The Province

Age ‘just a number’ for Ibrahimovi­c

No slowing down the 35-year-old Manchester United striker, who keeps filling the net

- STEVE DOUGLAS

MANCHESTER, England — Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c was weeks away from joining Manchester United when he was asked if, at 34, he could still cut it in what is widely regarded as the world’s most gruelling league.

“Age is just a number,” Ibrahimovi­c said calmly. “I’m not worried at all.”

The English Premier League is discoverin­g this was not just bluster and bravado from a player with seemingly limitless amounts of self-confidence.

At a time when games are coming thick and fast in the English season, Ibrahimovi­c is proving to be a standard-bearer in keeping fit and staying healthy. And, of course, scoring goals, the most crucial aspect of his job.

Now 35, Ibrahimovi­c has played in 17 of United’s 18 league games this season, starting and finishing all of them. The only game he missed was Nov. 19 against Arsenal because of suspension.

He has featured in 26 games in all competitio­ns this season, more than any other United player. He’s not just being preserved for the Premier League, either — he’s started twice in the English League Cup and four times in the Europa League.

There are harder-working attackers than Ibrahimovi­c — he wouldn’t likely fit in the high-energy forward lines of Liverpool or Chelsea, for example — and he picks and chooses his moments to produce bursts of energy, sometimes making him appear uninterest­ed during games. But the stats are impressive nonetheles­s for a man who uses game intelligen­ce and the work rate of younger players around him to play the often-thankless task of a lone striker.

He is yet to sustain an injury of note at United, testament to his work with his personal physiother­apist, the fact he is retired from internatio­nal football with Sweden and the physical condition of someone who is a black belt in taekwondo.

“His performanc­e doesn’t show how old he is,” United midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan said.

Ibrahimovi­c still needs to be scoring goals, though, and he’s delivering on that side, too.

His strike in United’s 3-1 win over Sunderland Monday took him to 50 club goals for 2016, which takes in the final part of his time at French champion Paris Saint-Germain and leaves him second behind Lionel Messi (51) of all players playing in Europe’s top five leagues. Seventeen have come in 26 games for United, with 11 in the past 10 games.

Ibrahimovi­c has already matched the number of goals that Anthony Martial netted last season for United — when Martial was the team’s top scorer — and 12 goals in the Premier League puts him one behind its leading scorer, Chelsea’s Diego Costa.

One thing is for sure: Ibrahimovi­c is not treating his first stint in English soccer as some kind of farewell tour for his trophy-laden career after spells with Malmo, Ajax, Juventus, Inter Milan, Barcelona and AC Milan.

“I am not really surprised because he is a very intelligen­t guy and he’s a very proud man,” United manager Jose Mourinho said. “For him to decide to come to a club with the level of expectatio­n of Manchester United and the most difficult league in the world for a striker, it’s because he knows that he can do it.”

 ?? — AP FILES ?? Manchester United’s Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c, 35, has played in 17 of United’s 18 Premier League games this season, starting and finishing all of them. He’s been a regular as well in non-league games, starting twice in the English League Cup and four times...
— AP FILES Manchester United’s Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c, 35, has played in 17 of United’s 18 Premier League games this season, starting and finishing all of them. He’s been a regular as well in non-league games, starting twice in the English League Cup and four times...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada