Analysing Erling Haaland’s first Manchester City hat-trick
Haaland, Manchester City
By Sam Lee
What did Manchester City sign Erling Haaland for? Well, that. And Pep Guardiola says that’s exactly what he told him when he was substituted after bagging his first Premier League hat-trick.
With the home side trailing 2-0 to Crystal Palace at half-time, they needed a spark and… well, actually, others delivered it and got Guardiola’s men going.
The difference between the two halves was that City didn’t rush to get the ball to Haaland. In the first half, Joao Cancelo, Rodri and Kyle Walker seemed overly keen to play a ball over the top and see what happened. The answer was nothing.
Crosses from out wide went the same way and City looked disjointed. Another “how many touches has Haaland had?” conversation loomed.
Then City sorted themselves out.
The Athletic’s tactics writer Ahmed Walid will explain exactly how, but in short, City stopped rushing things, Walker didn’t have to generate quite so much play and, in turn, they ended up finding Haaland at the right moments.
And then it was all about him.
His first goal, the equaliser, is one of those goals you couldn’t really imagine City scoring in the past couple of seasons: quite simply, a big header in the box.
It’s not the kind of goal Haaland has always scored. He was fairly spindly as a kid and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, his manager at Molde when he was a teenager, was pretty blunt on the subject. “‘You cannot even head’,” Haaland says he told him. “I was like, ‘Fucking hell, I agree with you!’”
He has worked on them since then. One of the impressive aspects of this particular header was the movement beforehand, dropping slightly so he could go back in and attack it rather than staying where he was to connect from a stationary position.
He steps out just a yard or so from here…
… to here…
… and the arm across Marc Guehi was pretty expert, too.
By the point of contact, he is back inside the six-yard box.

“Finally, Phil played the ball to me,” he said with a grin afterwards, a nod to one or possibly two non-passes from Phil Foden in recent games.
As for the second, maybe any City player could have scored it. They have got enough people in attack to take up positions like that and they have certainly scored enough tap-ins over the years to make this fairly routine.
Had he only scored this you’d probably say “Yeah, good goal, fine” and think no more of it, but ultimately he is the only City player who is actually in the six-yard box while everything else is unfolding; the only one to occupy a space even relatively close to the back post.
Bernardo Silva and Julian Alvarez had the typical calm heads to make good passes in the box and John Stones was up there to put the ball towards goal, but Haaland was the one to actually convert it.
As Guardiola said on Friday when talking about cut-backs and low crosses: “Erling is always there, it’s his biggest talent.” It’s where you want him to be.
The third goal, though, was truly masterful. Top-class centre-forward play, as Alan Shearer would surely call it.
Look at him demanding the ball from Ilkay Gundogan, who surely didn’t need telling what to do, although maybe the fact Haaland had two markers on him might have dissuaded him.
The presence of those two Palace defenders, though, seemed to make no difference to the outcome.
Haaland stayed on Joachim Andersen’s blind side, a feature of his Borussia Dortmund goals, and checked to see where Joel Ward was (behind him).
And when the ball arrived, he held off Ward as if he was saying, “You’re just not getting this ball, mate.”

It allowed him to take a touch to control the pass and another to settle himself before picking his spot, shrugging off Ward again as he did so.
You know it’s a ruthless finish when the goalkeeper doesn’t even dive. Look at Vicente Guaita — absolutely helpless.
That is the kind of goal you expect him to score for City and the most obvious difference Haaland could make. “We spoke about that: put the ball to his feet between the central defenders. It was quite similar at West Ham, how he used his body, and after the finish… he put the ball in the net. He doesn’t shoot, he put the ball in the net, soft, left, poof, where the keeper cannot save it,” said Guardiola.
For so long, City had become a little too unsure of themselves in those positions, usually failing to even have a shot on goal at all, but Haaland quite literally demanded the opportunity and finished it expertly.
In terms of how he’s settling in… none of his three goals were from counter-attacks! The third one was fairly transitional but it came from City knocking it about at the back until Foden, in a deep role, turned the ball around the corner and found Gundogan in space to drive forward. The Kevin De Bruyne-Haaland supply line wasn’t in operation at all, City barely had open space to break into, and Haaland coped just fine.
It is also easy to believe City might not have had enough to turn things around on Saturday without their new weapon.
It’s just a shame that Walker booted his match ball into the second tier at full-time.