National Post

It’s Zlatan’s Galaxy and we’re just living in it

- RYAN BACIC

CARSON, CALIF. •Halfthe players scrimmaged in green pinnies Wednesday, half in gray shirts alone. “Man on!” the Los Angeles Galaxy yelled. “Switch!” “Heyheyhey!” It was a fairly standard soccer practice, really, nothing-to-see-here ordinarine­ss. What had everyone a-buzz was the player they weren’t seeing.

“I thought Zlatan was training,” one youth-academy player said.

“Why isn’t he?” asked another.

Even when he’s absent, it seems, Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c has transfixed a city and a league.

The Swedish all-world striker arrived from Manchester United on March 29, met in the Southern California darkness by flashes of iPhone cameras, thrust-forth Sharpies, chants of his name, unintellig­ible screeches and a viral-ready hashtag: “#zLAtan.” Sidelined by right knee surgery, he hadn’t played a match in more than three months. Two days later, he came on as a substitute against new rival Los Angeles FC, scored spectacula­rly to tie the game, then scored again to win it.

“It’s good. It’s exciting,” Ibrahimovi­c, 36, said Wednesday. “Obviously, I have to adapt, learn the (MLS) game and see how it works. I look, I learn, and when that is done, I go for the kill.”

Such public swaggering is commonplac­e for Ibrahimovi­c, a 6-foot-5 personific­ation of sporting bravado and the audacious talent to back it up. Ever-quotable, he refers to himself often in the third person, and sometimes as something else entirely. He announced his signing with the Galaxy by posting on Twitter an image of himself, godlike, armwrestli­ng the devil, then by taking out a full-page ad in the Los Angeles Times that read simply: “Dear Los Angeles, You’re welcome.” At one point during his introducto­ry news conference, he summarized his emotions about the transfer by cracking that “the lion is hungry.”

Yet Ibrahimovi­c, who the Galaxy say will appear next week on Jimmy Kimmel Live, is just the latest star for a franchise fittingly used to them. His locker, the coveted corner spot, was once home to Landon Donovan and Steven Gerrard. Robbie Keane scored 83 MLS goals here after joining from Tottenham in 2011. David Beckham was the league’s first big, and perhaps still biggest, signing. Ibrahimovi­c, a former centrepiec­e at the likes of Ajax, Juventus, Inter Milan, Barcelona, AC Milan and Paris Saint-Germain, feels close.

“You just get kind of conditione­d that it’s normal at the Galaxy now,” said defender Dave Romney, a member of the club since 2015.

Also apparently normal, at least behind the scenes? Ibrahimovi­c himself.

“He’s been great in the locker-room, good guy to have around,” said former D.C. United midfielder Perry Kitchen, who signed with the Galaxy in January. “I can only say good things.”

That includes, of course, on the field.

While his signing resurfaced MLS’s weary “retirement league” reputation among some observers, Ibrahimovi­c remains only one season removed from having scored 17 times in 28 Premier League matches. The year before, he compiled 38 goals and 13 assists in 31 matches in the French first division, plus an additional 10 and five in Champions League play.

“Everyone knows his quality,” defender Rolf Feltscher said.

“By him just stepping on the field, guys automatica­lly want to be at a better level,” Kitchen said.

Grounding their 2018 turnaround in late Zlatan magic would be foolish, teammates know. But it’s great spectacle.

“As soon as they see him get off the bench, start warming up, the crowd goes crazy,” said Carlisa Perdomo, a local elementary school teacher and the leader of Galaxians, the team’s oldest supporters’ group.

“Then, of course, as soon as they see he’s going to come in, the crowd goes bonkers.”

Chicago will be next to experience it. The Fire announced Wednesday that its game Saturday against the Galaxy already had sold out.

 ??  ?? Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c
Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c

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