“I think I’m like wine. The older I get, the better I get.”
Zlatan Ibrahimovic has always had plenty to say but part of what makes him so special is his ability to back up even the boldest, self-aggrandising statements with action.
It is something he has continued with unexpected regularity during a 2020-21 season that has seen him score 14 goals in just 12 league games to spearhead AC Milan’s own unlikely challenge at the top of Serie A – all at the age of 39.
His evergreen efforts have also seen him enter an exclusive group, as the scorer of 500 club career goals.
This weekend, the Swedish striker will be firmly in the spotlight, for good reasons and bad (more on that in a bit), as AC face Inter in a Milan derby that could well help shape the narrative of the current Italian top-flight title race.
‘Dear Los Angeles, you’re welcome’
To get the full context behind Ibrahimovic’s current European renaissance, we must understand the journey he has undertaken in recent years.
The cruciate ligament injury he suffered in his second season at Manchester United in April 2017 was one that can spell the end for players in their prime, never mind their mid 30s, but the Swede battled back.
Moving to America to join US side LA Galaxy was seen by some as a slip into semi-retirement ahead of a well-earned shift into the full thing but 53 goals and a place in the MLS best XI two years running disproved that.
Then came the return to AC Milan, for whom he scored 42 times in 61 league games to inspire to an 18th Serie A title in 2011 and second-place finish the year after.
Eight years later, he was re-joining a very different Rossoneri – a fallen, faltering one. Surely this was a move based on romance as opposed to realism? Nope.
He joined with the club floundering in 11th in Serie A. Ten goals in 16 starts later they had finished sixth and qualified for Europe.
In typically forthright style, he declared that Milan would have won the league had he played the entire season, adding that he was “just warming up”.
True to form, he wasn’t kidding.
‘We are all players, some better than others’
There is, of course, another reason many eyes will be on Ibrahimovic during the Milan derby and that is his one major blot in his copybook for this season, which came the last time the Milan sides met.
Both he and Romelu Lukaku had scored for their respective sides as January’s Coppa Italia stood at 1-1 just before the hour mark.
A clash between the pair, along with some unsavoury comments – which included Ibrahimovic calling his ex-Manchester United team-mate a “little donkey” – earned both players a booking, with Ibrahimovic later sent off for a second yellow card.
Christian Eriksen scored a winner for Inter in extra time.
On Sunday, the red and black side of Milan will be hoping it is only the boots of their star man doing the talking.