In the 2011/12 season, Messi set the record for the highest goalscoring season in modern football history, when he scored 82 goals.
Erling Haaland and Robert He Lewandowski is currently the best center in the world his forward and proves it every time he takes the pitch.
Their start to the season was undeniable, and both have dispelled doubts about possible adaptations to the new league.
Lewandowski has scored 11 goals in his eight league appearances, including his league in Santander and the Champions League. Counting his Premier League and Champions League, Haaland has scored 14 goals in his 10 appearances.
These are staggering numbers and one can only speculate if any forward can break Lionel Messi’s one-hit season scoring record.
This article attempts to analyze how Lewandowski and Haaland score goals, their strengths and types of strikers, and whether this information can predict whether they will compete against Messi’s 2011/12 edition. increase.Messi’s Astronomical Map
Previously considered “unattainable”, his 82 goals put Leo his Messi into football history.
Written in gold and brilliance at the end of the most successful 2011/12 season of his career in front of goal and has been unmatched ever since.Of his 82 goals scored by the Argentine star, 73 have been for Barcelona (60 games) and 9 for Argentina (his nine since the end of this year’s Copa America).This is how Haaland scores goals
Erling Haaland is set to be the next great striker of his decade. Born in Leeds and raised in Brine, he practically started scoring goals the day he flew from his cradle to the pitch.
Haaland has played in over 200 official matches and scored 150 of his goals between Norwegian clubs and the national team during his professional career.Of his 82 goals scored by the Argentine star, 73 have been for Barcelona (60 games) and 9 for Argentina (9 for him since the end of this year’s Copa America).
The Norwegian has scored 29 goals in the 6-yard box, 58 in the remaining boxes and just 4 from outside the box.
These are staggering numbers which allow us to speculate on whether or not either forward could break Lionel Messi‘s record for goals in a single season.
But if there’s one thing Haaland can criticize about his game, it might be his reliance on his left foot for finishing.
Haaland seems to have been the missing piece for Manchester City to become a near-perfect team, with Pep Guardiola praising his influence.
“He reads where the place is. And of course he’s the guy in the box. We want to play a lot of time there, score a lot of goals, put in a lot of balls and make sure he feels comfortable and has a great weapon to use. He’s a guy who can go into the box and feel like he can score,” Guardiola said at a press conference.Without penalties, Haaland’s xG (expected goals) is his 5.73. And he scored his ten goals on the move.
In other words, his quality in contact with the ball and eye for goal greatly improve the expected quality of game figures. Lewandowski: Penalty Shooter
Robert Lewandowski’s career is based on achievements. It started with Znic Pruszkow, Lech Poznan, Dortmund, Bayern Munich and now Barcelona.
He scored goal after goal on the ladder he climbed without pulling the handbrake, breaking his record after goal. His age is no obstacle for him either.
Counting Lewandowski’s last five seasons, the Barcelona player has a clear preference for his right foot while using his head more often than Haaland. He has shot 4.07 shots per game and averaged 1.57 goals per game in the Premier League.