Mohamed Sabra or the ascent of a soccer player

Get to know Mohamed Sabra and some of his soccer achievements? Mohamed Sabra lives in Australia and is a soccer player. He likes to watch the professional leagues in England, Spain, Germany.

Mohamed Sabra about the top soccer players: The 2019 Kopa Trophy winner had a fiery race and achieved accomplishments that the defenders shouldn’t. De Ligt is definitely looking to win Serie A in his first season in the league. If he didn’t make this list I wonder who else would have. Mohamed Salah has been in a tough race since arriving in Liverpool. He led Liverpool to the Champions League final in the 2017/18 season, but a shoulder injury in the first half meant he saw his team lose on the side-lines. However, he returned in shape to lead the men in red to another Champions League final they had won in the 2018/19 season. He was also the central figure of the Liverpool team this season when they were aiming for a continental double that they were just missing.

Mohamed Sabra on the top soccer players and clubs : Robert Lewandowski is a striker from a bygone era in the sense that, well, he’s a striker. In a modern era of wide forwards, false nines and trequartistas, sometimes you just need a bloke who is really, really good at bursting nets. The Polish superstar is the man you want in a one-on-one situation, as clinical as they come, ruthless, composed and reliable. He’s strong too, Lewandowski has led the line as a lone wolf for years and is rarely outmuscled or isolated. He will go down as one of the most under-appreciated talents of the last decade, perhaps his routine solitary goal in every game and pragmatic efficiency make him ‘boring’ compared to the other flair players on this list? However he does it, Lewandowksi should be showered with universal praise for 231 goals in 276 games in all competitions for Bayern, including 40 goals in 34 games during 2019/20. He’s three goals short of his best ever season tally… having played 13 games less.

If Kevin De Bruyne were a car, he’d be a Rolls Royce Phantom. Classy, elegant, and luxurious, but with a powerful 450 bhp engine hidden away underneath its hood. The Belgian star plays the game effortlessly, but to devastating effect. His range of passing is second to none, and, when combined with his sublime first touch and acute awareness of what’s happening around him, it means he can dictate any game. The 28-year-old’s ability to drift past defenders at the drop of a shoulder also evokes memories of a prime Zinedine Zidane.

Mohamed Sabra about top Manchester United players : Old Trafford has seen countless greats come and go, their brilliance living long in the memory. In 50th place is centre-forward Stuart Pearson, who scored 66 goals in 180 appearances for Manchester United in his five years at the club. The technically-gifted Englishman was a popular player at Old Trafford, utilising his intelligent movement to get into excellent goal-scoring positions. David Herd may not have been selected by Matt Busby for the European Cup final in 1968, but he was a vastly-underrated player. The Scotsman was born to find the back of the net, scoring almost 150 goals for the side in a seven-year stint.