Five points: Malmö FF-Djurgården

Five points for Per Bohmann of Malmö FF-Djurgården on the field.

1. An Ice Cold Match – Or!?

Met a colleague earlier this week.

“Are you going to Malmö on Thursday?” he asked.

I had time to nod but didn’t answer before the colleague thoughtfully said.

“Damn what an ice cold match.”

A week or so ago, I didn’t think a healthy person could classify Malmo FFZoo with four rounds left to play as “Freeze”. Now it was difficult to defend against this kind of joy killer.

2. MFF whipped Djurgården in front of them

Then it didn’t take several minutes of playing before all that annoying talk became completely irrelevant. In recent years there has been a special nerve About these matches between MFF and Djurgården.

I could feel it in the air and down on the field. Now it is the best soccer team! The rhythm, fast combinations, and subtle turns of the game were peppered with fury, late bets and constant grumbling.

It was Malmo who hit the match and Dorgarden ahead. They were uglier, more aggressive, and harder! But above all much better. Erdal Rakib managed to make the score 1-0 early on. After 25 minutes, Soren Rex managed to score 2-0 after Malmö managed to overpower the entire guest team.

3. Imperial Hugo Larsson

I’ve already thought about how Hugo Larsson, Erdal Rakib and Anders Christiansen will deal with Rasmus Schuller, Humpus Wendel and Magnus Ericsson.
Was Malmö’s midfield mature and balanced enough to assert itself against the Djurgarden trio?

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You can safely say that. The home team’s players got it right in the defenses game, winning ball after ball by moving straight to the blue striped hamstrings. They took the fight, winning the lion’s share of the fights and dominating the entire match.

Hugo Larsson was pleased to follow him as broadcaster. The teenager is the big joy of the year in Malmö FF. You see exactly the imperial clarity in it that I’ve seen in so many MFF products over the years. He also participated in both goals before the break. Mönstereleven Larsson extended play with a relaxed gesture that led to Rakip 1-0. Then it was the 18-year-old who guarded the right area, pressed at the right time, and thus ensured that the team could tackle one more.

4. Sagittarius Return – Kali

The Scanians have had an ugly habit of accepting relatively cheap goals this season. Djurgården was definitely gassing after the break, but it didn’t take much for an early cut in the second half.
Four poor performances in a short time gave Djurgarden a goal.
Magnus Eriksson took revenge on Erdal Rakip and cut him in the center of the circle. In the end, the ball ended with Joel Asoro. Knudsen didn’t deal with winger jerk, Ismael Diawara left a weak shot return and Felix Pigmo didn’t straighten his legs when Elias Anderson was allowed to hit the ball into the net uncontested.

Suddenly Djurgården won all the duels. Suddenly the away team crushed the back line of the home team. Suddenly the MFFs didn’t think this was so much fun anymore. Suddenly the score was 2-2.

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Ismael Dewara nodded the ball in the direction of Felix Pigmo, who behaved childishly towards Ericsson. In the end, the right-back got the ball, but no better than when he released Callie Holmberg. The same Holmberg who – after a few years of a cold sleep – woke up from hibernation and transformed into his old person. The center was replaced by Victor Edvardsen, earned Beijmo a mile with the first touch and made it 2-2 with the second.

5. Malmö folds down – Djurgården stands

The total change of scenery in the second half, of course, tells us how unreliable Malmo has been all season. Every good thing a peacock does is always followed – I mean always! – For something bad. When Malmö falls, there are no safety nets or parachutes. Then the race is total.

Nor is there news that Jonas Knudsen, after injury, lacks the necessary conditions to assert himself in claiming the ongoing duels. Although the Dane advanced deep against Joel Asoro – scrapping the offside streak – he was easily devoured by Djurgarden’s whirlwind. A simple ball deep in and a desperate Knudsen was forced to land Asuro in the penalty area. Marcus Danielson showed courage and composure when he scored the winning goal from the penalty spot.

As humiliating as Malmö’s collapse was, the mental and wise ascent of the Stockholmers was of course just as powerful. MFF folds, Djurgården stands. In a weakened state, after three consecutive losses of the Allsvenskan, they could have felt sorry for themselves. The wailing began. collapsed. But it is Malmö who bends when everything seems to be at its best, and Djurgården is the one who stands up when everything seems to be at its worst. There are many indications that the blue team will play in Europe next year as well.

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