Remember when they said Harry Kane couldn't win trophies? Remember when they questioned whether he could score in big games? Remember when people wondered if he'd succeed in the Bundesliga?
Well, the England captain just equaled Robert Lewandowski's record for most goals in a single season for Bayern Munich. And folks, he's still got three games left to play.
Let me tell you something about Harry Kane - this is a world-class striker in his absolute prime, rewriting history books in Germany while making it look easy.
According to Score90, Kane has matched Lewandowski's single-season mark for Bayern Munich. That's not just any record - that's matching one of the greatest goal scorers in European football history.
And he's done it in his first season with the club.
Think about what that means. Kane left Tottenham after years of carrying that team on his back, hearing constant criticism about his trophy cabinet. He moved to Germany, adapted to a new league, a new system, a new language, a new culture - and immediately started breaking records.
This is what elite players do. They don't make excuses. They don't wait for perfect conditions. They show up and perform, no matter where they are or what league they're playing in.
The Bundesliga is supposed to be easier to score in, right? That's what the critics say. But if it's so easy, why doesn't everyone match Lewandowski's records? Why doesn't every striker who moves to Germany immediately start banging in goals like they're playing FIFA?
Because it's not easy. It's never easy at this level. And Kane has done it by being exactly what he's always been - a clinical finisher who shows up when it matters.
With three games left in the season, Kane has a chance to not just equal Lewandowski's record, but break it. To make it his own. To prove once and for all that he's not just one of the best strikers in England - he's one of the best in the world, period.
The trophy argument about Kane is over, by the way. He's won silverware with Bayern. The "can't score in big games" argument is over - just watch his Champions League performances. The "can't do it outside England" argument? Dead and buried.
What we're watching is a striker at the peak of his powers, doing what great strikers do - putting the ball in the back of the net, over and over and over again.
Three games to go. One record within reach. And Harry Kane showing everyone who ever doubted him exactly what he's capable of.
That's what sports is all about, folks. Proving the doubters wrong, one goal at a time.
