Ademola Lookman was brutally censured by his own manager after missing a penalty for Atalanta on Tuesday night as they crashed out of the Champions League.
The striker scored within 42 seconds of being introduced on his return from injury in the second half but was unable to reverse the slide.
After losing 2-1 in Belgium, Atalanta lost 3-1 to Club Bruges on the night to cap off a damning evening for Italian football, with AC Milan also exiting to Feyenoord.
In the 61st minute, Lookman had the opportunity to draw another goal back from the penalty spot.
However, former Liverpool goalkeeper Simon Mignolet saved his effort, which was struck well but quite centrally. At full time, Atalanta boss Gian Piero Gasperini issued a startlingly harsh put-down.
'Ademola Lookman is one of the worst penalty takers I’ve ever seen,' said the veteran manager.
'He wanted to take the penalty after scoring a goal, he took the ball despite (Mateo) Retegui and (Charles) De Keteleare available to take it… I didn’t like what Lookman did.
'Lookman wasn't supposed to take the penalty. Even in training he doesn’t have a good rate of scoring from the spot.'
Fulham fans with a decent memory might be inclined to agree with Gasperini. In November 2020, the forward had a chance to level in the 98th minute against West Ham, but dinked a limp panenka into the hands of Lukasz Fabianski, later admitting his devastation.
Retegui is Atalanta's regular penalty taker, having converted two of his three spot-kicks in Serie A this campaign, but Lookman has also taken and scored one.
He scored a hat-trick in last season's Europa League final triumph against Bayer Leverkusen and is widely acknowledged as one of the brightest sparks in the team.
The Nigerian had missed their last four games due to a knee injury but was brought on at half-time and scored within 42 seconds to give the Italians a glimmer of hope.
He is having another outstanding season for La Dea, having scored 15 goals and made seven assists.
Despite another Champions League disappointment, they are in with a shout for the Serie A title, sitting third and five points behind Napoli.
Their defeat by Bruges was marred by another bizarre moment when captain Rafael Toloi was sent off after trying to throw the ball at his opponent, only to slip over.
In the final moment of his side's Champions League clash with Club Brugge - which the Belgian side won 5-2 on aggregate - the defender clashed with Maxim De Cuyper.
In a heated moment, Toloi attempted to throw the ball at the Brugge defender, who had his back turned, but instead fell over as the ball slipped out of his grasp.
He quickly got back to his feet and charged at De Cuyper, barging him from behind before bundling both himself and the Brugge player onto the floor.
Referee Felix Zwayer quickly brandished a red card for the Atalanta skipper, who had to be held back by teammates as he remonstrated with the official.
The incident occurred in the final moments of the match, with the score already settled, meaning his dismissal had little effect on the outcome of the match.
Viucdekrz
114
One the worst comments I have ever heard from a manager too 😂
kocaikltuy
23
you might call the coach worst but the truth is he knows he's players ability and lookman shouldn't have attempted the spot kick in a crucial moment knowing he's conversion rate is poor
AUWALMUSA3132
9
One the worst comments I have ever heard from a manager too 😂
it was greed from lookman. some players are just not good in pk and they too know it and that's why when it's time for pk the best players for it are chosen and that doesn't mean they are the best in the team
Sanusimustapha90
8
you might call the coach worst but the truth is he knows he's players ability and lookman shouldn't have attempted the spot kick in a crucial moment knowing he's conversion rate is poor
I understand your point, but you don't sell out your star player publicly like that just because he misses a penalty, not even someone who we all know has been giving his best on the field, best players like Messi and Ronaldo also miss penalties.