The Citizen (KZN)

Ibrahimovi­c’s ego given a bigger boost

- Malmo

– Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c unveiled a bronze statue of himself on Tuesday near the stadium where he launched his profession­al career in his hometown of Malmo.

“No matter where you come from, where you are, no matter what you look like, the statue is the symbol that anything is possible,” said Sweden’s best-known footballer, visibly moved to see himself permanentl­y represente­d “where it all began”.

Ibrahimovi­c, who had a stint with Paris Saint-Germain, already has an effigy at the Grevin wax museum in the French capital.

He had been waiting for his statue in Sweden for five years. The work, created by Swedish sculptor Peter Linde, is impressive. Ibrahimovi­c stands 1.95m tall. The sculpture is 2.7 metres high and weighs 500kg.

Ibrahimovi­c, whose parents emigrated from the former Yugoslavia, grew up in difficult conditions in Rosengard, a seedy neighbourh­ood in Malmo.

He played for Malmo, then Ajax, Juventus, Inter Milan, Barcelona, AC Milan, PSG and Manchester United before moving to the LA Galaxy. He developed a reputation as a player who won league titles, collecting 13 in 16 seasons in the Netherland­s, Italy, Spain and France, although one, with Juventus, has since been rescinded.

Ibrahimovi­c dominated the Swedish national team from 2001 to 2016, winning 116 caps and scoring 62 goals.

He remains an icon in his hometown.

Ibrahimovi­c, who is famous for his bombastic, possibly tongue in cheek, declaratio­ns, said before leaving PSG that he would stay if the club owners could persuade the city to “change the Eiffel Tower for my statue”.

“A World Cup without me is nothing to watch, so it is not worth waiting for the World Cup,” he said when Sweden failed to qualify for the 2014 finals. – AFP

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