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Erling Braut Haaland (né Håland, Urban East Norwegian: [ˈhòːlɑn]; [2] born 21 July 2000) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Premier League club Manchester City and the Norway national team. Considered one of the best players in the world, he is known for his speed, strength, positioning, and finishing inside ...
These include German players with dual citizenship. If a player has not been capped on an international level, his country of birth is used, except those who were born abroad from German parents or moved to Germany at a young age, and those who clearly indicated to have switched his nationality to another nation.
Haaland made his debut for Norway on 5 September 2019, against Malta, starting in the 2–0 home win in UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying. [2] Almost a year later, Haaland scored his first senior international goal for Norway on 4 September 2020, in a 2–1 loss against Austria in the 2020–21 Nations League B . [ 3 ]
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Alfie Haaland (born Alf-Inge Rasdal Håland; 23 November 1972) is a Norwegian former professional footballer who played as a right-back or midfielder. Haaland played in the Premier League with Nottingham Forest , Leeds United and Manchester City , and won 34 caps for Norway .
Klezmer-punk act Daniel Kahn, alongside Psoy Korolenko, released a trilingual Yiddish-, Russian-, and English-language cover, “Moskve,” in 2020. German YouTuber Jarow made a cover of the song about Norwegian footballer Erling Haaland. It went viral on TikTok in 2021. The song "Ami" by Rika Zarai is sung to the same melody as "Moskau".
Arne Haaland (born 1936), Norwegian chemist; Arne Wegner Haaland (1923–2012), Norwegian engineer; Bjøro Håland (born 1943), Norwegian country singer; Bret Haaland (born 1964), American animation director; Gordon A. Haaland (1940–2017), American academic; Jan Haaland (born 1956), Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration rector
Erling Haaland 38: 39 0.97 2019–present 2 Jørgen Juve: 33: 45 0.73 1928–1937 3 Einar Gundersen: 26: 33 0.79 1917–1928 4 Harald Hennum: 25: 43 0.58 1949–1960 5 John Carew: 24: 91 0.26 1998–2011 6 Ole Gunnar Solskjær: 23: 67 0.34 1995–2007 Tore André Flo: 23: 76 0.3 1995–2004 8 Gunnar Thoresen: 22: 64 0.34 1946–1959 9 Alexander ...