NED 28mnts
Zlatan.De.Mooiste.Eredivisiegoals.NED.twb22.ts
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If ever there was a perfect way to score your last goal for a club, it would be Zlatan Ibrahimović’s magnificent solo goal for Ajax against NAC Breda. In a moment of pure brilliance, Ibrahimović would torment half their team with cutbacks, feints, several mazy dribbles and, in the end, a simple finish to send the Amsterdam ArenA wild, singing songs for the man they were jeering just over an hour ago. A goal to take your breath away, it was one of the great solo strikes of all time and an indication of what Ajax were letting go – a game changer, a magisterial forward, and someone who would become one of the finest strikers in history.
The Swede’s story in the Dutch capital started three years prior when he arrived with a more conventional hairstyle from local side Malmö FF. Spotted by former Netherlands and Real Madrid manager Leo Beenhakker, the Director of Football at the club at the time, who claims he was convinced by him in just 15 minutes, and by Danish scout John Steen Olsen, a reputed figure in Amsterdam who still works very closely with the club, Ajax moved quickly to get their man, beating off competition from Fabio Capello’s Roma to secure his signature. Given it was his first journey outside his native Sweden, he could be forgiven for showing naivety and settling into the country slowly.Ibrahimović arrived at the club for a record fee paid by Ajax at the time, so the pressure was on him already. Relatively unfamiliar outside Sweden at the time, he now had to make an early impact in his first move. Upon his arrival at the club, he was likened to the legendary Marco van Basten given his stature and reputation in his home country, and was awarded the famous number 9 shirt to further intensify expectations.
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