Kalulu Own Goal: Juventus vs Man City – Match Highlights


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Bek Juventus, Pierre Aboutbreaking into the goal alone when facing Manchester City Of Club World Cup 2025. The own goal he made was very silly.

Juventus are battered on the last matchday of the Group G of the Club World Cup. The Old Lady was shaken by Manchester City 5-2 at the Camping World Stadium on Friday (6/27/2025) early morning hrs.

Five goals lodged in the goal of Juventus were printed by different players. One of them was made by Kalulu which made the own goal in the 26th minute.

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Own Goal Kalulu began with the movement of the ball by Man City on the left side of the Juventus defense. The ball was then sent Matheus Nunes to the front of the goal with a cross.

Nunes ball ball does not lead to Man City players in the penalty box. The ball is precisely towards Kalulu which is reflexively kicking with the intention of sweeping the ball.

Instead of sweeping the ball out, Kalulu actually pointed the ball into his own goal. The French defender looks like scoring a Tap-in goal from Matheus Nunes bait, one silly thing for a defender.

Kalulu was very deeply regretting her mistake that led to the bobbol of the Juventus goal. Despite scoring own goal, the 25 -year -old player is still played by the coach Igor Tudor Until the end of the match.

Tudor did not blame Kalulu who broke into his own goal. For him this defeat was not because of the mistake of just one player, but the amount of difference between his team and Man City.

“Manchester City is too tough for us. Congratulations to them, this is a bad result and we don’t like it,” Tudor said after the match Juventus vs Man Cityreported from Football Italia.

“They have qualities, characters, and everything that is extraordinary. We want to move forward, but we cannot win the ball from them,” he added.

“Then we play too deep and they score goals. Right now, they are at a different level from us,” he said.

(bay/MRP)

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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