Pep Guardiola demanded a guard of honour from his players and staff to mark Erling Haaland’s Premier League goal record, to show the striker just how special an achievement it is. Haaland’s finish in a 3-0 win over West Ham means he now has 35 league goals for the season, surpassing the record previously shared by Alan Shearer and Andy Cole. “When there is a special occasion, we have to show how special it is,” said Guardiola. All of Haaland’s team-mates, plus Guardiola and his backroom team, lined up to acknowledge him as he made his way to the dressing room. Guardiola praised Haaland, saying “He is a joy. Everyone is happy to have him with us. This record will be broken sooner or later, maybe by him in the future, because he will score a lot of goals. But Andy Cole and Alan Shearer are incredible strikers and I think he deserved it.” Haaland laughed that the guard of honour was “painful”, telling Sky Sports: “Everyone hit me on the back.” He also tried to deflect the personal accolades, agreeing he would swap all his goals for the Treble that City are currently chasing – of Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup.
Guardiola then talked through the obvious danger Haaland poses when he started to run through his repertoire. The striker’s City scoring spree actually began against West Ham back in August, with two goals in a 2-0 win on the Premier League’s opening weekend. Guardiola said, “He understands what we want to do. The players understand his movement. With those first two goals against West Ham, immediately we saw he is a guy who, when you provide him with the ball, he scores in all situations, from crosses, penalties, combinations, transitions.” He also noted that when City lost against Liverpool in the Community Shield at the end of July, people said Haaland would not adapt in the Premier League. However, he started scoring at London Stadium the following weekend and has barely stopped since.
Finally, Guardiola underlined why he is so happy to have the 22-year-old: “We cannot achieve if the club does not provide us with top quality players up front. It’s not possible. This club had a legend in Sergio Aguero and Gabriel Jesus, an incredible worker. I was not here but [Edin] Dzeko, [Mario] Balotelli were top strikers. In the first half, he was not involved much but he didn’t become desperate and anxious and nervous. He was calm.”