. "He's also a very nice person. He's always calm and humble. Maintaining the level of consistency he shows through each season is really difficult. It depends on his work ethic. that."
'Finished' is a good word to describe Alisson, as compared to his peers, it makes sense to suggest that he doesn't really have any weaknesses. Now 30, he's as perfect as he can be, and that can be captured using the numbers below the surface, starting with his sweep. Throughout the campaign, Alisson averaged 2.4 defenses outside his own box every 90 minutes, which put him at the top of the Premier League ahead of Aston Villa's Emiliano Martínez in second, followed by is Nick Pope of Newcastle United.
His average goal distance in defensive actions is 19.8 yards, again putting him ahead of Pope in second and Chelsea's Kepa Arrizabalaga in third. When it comes to being a modern sweeper, none have been more effective on English shores in recent times.
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Wherever you are in the world - in the US, UK or beyond - you don't want to miss a thing. He was also heavily involved in Liverpool's efforts to make the move from behind. The Brazil international has excellent ball distribution skills, which is why he manages to make more passes on a 90-time basis - not including tees - than any of his teammates. none of him this season, with the exception of Brentford's David Raya, whom Klopp once likened to a number 10.
Alisson can do it all, but his biggest quality is definitely his ability to block shots. A goalkeeper's most basic requirement is to make saves, and the Red Devils number one is a master at that, especially when facing tough duels against opponents.
In England's top flight this season, Alisson has faced a total of 147 shots on target, and those shots are worth around 51.1 expected goals, but he has only conceded 41.
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