• NotClayMerritt@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Jackson has played less than 70 professional games. I don’t understand why our fan base screams be patient with Mudryk but Jackson has to be replaced in January and he’s not our level. Double standards are crazy. We should be more patient with both.

    • poopy_toaster@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Agreed, I don’t get it either. Both players coming into the league new but one is held to some ridiculous standard of “strikers gotta score goals” when we haven’t had the kind of productivity/chances created in years. I think he comes good, he is in the right spots a good percentage of the time, just unlucky. He’s young damnit, playing for a large club in a different country

    • Busquessi@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Chelsea is the Lazio of the Prem so I can think of one notable difference between them that would warrant this difference of opinion

  • neandertales@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    It’s pretty obvious he was totally unschooled, and he first explored last spring at Villarreal. I saw him get subbed in before that… he had a long way to go so good on him.

  • Skunk_Gunk@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Guy has a huge ceiling just needs to put it all together. He has moments of brilliance that don’t make the stat sheet and then follows it up with a mind numbing play. I believe in him to mature into to role and be a star.

  • floyd_droid@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    From The Telegraph’s Matt Law:

    Six years ago, the Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson was playing football barefoot in his hometown in Senegal and his life was so far removed from the wealth and glamour of the Premier League that he had never owned a pair of boots.

    Indeed, the very fact that Jackson explains how hard he found it to adjust to playing in football boots is a jolting reminder of how far he has come – and how quickly he has done so – from Ziguinchor, nine hours drive south of Dakar, to Stamford Bridge, via Villarreal.

    During an illuminating half-an-hour at Chelsea’s Cobham training ground, Jackson opened up on his path to the Premier League and provided Telegraph Sport with personal photographs of the place it all started and where his mother, Jeanne Malack, worked day and night on a farm.

    “In Ziguinchor, it was playing on the streets, playing with your friends only,” said Jackson. “No club, just playing because you love the game. Maybe playing, one euro each, against each other. Having fun, playing without boots. Just barefoot or maybe you borrow someone’s boots to play.”

    Asked if he had his own boots as a child, Jackson replied: “No, boots were expensive. I played in my school shoes or with bare feet. Maybe 16 was when I got my first boots. My mum bought me them, they were cheap, not like original boots. They were second-hand boots. I didn’t play with them to start with because I was not used to them. I was used to playing with my bare feet. So it took time, it was a bit strange.

    “When I was growing up, I loved Cristiano Ronaldo. I had his name on a shirt that I always wore. Not an actual shirt because they are expensive, so you don’t buy them. But I had a shirt that I put 7, Ronaldo on with a pen. I did it myself when I was a kid.

    “Of course, I would pretend to be him, but it was difficult to watch his games because you needed to pay. We would go to my friend’s house, everybody. We would watch in a large group, never just with one person in the house. All my friends, we’d all go to one house to watch Real Madrid.”

    Jackson’s admiration of Ronaldo explains why he marked his first career hat-trick, against nine-man Tottenham Hotspur, with the Portuguese forward’s famous ‘siuuu’ celebration.

    “I always did his celebration, even when I was at Villarreal and I scored two goals,” said 22-year-old Jackson. “So when I got a hat-trick, I had to do it. Now I’ll only do it for hat-tricks, not every goal.

    “It was my first career hat-trick. It was very special. The ball is in my lounge so everyone can see it. I hope there will be many more, but the first one is always very important and I will try to keep it very safe.”

  • _handsomeblackman_@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    my initial response to the headline was “don’t worry mate, we could tell”

    but having read the interview jackson comes across like a really likeable guy, he very honest and self-aware (which is rare with footballers) and his journey to become pro is the kind of thing kids around the world dream of, so i’m rooting for him!

    hopefully he gets the time he needs to develop at chelsea, but even if doesn’t, with his attitude i’m certain he’ll fulfil his potential