The National - News

REAL v MAN CITY: PARALLEL PATHS OF VINICIUS JUNIOR AND HAALAND

▶ The two 22-year-old forwards set to clash over two legs for spot in Champions League final

- IAN HAWKEY

Shortly after Real Madrid lifted the Copa del Rey and a warm Saturday night in Seville spilled into the early hours of Sunday, the Madrid president Florentino Perez was grumbling about scheduling and praising the contributi­on to the final, a 2-1 win over Osasuna, of Vinicius Junior. “The best player in the world in his position”, Perez said of the Brazilian.

Vinicius had dazzled along his left flank. Both goals, scored by his compatriot winger Rodrygo, had their origins in jet-heeled Vinicius dribbles. He was tireless, too. Perez’s concerns about fatigue, with the Spanish Cup winners hosting Manchester City on Tuesday night in the first leg of a Champions League semi-final, were largely for other players.

No Madrid player has been on the pitch for more minutes than Vinicius across the six competitio­ns they, as defending Liga and European champions, have been involved in. He has played 46 matches, scored 22 goals and directly assisted another 21.

These are startling statistics, and were it not for the towering numbers attaching to Vinicius’ contempora­ry, Erling Haaland, Perez might have declared his man not just peerless as a left winger but as the best 22-yearold attacker in the world.

The privilege for the Bernabeu is to see Haaland and Vinicius – 102 goals or assists between them this season – share a stage for the first time in careers that have climbed a similar, precocious trajectory while refining very different skills.

They were born nine days apart, in the first July of the new millennium, Vinicius Junior to a hardscrabb­le childhood in Rio de Janeiro, Haaland in Leeds, England.

As gifted teenagers, pre-set pathways defined Vini Jr and Haaland Jr’s ambitions. Once Vinicius had made his debut in May 2017 in top-flight Brazilian football for Flamengo, accelerate­d up the ranks because of his speed and confidence with the ball, he was already committed to a career in Europe, the standard next step for talented South Americans.

When Haaland made his debut in the highest level of the Norwegian league, for Molde in June 2017, his potential as a centre-forward was already recognised and a developmen­t plan sketched out.

Just as Madrid, who officially signed Vinicius on his 18th birthday, need no hard sell in recommendi­ng themselves to a Brazilian teenagers with a sense of flair – in Vinicius’s lifetime they have been the club of Ronaldo Nazario, Robinho and Kaka – Borussia Dortmund, with their reputation for trusting and nurturing young players, was a obvious destinatio­n for Haaland. His springboar­d between Molde and there would be Red Bull Salzburg, another fine school for forwards and with participat­ion in European competitio­n guaranteed.

Haaland’s Champions League debut featured a hattrick for Salzburg against the Belgian club Genk. In the same 2019-20 group phase Vinicius scored the first of his 14 European Cup goals – against the Belgians of Bruges.

The upward march since has been steep. Vinicius is now immortalis­ed in Madrid’s decorated European Cup history as the match-winner in a final.

Haaland calmly assumes the pressures of being earmarked to transform City from nearly-men in Europe to champions. “I’m here to try to develop the club, to try to win the Champions League for the first time,” he said after scoring five in the last-16 tie against RB Leipzig.

If he makes the difference in this semi-final, he will be easily cast as the decisive X-factor. A year ago, favourites City were eliminated by Madrid after an extraordin­ary comeback.

Haaland joined City the following month. With his 51 goals – 12 of them in eight Champions League matches – so far, he can look back with amusement at early criticisms that he seemed isolated, registerin­g low numbers of touches with the ball.

For Carlo Ancelotti, Madrid’s manager, the policing of Haaland is Tuesday’s major headache, with key centre-back, Eder Militao suspended. And for Pep Guardiola, the City manager who has been experiment­ing with variations to his right-back position, with John Stones operating in a fluid role and Kyle Walker, the specialist, dropping down the coach’s hierarchy, the threat of Vinicius demands a clear-eyed tactical plan.

With 51 goals – 12 in the Champions League – Haaland can look back with amusement at early criticism he received

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