Erling Haaland has reacted about Man Utd fans’ abuse towards his father at Old Trafford
Erling Haaland has revealed it was a “fantastic feeling” to score from the penalty spot after Manchester United fans were singing a pro-Roy Keane chant to him
Erling Haaland admitted he didn’t know why the Manchester United fans were singing “Keano” to him
Erling Haaland admits he doesn’t know why Manchester United fans were signing “Keano” to him before he slotted away a penalty at Old Trafford.
Manchester City ran away comfortable 3-0 winners in the Manchester derby on Sunday as Haaland struck a brace, while Phil Foden added gloss on the scoreline for Pep Guardiola’s side. It was a victory that moved City up to third, level on points with Arsenal and two points behind leaders Tottenham.
Haaland opened the scoring from 12 yards, handed the chance to give City the lead from the penalty spot after Rodri was hauled down by Rasmus Hojlund. But before the 23-year-old coolly sent Andre Onana the wrong way, he was subject to pointed “Keano” chants from the United supporters. And Haaland didn’t understand why the United fans sang that to him.
“A lot of people were singing Keano to me, I don’t know why, but it is what it is,” Haaland told Sky Sports after the match. “I had the pressure and I scored, so that was a fantastic feeling.”
Haaland’s father, Alf-Inge was infamously involved in an altercation with Keane during a Manchester derby in 2001. Alf-Inge had clipped the ball away, only for Keane to come steaming in and catch the former City midfielder on the leg. Alf-Inge’s knee was never the same and he was forced to retire aged 30. Keane had blamed Haaland for an incident years earlier, during the Norwegian’s time at Leeds, which left the Irishman with a serious knee injury.
Keane was handed a three-match suspension and a £5,000 fine at the time. But the incident was brought up once again a year later, when Keane released an autobiography. The ex-Manchester United star said: “I’d waited long enough. “I f*****g hit him hard. The ball was there (I think). Take that you c***.”
After that, Keane was slapped with a further five-match ban and a £150,000 fine.
There has been no love lost between the pair since, though Keane did try and clear things up in another autobiography in 2014. He said: “[He] pissed me off, shooting his mouth off. He was an absolute p**** to play against. Niggling, sneaky.
“I did want to nail him and let him know what was happening. I wanted to hurt him and stand over him and go: ‘Take that, you c***.’ I don’t regret that. But I had no wish to injure him. It was action; it was football. It was dog eats dog.”
Haaland headed home his second of the match just moments into the second-half, before setting up Foden for their third. Speaking on his side’s performance, Bernardo Silva added: “Yeah, it was a good game for us. Apart from a few simple balls that we lost, we didn’t give them much to counter.
“The way we controlled the game, especially in the first 30 minutes in the second half I thought we were very good. What we lacked against Arsenal, I thought we were fabulous and I am so happy because it’s not easy to play at Old Trafford.”
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Manchester United are missing key Erik ten Hag undroppable for two reasons
For possibly the first time since August, Manchester United’s back-four should pick itself when Manchester City visit Old Trafford on Sunday afternoon.
The Reds’ defensive department has been hampered by injury and illness-related issues since the opening month of the season, meaning it has been impossible for manager Erik ten Hag to find a settled and consistent rearguard. Three of the four members that started the opening two games of the season are expected to miss Sunday’s derby, highlighting the sheer size of the problem.
Aaron Wan-Bissaka, Lisandro Martinez and Luke Shaw joined Raphael Varane in forming the back-four for United’s opening two Premier League outings this season, starting the win over Wolves and defeat by Tottenham Hotspur, but only the latter is currently fit. Shaw was the first casualty of that quartet, suffering a muscle injury in the build-up to the win over Nottingham Forest.
He’s the player they’ve missed the most for a collection of different reasons, though two have been more noticeable than others. The England defender was virtually an ever-present figure for Ten Hag last term, either at left-back or as a makeshift centre-back.
His United career, like those of several others, was resurrected last season, benefitting from Ten Hag’s elite-level coaching credentials. He made 47 appearances in total, scoring one goal and chipping in with six assists. He also made a significant contribution to the 28 clean sheets that were recorded in all competitions.
After initially losing his place to Tyrell Malacia after a shaky start to the Ten Hag era, Shaw wrestled his spot back after the former was given a schooling by Phil Foden in the 6-3 defeat to City last October. The former Southampton man has topped the pecking order at left-back ever since.
Though his statistics last season, both offensively and defensively, made good reading, Shaw’s game was about much more than just his work in both boxes. He was a key contributor to United’s style of play between both boxes.
Ten Hag, from the outset of his tenure, made it clear that he wanted to transform United into a possession-based team. The signings of Christian Eriksen, Casemiro and Martinez immediately highlighted in the summer of 2022, with the trio renowned for their ball-playing expertise.
Working in tandem, Martinez and Shaw almost immediately transformed the left side of United’s defence, with the duo’s ball-playing credentials shining through. Both are excellent at progressing the ball out from the back, and Shaw’s ability to do that in the left full-back position has been sorely missed in recent weeks.
Shaw, who turned 28 in July, was essential to United’s build-up play last season, progressing the ball forward and contributing to the transition. He also assisted with ball retention in midfield, sometimes tucking into the centre of the pitch, a trait which United have attempted to persist with this season.
Furthermore, Shaw is a first-class professional, who is never afraid to speak the truth. He fronted up after United’s dismal 2-0 defeat to Newcastle United in April, setting the record straight by telling several home truths. United need leaders of his ilk.
As well as that, perhaps even more crucially, his absence at left-back has been felt by Marcus Rashford. The United academy graduate, who scored the winner in last season’s all-Manchester affair at Old Trafford, has scored just one goal so far this season and has looked a shadow of the player he was last term.
Though he deserved tremendous levels of credit for what he achieved last season, becoming the first United player to score 30 goals in a season since Robin van Persie a decade earlier, a lot of his success was built on the fact he had sound knowledge he’d built a solid and fruitful partnership with Shaw. The England colleagues would often link up down the left-flank, displaying a firm understanding of each other’s personal game.
It was a reliable partnership, one which United frequently prospered from. Rashford has had anything but a settled partner on the left so far this term, with the left-back spot, in Shaw’s absence, having been shared between Sergio Reguilon, Victor Lindelof and Sofyan Amrabat because of further injury troubles.
The sooner Shaw overcomes his muscle problem and returns to full fitness, the better, both for United as a collective and Rashford personally. He is a vitally important cog in the way Ten Hag wants his team to play, and his presence has been sorely missed.