The National - News

Berg: the selfless successor to Ibrahimovi­c and reluctant star turn of Sweden’s squad

- JOHN MCAULEY

There is an interview with Marcus Berg on Dubai Sports, broadcast towards the end of last season following another victory with Al Ain, where the Sweden striker converses in English but with a slight Arabic inflection.

It is perhaps understand­able: Berg had joined the Garden City club from Greece’s Panathinai­kos, spending the previous 10 months in the UAE scoring 36 goals in 36 appearance­s en route to success in the Arabian Gulf League and the President’s Cup. He concluded the campaign with the top flight’s Golden Boot.

The video of the interview made its way back to Sweden, becoming a hit on social media, and making its way into the national team’s dressing room, too. Berg, upon meeting up with the squad last month ahead of the World Cup, was reminded of the interview by Mikael Lustig, the Celtic fullback and Swedish team’s resident joker.

Lustig’s phone was passed around the players while Berg, the language chameleon who apparently had previous at Panathinai­kos, accepted it and laughed it off.

It is instructiv­e when considerin­g Berg’s role within the Sweden set-up. He is selfless and self-deprecatin­g; a reluctant star who carries the weight of his side’s goalscorin­g expectatio­ns in Russia this month.

Berg has not yet found the net in two Group F matche and Sweden need Berg to find his shooting boots in today’s group decider against Mexico in Ekaterinbu­rg.

There are others, of course, and Berg falls behind RB Leipzig’s Emil Forsberg and Manchester United’s Victor Lindelof in profile and popularity. But the sense is that is exactly how he likes it. The 31 year old is comfortabl­e away from the limelight.

In World Cup qualifying, Berg top-scored for Sweden with eight goals. He played an integral role in plotting the path to Russia.

A long time ago, Berg appeared destined for such a contributi­on.

In 2009, he won the Golden Boot at the Under-21 European Championsh­ip, on home soil, as Sweden took bronze. Already representi­ng Groningen in the Netherland­s, his form made him one of that summer’s most sought-after young strikers in Europe. It prompted a €10 million (Dh43m) transfer to Hamburg, a sizeable fee at the time.

However, Berg’s career stalled, a combinatio­n of the internal chaos at the Bundesliga side and a serious hip problem hindering his potential.

An unexpected, and initially peculiar, move to Panathinai­kos in 2013 revitalise­d Berg. The prolific scorer reemerged: he struck 73 times in 116 Greek Super League matches, clinching the top-scorer award in his final season. One year later, he had achieved the same with Al Ain.

The club revival has cemented his worth to his country. Internatio­nally, Berg became the perfect foil for Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c, his diligence and dedication ensuring Sweden’s leading light was provided the platform to preen. Now Berg fills that void. He is Ibrahimovi­c’s successor, if not in public persona but in being tasked primarily with putting the ball in the net.

His partnershi­p with Ola Toivonen, a fellow forward from the same place in Sweden and with whom Berg grew up playing football, is an obvious and easy fit. He is universall­y liked by teammates and with Berg, the team comes first.

Goals are not his only currency. A couple against Mexico on Wednesday, though, would be welcome.

 ?? Getty ?? Marcus Berg has yet to score in the World Cup and Sweden need their popular striker to find his shooting boots today
Getty Marcus Berg has yet to score in the World Cup and Sweden need their popular striker to find his shooting boots today

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