Edin Terzić Suddenly in Spotlight as Dortmund Coach

Edin Terzić. (Getty Images)
Edin Terzić. (Getty Images)
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Edin Terzić Suddenly in Spotlight as Dortmund Coach

Edin Terzić. (Getty Images)
Edin Terzić. (Getty Images)

Bayern Munich laid the template last season, and Borussia Dortmund wants to follow it this season.

When Bayern fired Niko Kovač last year after 10 league matches, his replacement was an assistant coach that led the team to a Champions League, Bundesliga and German Cup treble.

Dortmund fired Lucien Favre on Sunday after a 5-1 loss to Stuttgart in the 11th round the day before. His replacement, assistant coach Edin Terzić, will get his first chance to put the team on the right track on Tuesday against Werder Bremen.

“It’s an unbelievable situation. I was produced by this club,” Terzić said Monday, recalling his first visit to the team's stadium when he was 9 years old. “It was clear then for whom my heart was beating. I never dared dreaming of becoming head coach.”

Terzić has a good reputation from his work as Favre’s assistant since 2018. The 38-year-old Terzić was a Dortmund youth coach and scout from 2010-13, reporting to then-coach Jürgen Klopp, and he later worked as an assistant to Slaven Bilić during the Croat's stints as coach of Turkish team Beşiktaş and Premier League club West Ham.

“We’ve gotten to know him as a proven expert who has a great feeling for working with the guys and who also brings the emotion that Borussia Dortmund always needs on the day,” Dortmund sporting director Michael Zorc said.

Dortmund has gone three matches without a victory and is already six points behind surprise league leader Bayer Leverkusen.

Under Favre, Dortmund routinely fell short when challenging Bayern in the Bundesliga. The team squandered a nine-point lead in 2018-19, then finished runner-up again last season — 13 points behind Bayern after another poor finish.

Dortmund could only win the less-important German Super Cup — traditionally a ceremonial curtain raiser for the season — under Favre in 2019.

Terzić brings a very different coaching style.

“To sum it up quickly, I’m always in favor of scoring one more goal than the opposition,” he joked.

Favre sometimes faced criticism for not responding quickly when changes were needed during a game. His quiet manner also gave the impression he was somehow aloof to what was happening on the field.

Terzić is more directly involved. He favors an aggressive game from his team, pressuring opponents into losing possession, closing down space and combining quickly to open opposing defenses.

“You have to fill a certain role as a coach and emotion is part of that,” Terzić said. “I spoke with the team yesterday. It was important that they already identified issues that need to be worked on.”

Dortmund has a plethora of attacking talent like Marco Reus, Erling Haaland, Thorgan Hazard, Jadon Sancho, Julian Brandt, Gio Reyna and Youssoufa Moukoko, who only became eligible to join the team in November when he turned 16.

Only Reyna impressed against Stuttgart, however. Haaland is injured and out until at least January, and the others appear to be struggling with confidence.

“The loss on Saturday was painful. But now we have to move on, and quickly,” Terzić said. “We also saw a lot of positive things lately. We have to have the belief to bring them back and show them again.”

Terzić won’t have much time to settle into his new role. After Tuesday’s trip to Bremen, Dortmund visits Union Berlin — which held Bayern to a 1-1 draw on Saturday — before a trip to face Eintracht Braunschweig in the German Cup on Dec. 22.

Terzić will also be judged on his success in the Champions League, where Dortmund was drawn to face Sevilla in the last 16. Those games are scheduled for Feb. 17 and March 3.

“We’re happy with the task but there are still a lot of other issues to keep us busy before then,” Terzić said of the draw.

Borussia Mönchengladbach coach Marco Rose is reportedly a candidate to take over next season.

“The contract with Edin lasts until summer 2021 for now,” Zorc said. “That’s a long way, at least 26 competitive games. The main focus is on the here and now, to get the team back on the right path.”



Netherlands into Euro 2024 Semifinal against England after Beating Türkiye

Türkiye’s forward #21 Baris Alper Yilmaz reacts as Netherlands' players celebrate after the UEFA Euro 2024 quarterfinal football match between the Netherlands and Türkiye at the Olympiastadion Berlin in Berlin on July 6, 2024. (AFP)
Türkiye’s forward #21 Baris Alper Yilmaz reacts as Netherlands' players celebrate after the UEFA Euro 2024 quarterfinal football match between the Netherlands and Türkiye at the Olympiastadion Berlin in Berlin on July 6, 2024. (AFP)
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Netherlands into Euro 2024 Semifinal against England after Beating Türkiye

Türkiye’s forward #21 Baris Alper Yilmaz reacts as Netherlands' players celebrate after the UEFA Euro 2024 quarterfinal football match between the Netherlands and Türkiye at the Olympiastadion Berlin in Berlin on July 6, 2024. (AFP)
Türkiye’s forward #21 Baris Alper Yilmaz reacts as Netherlands' players celebrate after the UEFA Euro 2024 quarterfinal football match between the Netherlands and Türkiye at the Olympiastadion Berlin in Berlin on July 6, 2024. (AFP)

The Netherlands came from behind to beat Türkiye 2-1 on Saturday and book its place in the European Championship semifinals.

An own goal from Mert Muldur in the 76th minute, only six after Stefan De Vrij canceled Samet Akaydin’s first-half header for Türkiye, was enough for the Dutch in the last of the quarterfinals.

The Netherlands will face England in the second semifinal in Dortmund on Wednesday. Spain faces France in the first on Tuesday.

Türkiye was without defender Merih Demiral, who was suspended for two matches by UEFA for making a nationalistic hand gesture after scoring in Tuesday’s 2-1 win over Austria. The gesture is used by Turkish nationalists and associated with an ultra-nationalist group.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was at the game after he changed his plans because of the diplomatic row with Germany over Demiral's gesture.

German interior minister Nancy Faeser had said Demiral used his celebration “as a platform for racism” and federal minister Cem Özdemir, a German politician of Turkish descent, said the gesture “stands for terror, fascism.”

Many Turkish fans made the gesture on their way to Berlin’s Olympiastadion, and again during Türkiye’s national anthem before the game.

The Dutch made a better start, but Türkiye’s defenders dug in to limit the impact of Cody Gapko, Xavi Simons and Memphis Depay. Türkiye lined up with five at the back without the ball, as it had in the win against Austria, and gradually improved.

Akaydin rewarded a period of Turkish pressure by scoring in the 35th. Arda Guler delivered a butter-soft cross for the defender to head in off the underside of the crossbar.

It set off wild celebrations among Türkiye’s coaching staff and fans. Guler was swamped in the coaching area with hugs, while fans in the west end of the stadium set off flares. Most stayed standing after the goal.

Turkish supporters greatly outnumbered their orange-clad counterparts in a city that’s home to a large community of people with Turkish roots. Most are descendants of Turkish “guest workers” who arrived in what was West Germany to help rebuild the post-war economy.

Germany is home to some 3 million Turks or people with Turkish roots, making them the country’s largest ethnic minority, and the team has enjoyed fevered support at Euro 2024.

The Dutch pushed for an equalizer before the break to a chorus of whistles.

Dutch coach Ronald Koeman, who won Euro ’88 as a player with the Netherlands, reacted at the break by sending on big forward Wout Weghorst for Steven Bergwijn.

Weghorst’s presence gave the Dutch wingers a target, leading to a period of intense pressure.

Guler hit the post with a free kick, but it was an isolated effort as Dutch pressure continued.

It finally paid off in the 70th when De Vrij was left free to head in Depay’s cross.

Suddenly the Dutch supporters could be heard again, and they were cheering again six minutes later when Gapko forced the own goal from Muldur by getting in front of the defender to Denzel Dumfries’ low cross.