“You’ll explode” – Malmo coach on New Sunderland goalkeeper

“You’ll explode” – Malmo coach on New Sunderland goalkeeper

What’s his story in Malmö?

Matt, thanks for joining us. You are a former pro goalkeeper, now coaching U19 and U17 keepers at the Malmö FF academy, as well as providing goalkeeping analysis for The Athletic. Melker Elberg is someone you know outside of day-to-day training — what’s his story in Malmö and how has this rapid rise happened over the last 12 months?

Matt Piedrowski: His story is just incredible. He has been part of the first team for the past few years but has been loaned out to lower-league clubs, where he hasn’t gotten much game time – that’s unusual because you send someone out on loan. Malmo always believed in him, but the club has really high standards: win the championship every year, go to Europe. It is difficult for a young person to enter.

This year, Ricardo Friedrich was No. 1 at the start (after Johan Dahlin’s injury — a club legend with seven or eight titles). Melker was originally third choice, but the team struggled, Ricciardo disagreed, and Melker was performing in training. The club’s hand was forced—they gave him a run. He played seven Allsvenskan games and kept five clean sheets. Then Robin Olsen came back, but even he didn’t convince everyone, and fans were saying, ‘Play the young man – he’s the future.’ He also got five games in Europe and did an incredible job. The rise has been meteoric.

To get European games so quickly shows real confidence. What stands out about his mindset?

Matt: This is a high level for Malmö – they dominate domestically and want to make a name for themselves in Europe. When things go wrong, the young take over and Melkar takes full control. He is brave, bounces back from mistakes and never gets discouraged, even when experienced guys play ahead.

The first-team goalkeeper coach always said he never complained – just worked hard. He is humble, reflective, and confident, but not arrogant. That calms him down on the field.

Off it, he calmed down; on it, he controls and organises.

With just 14 senior games for Malmö (seven leagues, five Europa Leagues, and two cups), does the move surprise you?

Matt: Football moves fast. Clubs have rosters of young players; once he played and performed in quality matches — including in Europe — he grew rapidly. At 22 years old, it’s an incredible experience in a short amount of time. In terms of numbers, it’s crazy – he has limited games – but Sunderland sees potential.

It’s the most expensive goalkeeper sale from Allsvenskan of all time, but it’s peanuts for Sunderland. It’s smart business: develop him, and he can play in the Premier League or be sold for a profit.

Style-orientated? Comparisons to Robin Roff seem common — aggressive, ball-playing, but commanding...

Matt: Melker himself says he is aggressive and aggressive. He takes chances in build-ups and crosses and has modern positioning. He’s good on the ball, comfortable short/medium/long, but can be risky – the criticism is that he sometimes tries too hard. But even after the early mistakes, he didn’t change; he continued.

I like aggressive guys – they’re easier to reel in than push a timid one. He has explosive athleticism, is strong and covers the corners superbly. It adapts to game changes: a hybrid of ball play and dominating off the line in quick/direct play. He shares similarities with players such as Roefs and Verbruggen.

How is it viewed in Sweden/Malmö? And for the academy?

Matt: As a huge success story, the transfer is a huge step up to the Premier League for him.

Malmö benefits from a record fee and retains Robin Olsen. It is seen as positive; he is now seen as a future national team component. For the academy guys (he joined us at 16 as a product), it’s inspiring. Malmö make excellent defenders but are difficult to break down. He was the first youngster to take the opportunity and deliver.

This demonstrates that perseverance and taking calculated risks can lead to success.

When he comes to Light Academy, what should fans expect? He replaces Patterson in the group and adds competition behind Rofes.

Matt: He’ll be motivated to impress – he’s a fighter and never complains. He is quiet off the field but dominant in training, shouting, organising and making mad saves. It’s a tough transition at a high level, but he’ll adapt – he’s done it before. It is low-risk but with high reward and huge potential.

In the next 18 months, what do you want to see?

Matt: Short term: Settle in England, get comfortable with teammates/staff/expectations. Then perform when the opportunity arises, more than likely in the first cup.

The pressure at Malmö was intense, but he thrived. He will rise to the challenge of the Premier League.

For fans not quite sure about it, what do you say?

Matt: I understand the short-term scepticism, but look 18 months ahead – it may be an afterthought. See him train if you can; you will be physically and mentally devastated. He got the level.

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