Things You Didnt Know About Paulo Dybala

Paulo Dybala has long been hailed every bit Lionel Messi's successor in the Argentine setup. The 23-twelvemonth-onetime earned a €32 million transfer to Juventus at the offset of the 2015 flavour after impressing at Palermo and has not looked back since.

The fleet-footed Argentine rose to stardom after his scintillating display against Barcelona in the quarter-final of the UEFA Champions League, which literally knocked out the Blaugrana from the contest. Dybala scored a brace in the outset-leg of the tie every bit Juventus won the game 3-0 and Barcelona needed to overturn this arrears in the second leg but Messi and company fired blanks, ensuring that the Catalan outfit's Champions League journey came to an end.

Dybala has long been linked with large-money moves to Spanish giants Real Madrid and Barcelona, and while the Argentine has pledged his long-term future to the Turin giants, we all know annihilation tin happen in the world of football game and information technology seems to exist merely a matter of time before he ends up at the shores of Kingdom of spain.


#1 His nicknames

Paulo Dybala
'The Jewel'

Paulo Dybala has ii very interesting and intriguing nicknames – 'La Joya' which means 'The Jewel' and 'El pibe de la pensiĆ³n' which translates to 'The kid that creates the pension'. He got the nickname 'El pibe de la alimony' after his begetter's untimely death, which forced him to move out of his house and shift to Cordoba's guesthouse.

While the second of his nickname is a flake too complicated, the erstwhile was endowed on the Juventus striker by Argentine journalist Marcos Villalobo. The story goes that during Dybala's early on years, Villalobo was in attendance during a game in which the fleet-footed frontwards was playing and mesmerized by the exploits of the youngster he named him 'La Joya', for the striker was like a rough diamond. The nickname has subsequently been adopted by the fans and his teammates.

Dybala's sometime teammate and world'due south most expensive transfer, Paul Pogba, had a different nickname for the former Palermo star. The Manchester United midfielder used to call Dybala – Square R2 – the buttons on the playstation controller that allows 1 to plow and shoot.

#2 He could accept represented Poland or Italy but chose to represent Argentina

Paulo Dybala Lionel Messi
Dybala chose to represent Argentina

La Joya had the pick to choose between three countries to represent on the international stage – Argentina, Poland and Italian republic. Dybala's grandfather was Polish and had to flee the country during World War Ii before he settled in Argentina.

The Juventus striker had the opportunity to representGli Azzurri because his family also had roots in the country through his maternal side. Dybala'due south maternal grandmother – Da Messa – was from the Province of Naples and he has also obtained Italian citizenship.

However, the forrard chose to represent Argentina – as he feels Argentine and always dreamt of representing La Albiceleste.

#3 His footballing idols

Andrea Pirlo, Ronaldinho
Too much skills in one flick!

Dybala hails from Argentina, a nation known for producing groovy footballers and as such the Juventus striker had a lot of superstars to cull his idol from. However, rather surprisingly, his role model is not Diego Maradona or Lionel Messi – information technology is Italian legend Andrea Pirlo.

In his documentary, titled 'La Joya', Dybala revealed that Pirlo was his favourite footballer growing upwardly and was also his function model. However, Pirlo is not the merely footballer to accept influenced the fleet-footed striker, as 'La Joya' claimed that growing up he idolised the legendary Argentine midfielder, Juan Roman Riquelme along with Barcelona and Brazil legend – Ronaldinho. Now we know where those fancy tricks come from, don't we?

#4 The story behind his Juventus jersey number

Paulo Dybala
Why he chose the #21 jersey?

When Dybala arrived at Juventus from Palermo, he was used to wearing the #9 jersey. However, the jersey was occupied by Alvaro Morata in Turin and he had to choose another number. The Argentine opted for the #21 jersey, which had just been vacated by the legendary Andrea Pirlo, who had moved to the MLS. Long before Pirlo, even the nifty Zinedine Zidane had donned the #21 jersey at Juventus and thus Dybala considered information technology to exist an iconic number,

Explaining his decision to wear the #21 jersey, Dybala had said in an before interview, via Sport English: "At Instituto I e'er played with No.9. At Palermo, as well, and when I arrived here it was taken by Morata and he wanted to go along it. Pirlo had just left, an idol who was wearing [No.21]. The No.21 is like the No.x at Juve, an important number. It was a test because I wanted to exam myself confronting the weight of a number that represents so many thins here."

#5 The reason behind his celebration – Dybalamask

Paulo Dybala mask celebration
The Dybalamask

Dybala celebrates his goals in 2 ways. The first, a Messiesque celebration with two fingers pointing towards the sky, which is his way of dedicating his goals to his late father Adolfo Dybala – who lost his battle against Pancreatic cancer when Dybala was young. However, it is his 2d commemoration which has caught the eye of the world – the 'Dybalamask'.

When he dons the Dybalamask, he covers his face – below the nose – with his hands in a style which is alike to what a mask does. So what exactly does the commemoration hateful? Well, we will leave it for the Argentine to explicate: "Dybalamask is really simple: it'southward the mask of a gladiator! When we struggle, sometimes nosotros must wearable our warrior mask to exist stronger, without losing our smile and kindness!"

#6 Like Lionel Messi, Dybala had a national team full debut to forget

Paulo Dybala
Paulo Dybala in tears after getting sent off in his kickoff start for Argentina

We all know Lionel Messi was sent off within seconds of making his La Albiceleste debut back in 2005 but nearly eleven years after Paulo Dybala faced a similar state of affairs. In a 2018 World Cup qualifier against Uruguay – which too marked the return of Messi from retirement – Dybala, making his first start for his country, was sent off towards the finish of the first half.

The Argentine was booked first in the 29th minute and and then in the 45thursday infinitesimal. The then 22-yr-old Dybala immediately broke into tears and was comfortless equally he trudged off the pitch. It took some calming words from the v-fourth dimension Ballon d'Or winner to assistance Dybala get over the setback.

Speaking about the incident he had said: "Leo Messi told me to exist at-home, that these things happen, that information technology was not my fault but the referee'due south. I felt practiced, comfy playing with Messi. We had spoken in training about how I was going to play, depending where Leo was positioned, I would change with him. If he was in the middle."

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Source: https://www.sportskeeda.com/football/6-interesting-things-you-didnt-know-about-paulo-dybala

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