"She gave him a rose, and he gave her one back. His face lit up and she started a conversation with him," Glen added.
"He had a strong mentality but he's a really nice guy. He always worked hard and had the idea of being a top player, training every day. He wanted to prove people wrong."Dennis Lawrence, who was part of Mark Robins' backroom staff at Coventry when Gyokeres was there, says: "I had to laugh the other day when I saw he scored a free-kick for Sporting. At Coventry, he would try free-kicks [in training] and I would say, 'No, you're not on free-kicks, Viktor'.
"But his mentality is, 'no, I know I can do this.'"And he's scoring these incredible free-kicks now. He's got that ability to focus on and achieve anything he wants."It all started on the gravel pitches of his local grassroots club in Stockholm, IFK Aspudden-Tellus. Gyokeres was five at the time and he credits his father, Stefan, in his development.
"Making that journey together helped me a lot. We'd share good and bad moments," says Gyokeres, who has since gone on to make a big impression - on and off the pitch.Recently he was the cover star for Vogue Scandinavia, who described the player as Swedish football's "pride and glory".
Take a glance at the list of leading goalscorers in Europe's top leagues in 2024-25 and the usual suspects are there.
Real Madrid's Kylian Mbappe managed 31 in his debut season in La Liga, Mohamed Salah contributed 29 goals as Liverpool claimed the Premier League crown, while Robert Lewandowski finished on 27 during Barcelona's title-winning season - one more than England captain Harry Kane's tally for Bayern Munich.James Young, 81, was travelling home from a holiday on the Greek island of Rhodes with his wife when he fell about 5ft while being transported on an airport ambulift.
Mr Young was said to have landed "on his hands and knees" and was rushed to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh for treatment following the fall on 28 November 2023.Edinburgh Airport said it accepted the decision of the court and offered "sincere condolences" to Mr Young's family.
He suffered a punctured lung, spine fractures and a fractured pelvis as well as a flail chest, where multiple broken ribs cause the chest wall to become unstable and interfere with breathing.Mr Young, from Edinburgh, suffered a heart attack two days later and clinicians concluded "the totality of his injuries and medical condition were not survivable".