Norway’s Haaland says pressure is all on England

This post was originally published on this site.

Norway’s Haaland says pressure is all on England

A smiling Erling HaalandImage source, Getty Images
ByAlex Brotherton

BBC Sport journalist
  • Published

Norway striker Erling Haaland says all the pressure is on England leading into their World Cup quarter-final meeting on Saturday – and with a smile, called on the media to put as much pressure on Thomas Tuchel’s side as possible.

Norway had not competed at a World Cup since 1998, but have reached the final eight for the first time after finishing second in Group I before beating Ivory Coast and Brazil in the knockout stage.

England have reached at least the quarter-finals in the past three men’s World Cups, but have not made the final since winning the competition in 1966.

When asked is all the pressure is on England, Manchester City striker Haaland said: “Yes, definitely.

“I think there’s some clear favourites out there, England’s one of them.”

Speaking to journalists, he added: “I think all of you should put every single pressure on the English lads.

“Yeah, they [England fans] should be confident of progressing, definitely. It’s England.”

Haaland, 25, has scored in each of his past 14 competitive games for Norway, and will look to continue that run against the nation of his birth – he was born in Leeds, during the summer his father Alf-Inge moved from Leeds United to Manchester City – when they meet in Miami on Saturday (22:00 BST).

When Haaland appeared on the cover of Time magazine last year, he said Norway had a 0.5% chance of winning the World Cup.

But seven goals in four appearances for Haaland – including a double to eliminate Brazil in the last 16 – have helped fire Norway to the last eight.

“I didn’t expect it. To be honest, to be in the quarter-finals with Norway in the World Cup is quite surprising even for me,” he added.

“Playing against Brazil was kind of crazy for us Norwegians and to win against Brazil and then go and play England in the quarter-finals in the World Cup in the USA is quite special.

“It’s difficult to take everything in because you need to kind of just play the game like it’s a training session.

“I think if you watch the scenes back in Norway, this is not normal for Norway to be, so it’s super special.”

Haaland’s popularity in the US has surged during the tournament, partly because of his personality and off-field exploits, as well as his goals.

Just hours after scoring the winner in the last 32 against Ivory Coast, Haaland went shopping in Dallas for cowboy hats and boots.

He filmed the trip for his YouTube channel, and the video gained more than six million views in five days.

“It’s a good thing because I like the Americans, I think they are kind of hilarious as well. They are funny, so I like the way they are,” he said.

“I think it’s just good. Honestly on every single thing with the World Cup so far here it has been amazing. From the games to the stadiums, everything has been amazing.

“The training ground where we train has been amazing, so I’m super happy and it’s been impressive.”

Other videos show him attending the Stanley Cup final in North Carolina and leading his team-mates in the Viking row after beating Brazil.

“I like to joke a little bit and I like to have fun,” he said. “I think that’s a key to for my daily life to joke around and of course train good, of course focus well and prepare well but you also need to joke around and you need to enjoy the moment.

“That’s what we’ve been doing now and just as we play in the World Cup, we have to enjoy it because nothing lasts forever. We have to just enjoy while we’re here.”

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

This video can not be played

Haaland comments could be mind games – O’Reilly

Haaland’s Manchester City team-mate Nico O’Reilly has had a fast rise in his senior career.

The 21-year-old made his first-team debut for City under two years ago and is now the starting left-back for England at the World Cup.

O’Reilly is likely to start the quarter-final on Saturday against Norway and will come up against Haaland.

“Could be mind games,” O’Reilly responded when asked about Haaland’s comments concerning England being favourites.

“But look, they’re a good team as well. They have shown it through the whole tournament. It’s not just certain players we have to worry about – they’re good collectively. It’s going to be a good game and good battle.”

Haaland has scored seven goals during this tournament and O’Reilly is all too aware of how devastating a finisher the striker is.

“Erling is Erling,” O’Reilly said.

“We all know what he is like. He can score goals and is dangerous in the box. He is a real threat. They need to get him the ball. A lot goes into it.”

England assistant Anthony Barry also echoed O’Reilly’s comments that Norway are not a one-man team.

“They’re excellent at set-pieces, they have other threats, the frontline is full of threats, playing in some of the biggest teams in Europe,” Barry said, speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live.

“Odegaard is obviously a Premier League winner and captain now, so they’ve beaten some good teams to arrive where they are.

“It’s no shock and there’s no fluke at this stage of the tournament – whoever’s in the last eight with us deserves it, and they have our full respect.

“We’re prepared for the game. As I said, focus on Norway, and it’s step one of three,” Barry added.

Hot this week

Olympic champion McKeown out of Commonwealth Games

Olympic champion McKeown out of Commonwealth GamesByLorraine McKennaBBC Sport...

Start-ups raise record $17bn but British money misses the party

UK start-ups raised a record $17bn (£12.7bn) in the...

‘Absolute perfection!’ Mbappe fires France ahead against Morocco

All the angles of Kylian Mbappe's opener for France against Morocco in the 2026 World Cup.

Topics

spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img