Bundesliga

2020-06-15T17:15:00Z

Erling Haaland's journey: from Bryne to Dortmund, and beyond

Erling Haaland led an explosive life at Borussia Dortmund, but where did it all begin for the Norwegian goal-fiend?

Haaland is already an integral member of the Norway national team but he was actually born in Leeds, England in July 2000, the summer his father Alf Inge Haaland - a defensive midfielder of some acclaim - swapped Leeds United for Manchester City.

Career cut short

Haaland Sr. spent 10 years in the English Premier League with Nottingham Forest, Leeds and Man City between 1993 and 2003 whilst wining 34 caps for Norway, but he is perhaps best remembered for the horror tackle he received from Roy Keane in City's derby draw with Manchester United in April 2001.

Alfie Haaland never played in the Premier League again after the Manchester derby in April 2001.

With his career petering out, 'Alfie' and his family returned to their native Bryne, a 12,000-strong town 300 miles southwest of Norway's capital Oslo, a few years later, and the young Erling soon found himself in the youth set-up of the club his father had started his own career at: Bryne FK.

Bryne beginnings

Bryne - pronounced like this if you'd like to stay on the right side of the now 6'4"-tall Haaland Jr. - is a commuter town a half-hour drive south of the country's oil capital Stavanger, and the local football club operate in Norway's second-tier, their last spell in the nation's top-flight Eliteserien ending back in 2003.

Accordingly, Bryne are not drilling for resources in the same way as elite youth academies. There were 40 players of mixed ability in Haaland's age group for each of the 10 years he spent with the club, with perceived lesser players spared the axe at the end of every season. Between the ages of six and 16, Haaland played competitive games a year ahead of the curve, though.

"As he grew older, he was always hardworking, a really nice guy to work with," Alf Ingve Berntsen, his coach at the time, explained to bundesliga.com. "He smiled a lot, trained a lot, scored a lot. A guy like Erling, you can't create that. He's born with special gifts. No matter who we played against he respected the opponents, but he was never afraid. That also, I think, is very important."

Teenaged prodigy

Bryne handed Haaland his first-team debut three months before he had turned 16, and by the end of the 2016 season the young striker had made 16 appearances with the club, four of them starts, as well as progressing from Norway's U15 squad to their U17s - the first clear sign, perhaps, that he would commit to his father’s country of birth rather than his own down the line.

At the time, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was in his second spell as Molde FK coach. A former international teammate of Alfie Haaland, he had seen enough of the young Erling to sign him for the club in February 2017.

Erling Haaland (l.) began to evolve into the complete striker under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's (r.) tutelage at Molde.

Solksjaer's own father Oyvind had been a Greco-Roman wrestling champion in the late 1960s, but in his playing days the now 47-year-old Ole had always struggled to put on muscle. As a striker himself, his game was based on movement, opportunism and ruthless finishing, a combination that took him to six Premier League titles with Manchester United, as well as a UEFA Champions League triumph in 1999.

Haaland had been the small kid playing up a year with Bryne, and further refining his attacking craft under quintessential fox in the box Solskjaer was an experience both enjoyed. However, after a period of eating up to three dinners a day, Haaland soon found that he didn't share his coach's inability to bulk up.

Out of the shadows

"Some of my strengths I can see in Erling but in other things he's a lot better than me already, I can say that," Haaland Sr. reflected to bundesliga.com. "I think maybe he's learned a few things from me, you know, mentality and stuff, the will to win."

Blessed with the right physical and mental weapons in his armoury, Haaland packed on around 15 kilos (north of two-and-a-half stone) in weight - "all muscle," according to Solskjaer - and began to rack up the minutes with Molde.

"Man-child" Haaland packed on more than two stones in weight in a single season at Molde.

In his first season he scored two league goals in 14 appearances, 11 of which were off the bench; in his second he started 17 of his 25 Eliteserien games and plundered 12 goals. By the time he left for Red Bull Salzburg in January 2019, RB Leipzig's sister club knew they were getting a complete striker.

Salzburg had not exactly been struggling for goals ahead of Haaland's arrival. Munas Dabbur, now of Hoffenheim, found the target 42 times in his final two league seasons with the Austrian champions, but in January 2019 they had agreed to sell him to Sevilla the following summer with Haaland in mind.

Raring to go

Haaland was restricted to just two league appearances in the second half of the 2018/19 season, but that May he gave warning that he was ready to shift things up a gear.

Haaland scored nine - yes, NINE - goals in a single match, helping Norway to a 12-0 win over Honduras at the FIFA U20 World Cup in Poland. He later said he was disappointed not to have bagged 10. His haul was a tournament record, and he ended the competition with the Golden Boot despite Norway getting knocked out at the group stage.

Haaland's nine-goal haul for Norway against Honduras at the FIFA U20 World Cup was also record number of goals for a player in a single match in the competition's history.

The next season - the 2019/20 campaign - was meant to be one in which Haaland expanded on his promise, but Salzburg soon discovered what Bryne had all those years earlier: that Haaland was in a rush, his growth more revolution than evolution.

He took just two league appearances to bag his first hat-trick in a 5-2 win over Wolfsberger and by December had scored 16 goals at rate of one every 61 minutes. He was also the second-top scorer in the UEFA Champions League by Christmas, his nine goals only bettered by Robert Lewandowski's 10 for Bayern Munich.

In demand

Salzburg had known they might struggle to hold onto Haaland in the longer term, but clubs were reportedly battering down their door to acquire a player who was now, already, the game's hottest young striker.

Leipzig were naturally linked - Naby Keita, Peter Gulacsi and Marcel Sabitzer among the 10 players who have made the journey from Salzburg to Saxony in recent seasons - whilst Solksjaer's presence in the Manchester United dugout made their reported interest almost inevitable. Haaland had only one destination in mind, though.

Watch: Haaland signs for Dortmund

"He's really looking forward to every training [session] and really enjoying playing in front of a really nice crowd in Dortmund," father Alfie explained now three months into his son's BVB career.

'Role model'

"My father's been a big role model for me," concluded Haaland Jr. "I always said to myself I wanted to become a professional football player at a high level and that's what I said [my] whole life."

And he immediately continued soaring to the very top of the game once he landed in Dortmund, with his Bundesliga debut comprising just 34 minutes but resulting in a match-winning hat-trick.

Dortmund were trailing Augsburg 3-1 when Haaland was called from the bench in the 56th-minute and he had his first goal for the club three minutes later before ending up with the match-ball.

Watch: Haaland's 20-minute hat-trick on his Dortmund debut

"I came here to score goals," Haaland told bundesliga.com afterwards. "It's a good debut for me. We just have to take it game by game, then we’ll see what happens... It’s amazing to play in front of these and it just gives you more joy to play football in front of such passionate fans."

There was plenty more joy for Dortmund's hero and their faithful following, with that bulldozing Bundesliga bow was a sign of things to come as Haaland hit braces in each of his next two appearances and chalked up seven goals in just three appearances- and a grand total of 136 minutes - of football. By the end of the campaign, he had 16 in 18 games for BVB and Haaland eventually left the Signal Iduna Park with an 86-goal haul from 89 outings in all competitions.

He departed the German top-flight with a DFB Cup winners' medal in his luggage - having scored twice in the final - and having hammered home his status as one of the most deadly strikers on the planet. Considering his previous, the scary thing with Haaland is that he will most likely only get better.

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