Erling Haaland: Has the Manchester City star underperformed in 2024/25?
When Erling Haaland smashed 36 goals in his debut Premier League season, it felt like we were witnessing a force of nature, a modern-day juggernaut who could bend defences to his will. By the time the confetti fell on Manchester Cityโs historic treble, Haaland was not just Cityโs golden boy but the face of European footballโs next era.
Fast forward to the 2024/25 season, and something feels slightly off. Heโs still scoring, sure,ย 21 Premier League goals and 30 across all competitions are numbers most strikers would dream of. But with Haaland, the bar is set far higher. So, has he underperformed? It depends on how you define โperformanceโ and what you choose to ignore.
Still Scoring, but Less Scary?
Letโs get this out of the way first: Haaland hasnโt been bad in the Premier League this season. But he also hasnโt been โthatโ Haaland. You know, the one who had pundits scrambling for new adjectives weekly. The goal count is solid, but itโs dipped. And more importantly, the fear factor seems to have faded for a while, not completely, but enough to give defenders more hope.
Earlier in the season, he went through a rare five-game drought in the league. For most strikers, thatโs just football. For Haaland, itโs headline news. His movement in the box still creates space, but the ruthlessness, the ruthless finishing that defined his early City days, has felt patchy.
Injuries and Rust

One big reason for that? He picked up the ankle injury in March. Haaland missed key fixtures, including Cityโs tricky Champions League ties and a few crunch Premier League games. It wasnโt just the time out, but the rust he showed upon return. In a frustrating 0-0 draw against Southampton, he looked off the pace, disconnected from the rhythm of Cityโs attack.
The cracks show more clearly when heโs not fully fit, mainly because his game doesnโt rely on intricate link-up or drifting between lines. Heโs a finisher. It can be a long night if heโs not getting service or his touch is slightly off. He’s not a Sergio Aguero who can build attacks on his own.
Guardiolaโs Dilemma
Pep Guardiolaโs tactical evolution since Haalandโs arrival has been fascinating and occasionally problematic. Thereโs no denying that Haaland changes the way City plays. His presence forces the ball forward more directly, reducing the free-flowing, position-swapping chaos that made City so tricky to pin down.
Some fans and pundits have whispered it for months: Does City look better without Haaland? Itโs not a wild idea,ย just look at how they clicked during his injury spell last season. But letโs be fair, this isnโt about better or worse. Itโs about different. Guardiola has spent the season balancing Haalandโs raw power and the teamโs intricate style. And thatโs no easy task.
Missing KDB Hurts
Letโs also consider the service. Kevin De Bruyne, Cityโs architect-in-chief, missed a massive chunk of the season. Without him, Haalandโs supply line was, at best, inconsistent. Phil Foden has been electric, but heโs more of a scorer than a supplier.ย
Bernardo Silva is class, but not always in the final third, and has significantly regressed. The electric wing play of Jeremy Doku or Savinho does bring a lot of flair, but it doesnโt bring De Bruyneโs vision or timing. Without that perfect pass weight or that early cross into space, Haaland has often looked like a sports car without a driver: fast, furious, but stranded.
The Expectation Problem
Perhaps the biggest issue with Haalandโs season is not his actual performance but the expectations surrounding it. The man scored so many goals so quickly that even a slight dip feels like failure. In truth, heโs operating at a high level, just not a historic one. The football world has a short memory and a long list of demands.
Thereโs also a tactical trade-off that fans are starting to notice. When Haaland plays, City sometimes loses a bit of midfield control. Opponents find ways to hurt City in transition when he doesnโt track back or press with the same intensity as others. Itโs subtle, but those little gaps matter in a league as unforgiving as this.
Final Thoughts
It depends on how you look at it. If you compare Haaland to every other striker in Europe, then no, heโs still elite. If you compare him to peak Haaland, thereโs been a dip. But football isnโt always about numbers. Itโs about context. Injuries, tactical shifts, missing teammates, and the mental strain of constantly being expected to perform at an outrageous level all play a role. Erling Haaland hasnโt been bad this season. He hasnโt even been average. But he has looked more human. And maybe thatโs what surprises us most.
