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Jurgen Klopp - Interesting article

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peekay

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It's too early to tell whether Jürgen Klopp can follow in the footsteps of Bayern manager Louis van Gaal and win the Bundesliga championship this season. But the 43-year-old Klopp is certainly on course to have a similarly positive impact as the Dutchman had on the German national team.

Van Gaal helped Jogi Löw's cause by realizing the full central midfield potential of Bastian Schweinsteiger as well as nurturing the talents of Holger Badstuber and Thomas Müller. Klopp's great work at Bundesliga leader Dortmund has now ushered in the next wave of young internationals. Center back Mats Hummels, 21; left back Marcel Schmelzer, 22; and midfielders Kevin Großkreutz, 22, and Mario Götze, 18, have all been called up for Germany's friendly game against Sweden next week.

"It's a great testament to the development of each one of them, but also to that of Borussia Dortmund as a whole," sporting director Michael Zorc said.

Zorc might have thrown Klopp's name in with the accolades, too. Then again, it wasn't really necessary. Everybody acknowledges that Borussia owes its re-emergence to the man with the floppy haircut. Player by player, Dortmund is good, but it shouldn't be quite good enough to lead the table with nine victories in 11 games. Its bespectacled, all-action sideline blusterer ("I'm shocked sometimes, looking at myself on television," he said) clearly makes the difference.

When you see him on the touchline in his black tracksuit, all wired up, punching the air and jumping around like a hyperactive 6-year-old on a sugar rush in Disneyland, it's easy to think of him as purely a "motivational coach," a kind of cross between Martin O'Neill and Jürgen Klinsmann. The reality, however, is much more flattering. Klopp not only can read a mean game -- he gave TV punditry a good name from 2005 to 2008, bringing tactical analysis to the masses -- but also write one. He established little Mainz 05 in the top flight with "concept football" (thoroughly drilled, collective movement at high tempo) and is now reaping greater rewards, thanks to Borussia's superior squad.

Against his former club 10 days ago, Klopp employed an unusual 4-3-2-1 formation that he said the team had practiced for only 45 minutes. His players, though, were tactically sophisticated enough to deal with the change and, as he put it, "greedy" enough to fight Mainz's pacey pressing game with even more pacey pressing. Dortmund won 2-0 to regain the top spot.

Klopp's also put "Life-Kinetik" on the curriculum, exercises in coordination and movement. "It doesn't look like it has anything to do with football," he explained, "but it teaches you the connection between awareness and motion sequences, between brain and body. You can train these things."


If the relationship between manager and his young team (average age: just over 23) is a little reminiscent of that of very driven, ambitious teacher and his eager pupils, that's probably no coincidence. Klopp was brought up by an ultracompetitive father who taught the young boy to ski and play tennis and football -- the hard way.

"He would outrun me on the football pitch or simply ski down the hill even though I was a novice," Klopp told the German newspaper Die Zeit last year. "He would show no mercy, and never let me win."

Like many modern coaches of a similar ilk, Klopp never scaled real heights as a player. He was only a better-than-average pro at Mainz, in the second division. He obviously shares the "greed" he keeps referring to with his charges; few Bundesliga coaches have looked more determined in recent years. Winning might be everything to him, but Klopp is clearly someone who thinks beyond the 90 minutes, too. Asked about the taboo subject of homosexual footballers, Klopp said he would welcome them in his team.

"If they're good, they will play. If not, they won't," he said. "It's as simple as that. There might be some daft comments in the showers and jokes in the changing room, but it would soon become normal and accepted by the players. It will be like four at the back in Germany. At first, people didn't want it and made silly comments, but now it has become the norm."

His sense of humor can verge on the vulgar but he doesn't take himself too seriously. In the wake of Dortmund's 4-0 win at Hannover on Sunday, Klopp was happy to answer a series of satirical questions about "Dortmund's crisis" on German television.

"Neck to neck with teams like Mainz and Eintracht Frankfurt after 11 games -- that's not what we want," he deadpanned. "We have problems, so many problems. I'm not sure I'm still the right manager. The team seems to play to get rid of me."

The opposite is true. In fact, Dortmund will have to continue to play extremely well if it is to keep him around in the coming years: There are persistent rumors that "Kloppo" might one day follow van Gaal in yet another way -- onto the Bayern Munich bench.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/raphael_honigstein/11/11/klopp/index.html#ixzz15xX7wQ2p

klopp-298.jpg
 
Good to see Dortmund doing very well this season... finally getting their shit together.

Klopp has done some shrewd business, most notably signing Shinji Kagawa for a mere 300,000 pounds - and is now turning out to be one hell of a striker.

Kagawa, Barrios, and Subotic - I'd take any of these in a heartbeat.
 
[quote author=Roopy link=topic=42884.msg1222134#msg1222134 date=1290402024]
Good to see Dortmund doing very well this season... finally getting their shit together.

Klopp has done some shrewd business, most notably signing Shinji Kagawa for a mere 300,000 pounds - and is now turning out to be one hell of a striker.

Kagawa, Barrios, and Subotic - I'd take any of these in a heartbeat.
[/quote]

Do you follow Bundesliga Roopy? What happened to Bayern. They are I think 14 points of the first place.
 
[quote author=peekay link=topic=42884.msg1222137#msg1222137 date=1290402394]
[quote author=Roopy link=topic=42884.msg1222134#msg1222134 date=1290402024]
Good to see Dortmund doing very well this season... finally getting their shit together.

Klopp has done some shrewd business, most notably signing Shinji Kagawa for a mere 300,000 pounds - and is now turning out to be one hell of a striker.

Kagawa, Barrios, and Subotic - I'd take any of these in a heartbeat.
[/quote]

Do you follow Bundesliga Roopy? What happened to Bayern. They are I think 14 points of the first place.
[/quote]

It's collection of things:

1. Shit defence

Van Buyten and Badstuber have been suspect on too many occasions this season. They can do the job defensively - they have the ability to do the job in the league - but they can't play in accordance with Van Gaal's tactics.

They really should have gone out and signed a strong centre back in the off season - I'm pretty sure Nerlinger even came out and said a centre back was a MUST - but it never eventuated.

In my opinion, Bayern should have sold Ribery in the summer - because I seriously doubt they'll get the big money offers that were once being rumoured - and use those fund to invest in a defence.

And Demichelis is unhappy and wants to leave - so now they'll have to go out and sign a full-back too.

Furthermore, Tymoshuk has been used as a centre back at times this season - pretty much sums it up.

2. Injuries

Ribery, Robben, Van Bommel, Olic, Breno, Contento ...

With injuries to players like that, Van Gaal has to turn to mediocre players like Hamit Altintop - not sure how he is still at Bayern!

3. Hoeness & Van Gaal

Acting like little bitches with their feud. Publicly they have said they patched things up, but its clearly bullshit.

4. KVNB

And with all these things going on - instead of board looking at the squad and situation - they've put most of the blame for their problems on the KNVB and the dispute over Robben and Van Bommel.
 
[quote author=Roopy link=topic=42884.msg1222134#msg1222134 date=1290402024]
Good to see Dortmund doing very well this season... finally getting their shit together.

Klopp has done some shrewd business, most notably signing Shinji Kagawa for a mere 300,000 pounds - and is now turning out to be one hell of a striker.

Kagawa, Barrios, and Subotic - I'd take any of these in a heartbeat.
[/quote]

I havent seen them too much so I will not put my personal view on them fitting in here. But in general for any young (or older for that matter) player, it is important with confidence. They need to know where they stand, and need to be given time to fail. Consistency by manager means that you are given the same chance to fail to release your potential as others. Over here an unknow youngster failing to show his true potential instantly would result in abuse and often the manager wouldnt dare to stand by his man. I also think it takes a very special manager to dare to treath his players with dignity and respect. Some has that, others dont. If a player dont play and he know exactly why, he will probably cope with it. If he just dont play with no explanation he will stagnate and probably deliver weak performances when given the chance.
 
Good read Peekay. Klopp does seem like a proper candidate. Especially like the bits about the pacy pressing game as well as the unfamiliar training methods.

Elsewhere Laudrup's Mallorca beat Sevilla away last night and has now recorded famous draws at Camp Neu versus Barca and at home against Real as well as yet another impressive away win at Valencia.

This with a team mind that was left in turmoil both on and off the pitch when he arrived in Summer. Beeing banned from the Europa League due to financial issues, losing key-players amongst other hick-ups.
 
[quote author=KHL link=topic=42884.msg1222181#msg1222181 date=1290418442]
Good read Peekay. Klopp does seem like a proper candidate. Especially like the bits about the pacy pressing game as well as the unfamiliar training methods.

Elsewhere Laudrup's Mallorca beat Sevilla away last night and has now recorded famous draws at Camp Neu versus Barca and at home against Real as well as yet another impressive away win at Valencia.

This with a team mind that was left in turmoil both on and off the pitch when he arrived in Summer. Beeing banned from the Europa League due to financial issues, losing key-players amongst other hick-ups.
[/quote]

I agree with your assessment on Klopp. My two main candidates for Liverpool job are him and Joachim Löw. Oh and that Villas Boas guy.

I wouldn't be too disappointed with Laudrup either. He did a magnificent job with Getafe and is now doing the same with Mallorca. I don't know what went wrong in Moscow but my concern with him is if he is at his best managing a struggling club and not really a big team manager.
 
[quote author=Akakabooto link=topic=42884.msg1222188#msg1222188 date=1290419082]
[quote author=KHL link=topic=42884.msg1222181#msg1222181 date=1290418442]
Good read Peekay. Klopp does seem like a proper candidate. Especially like the bits about the pacy pressing game as well as the unfamiliar training methods.

Elsewhere Laudrup's Mallorca beat Sevilla away last night and has now recorded famous draws at Camp Neu versus Barca and at home against Real as well as yet another impressive away win at Valencia.

This with a team mind that was left in turmoil both on and off the pitch when he arrived in Summer. Beeing banned from the Europa League due to financial issues, losing key-players amongst other hick-ups.
[/quote]

I agree with your assessment on Klopp. My two main candidates for Liverpool job are him and Joachim Löw. Oh and that Villas Boas guy.

I wouldn't be too disappointed with Laudrup either. He did a magnificent job with Getafe and is now doing the same with Mallorca. I don't know what went wrong in Moscow but my concern with him is if he is at his best managing a struggling club and not really a big team manager. [/quote]

One could argue that Liverpool would suit him rather well then...

*blinks*

Joking aside you are right of course. He hasn't been tried at highest level but he certainly seems to thrive whenever his teams are facing the best opponents around. I'd be very disappointed if he wasn't capable of stearing an even better squad than compared to what he's got at Mallorca to loads of points however.
 
"Liverpool To Kop Klopp"

"Klopp Kops Top Kop Job"

We have to get this bloke in. He has glasses and foppy hair, looks a bit like an ageing German porn star and likes to use "Life-Kinetik", which sounds like ballet, but with more "science".

He'd be perfect for our Brave New Anfield, with our strategy and spreadsheets and sabrementics.
 
[quote author=Roopy link=topic=42884.msg1222140#msg1222140 date=1290403960]

It's collection of things:

1. Shit defence

2. Injuries

3. Hoeness & Van Gaal

4. KVNB

[/quote]

hanks for that mate.

;D at Brendan
 
Nice read, peekay. Always love to read articles re coaches and tacticians. 🙂 More than enough of those on players. Think they benefited with the German FA's approach on youth players and academy too. The no. of youngsters in first team of Mainz, Schalke, Dortmund, Stuttgart etc. is amazing.
 
[quote author=Brendan link=topic=42884.msg1222272#msg1222272 date=1290427367]
"Liverpool To Kop Klopp"

"Klopp Kops Top Kop Job"

We have to get this bloke in. He has glasses and foppy hair, looks a bit like an ageing German porn star and likes to use "Life-Kinetik", which sounds like ballet, but with more "science".

He'd be perfect for our Brave New Anfield, with our strategy and spreadsheets and sabrementics.
[/quote]

His name is also the same response Captain Hans Geering would give to a "Heil Hitler" on BBC classic sitcom "Allo Allo'.

"Heil Hitler"

*Does Nazi salute*..."Klopp!!"

He ticks all the boxes for me.
 
[quote author=KHL link=topic=42884.msg1222181#msg1222181 date=1290418442]
Good read Peekay. Klopp does seem like a proper candidate. Especially like the bits about the pacy pressing game as well as the unfamiliar training methods.

Elsewhere Laudrup's Mallorca beat Sevilla away last night and has now recorded famous draws at Camp Neu versus Barca and at home against Real as well as yet another impressive away win at Valencia.

This with a team mind that was left in turmoil both on and off the pitch when he arrived in Summer. Beeing banned from the Europa League due to financial issues, losing key-players amongst other hick-ups.
[/quote]

'Michael Laudrup's new Liverpool side oozed with class' has a nice ring to it. I like it!
 
[quote author=Khalido link=topic=42884.msg1222607#msg1222607 date=1290489505]
[quote author=Brendan link=topic=42884.msg1222272#msg1222272 date=1290427367]
"Liverpool To Kop Klopp"

"Klopp Kops Top Kop Job"

We have to get this bloke in. He has glasses and foppy hair, looks a bit like an ageing German porn star and likes to use "Life-Kinetik", which sounds like ballet, but with more "science".

He'd be perfect for our Brave New Anfield, with our strategy and spreadsheets and sabrementics.
[/quote]

His name is also the same response Captain Hans Geering would give to a "Heil Hitler" on BBC classic sitcom "Allo Allo'.

"Heil Hitler"

*Does Nazi salute*..."Klopp!!"

He ticks all the boxes for me.

[/quote]

Excellent work.
 
[quote author=Khalido link=topic=42884.msg1222607#msg1222607 date=1290489505]
[quote author=Brendan link=topic=42884.msg1222272#msg1222272 date=1290427367]
"Liverpool To Kop Klopp"

"Klopp Kops Top Kop Job"

We have to get this bloke in. He has glasses and foppy hair, looks a bit like an ageing German porn star and likes to use "Life-Kinetik", which sounds like ballet, but with more "science".

He'd be perfect for our Brave New Anfield, with our strategy and spreadsheets and sabrementics.
[/quote]

His name is also the same response Captain Hans Geering would give to a "Heil Hitler" on BBC classic sitcom "Allo Allo'.

"Heil Hitler"

*Does Nazi salute*..."Klopp!!"

He ticks all the boxes for me.

[/quote]

Ooo it would be great if when Klopp walks into dugout Kop did a synchronized Nazi salute with a thunderous "KLOPP!!"!

Or maybe not...
 
[quote author=Avmenon link=topic=42884.msg1222635#msg1222635 date=1290502537]
[quote author=Khalido link=topic=42884.msg1222607#msg1222607 date=1290489505]
[quote author=Brendan link=topic=42884.msg1222272#msg1222272 date=1290427367]
"Liverpool To Kop Klopp"

"Klopp Kops Top Kop Job"

We have to get this bloke in. He has glasses and foppy hair, looks a bit like an ageing German porn star and likes to use "Life-Kinetik", which sounds like ballet, but with more "science".

He'd be perfect for our Brave New Anfield, with our strategy and spreadsheets and sabrementics.
[/quote]

His name is also the same response Captain Hans Geering would give to a "Heil Hitler" on BBC classic sitcom "Allo Allo'.

"Heil Hitler"

*Does Nazi salute*..."Klopp!!"

He ticks all the boxes for me.

[/quote]

Excellent work.
[/quote]
I'm sold.
 
Bundesliga leaders Borussia Dortmund have extended the contract of head coach Jurgen Klopp until the summer of 2014.

The 43-year-old has been in charge at the Westfalenstadion since the summer of 2008 and has helped them develop into a force to be reckoned with in Germany.

This season Die Schwarzgelben hold a seven-point lead at the top of the table, having won 11 of their 13 games to date.

"I'm incredibly happy with the confidence that the club shows in me and my coaching staff, and I'm proud to be part of it," Klopp told his club's official website.

"I am committed one hundred per cent, even if we will not only experience good days here - we never get critical or sceptical.

"For the second time in my career, I have the good luck to work at a club where there is a lot of stability."

Director of sport Michael Zorc added: "Jurgen stands for the advancement of this club, not only in the current season."
 
Extending the contract of a manager doesn't mean much these days. Especially in Germany.
 
[quote author=Doped White Mouse link=topic=42884.msg1224015#msg1224015 date=1290759798]
Extending the contract of a manager doesn't mean much these days. Especially in Germany.
[/quote]

Yeah. As are players'. Contracts are getting worthless in football, unfortunately. But it'll probably guarantee a larger compensation (if another club moves in for Klopp's services) or payoff (he gets sacked).
 
Interesting write up on Klopp's tactics and Dortmund's formation/strategy this season:

http://timhi.wordpress.com/2010/11/25/dissection-of-dortmund/

The part on Götze, Großkreutz and Kagawa is of most interest to me.

From a tactical point of view, the narrow attacking midfielders create migraine-sized headaches for the opposition.

Götze & Großkreutz: Two Double G’s that have nothing to do with Hip-Hop

As mentioned, Mario Götze and Kevin Großkreutz rarely stay on the sidelines, preferring to find pockets of space between midfield and defence in central areas. Kagawa, put simply, just moves.

However, it’s the two German youngsters that provide difficulties for the opposition.

They operate in areas where there is not a direct opposition player designated to combat their effectiveness. Although ‘in the hole’ players may now be meeting their match with the increasing importance of defensive midfielders, players who operate in the channels and deeper can be now seen with relatively the same importance.

Why are Götze and Großkreutz effective this season? Well, it forces the opposition to make a decision on who is going to pick them up.

If they leave them in the realm of central midfielders responsibility, they’ll be outnumbered unless they play with two or three deep central midfielders; this also leaves the full-backs as largely redundant.

gotse-grosskreutz-diagram1.png


If the opposition instruct their full-back to pick them up, it allows them to have a spare man in the middle of the park to close down whoever the manager instructs or to sit and be used as a spare man. Dortmund, however, have options to rebuff this tactical repositioning.

gotse-grosskreutz-diagram2.png


The problem is Kagawa is a clever little player. He knows when to move wide to drag players with him, creating space for Götze or Großkreutz to play with. Kagawa has a very Ozil-esque left-foot, which is able to design and create a first-time ball through a defence from wider areas of the pitch.

The attacking quartet (+Piszczek) is able to create sparkling football at times; their movement quick and incisive, only matched by their penetrative passing and two-touch football. Klopp has them organised in such a way that they can respond to the opposition’s organisation as well as being hard to play against. Their youth allows them to press for seventy minutes without changes, and, by that time, the game is usually over. Teams without a clear game-plan or midfield players capable of handling the tenacity of the ‘Die Borussen’ will struggle to play through the middle of the park.

It’s not that the quartet has technical ability; they have power and pace and the ability to cut-through a defensive line with one run. Their right-side is always dangerous, with the pacey Jakub B?aszczykowski often coming off the bench to replace Mario Götze.
 
Borussia Dortmund coach Jürgen Klopp has never been one to hide his emotions and right now the 43-year-old usually has a smile on his face.

No wonder, since his young, stylish Dortmund side are seven points clear of his former club 1. FSV Mainz 05 at the top of the Bundesliga and 14 ahead of champions FC Bayern München. Their UEFA Europa League position is less secure – they are third in Group J ahead of their home meeting with FC Karpaty Lviv – but already, it is being said that Dortmund and Klopp were made for each other.

Fans in the club's home region, the Ruhr, are renowned as being among the most passionate in Germany, and while he is a calm analyst of the game on television, Klopp is as animated as any supporter during Dortmund games, pacing up and down the touchline, gesturing excitably and often joining in goal celebrations.

Such behaviour is entirely in keeping with his footballing philosophy. ""We want to play at full throttle, we want to take it to the limit"," he explained. While his side have taken that to heart, Klopp's only regret is his occasional "embarrassing" altercations with authority figures. "Sorry, I am an idiot," Klopp said penitently after a recent spat with a fourth official.

Clearly the former Mainz striker turned defender sets high standards for his own behaviour, and this was rarely more apparent than after a 4-0 win at Hannover 96 on 7 November where he was horrified to see his side playing "cautiously, like an away team". Seemingly unmoved by the scoreline, he added: "We have problem after problem. The team just don't listen. I still have no idea whether I am the right man for this job."

His players seem certain he is. Klopp's relationship with his side has been extremely close, though he was happy to affectionately mock goalkeeper Roman Weidenfeller, who at 30 is by far the oldest player in his regular starting XI. "He is a terrible sight in the morning," said Klopp. "We have to drag him along. Sometimes we have to drink him pretty."

The genial Klopp is no fool, though. Eyebrows were raised when, in his first summer with the club in 2008, he persuaded Dortmund to sign unknown centre-back Neven Suboti? from his old side Mainz for €4.5m, but at 21 the Bosnian is now a recognised master in his position.

Japanese attacking midfielder Shinji Kagawa looked to be a similarly eccentric purchase this summer, but the 21-year-old has justified Klopp's decision to field him ahead of more recognised talents, with seven goals in 14 Bundesliga appearances.

The Stuttgart-born Klopp is also alive to innovations in sports science, using first-half highlights packages to illustrate tactical points to his players during the half-time interval, and while he may have won nothing yet, he has earned acclaim from 'Der Kaiser'. ""Dortmund are in a league of their own at the moment"," said Franz Beckenbauer, with the mighty Zeus of the German footballing world adding: "Klopp is on his way to Mount Olympus."
 
[quote author=Binny link=topic=42884.msg1227499#msg1227499 date=1291272346]
Borussia Dortmund coach Jürgen Klopp has never been one to hide his emotions and right now the 43-year-old usually has a smile on his face.

No wonder, since his young, stylish Dortmund side are seven points clear of his former club 1. FSV Mainz 05 at the top of the Bundesliga and 14 ahead of champions FC Bayern München. Their UEFA Europa League position is less secure – they are third in Group J ahead of their home meeting with FC Karpaty Lviv – but already, it is being said that Dortmund and Klopp were made for each other.

Fans in the club's home region, the Ruhr, are renowned as being among the most passionate in Germany, and while he is a calm analyst of the game on television, Klopp is as animated as any supporter during Dortmund games, pacing up and down the touchline, gesturing excitably and often joining in goal celebrations.

Such behaviour is entirely in keeping with his footballing philosophy. ""We want to play at full throttle, we want to take it to the limit"," he explained. While his side have taken that to heart, Klopp's only regret is his occasional "embarrassing" altercations with authority figures. "Sorry, I am an idiot," Klopp said penitently after a recent spat with a fourth official.

Clearly the former Mainz striker turned defender sets high standards for his own behaviour, and this was rarely more apparent than after a 4-0 win at Hannover 96 on 7 November where he was horrified to see his side playing "cautiously, like an away team". Seemingly unmoved by the scoreline, he added: "We have problem after problem. The team just don't listen. I still have no idea whether I am the right man for this job."

His players seem certain he is. Klopp's relationship with his side has been extremely close, though he was happy to affectionately mock goalkeeper Roman Weidenfeller, who at 30 is by far the oldest player in his regular starting XI. "He is a terrible sight in the morning," said Klopp. "We have to drag him along. Sometimes we have to drink him pretty."

The genial Klopp is no fool, though. Eyebrows were raised when, in his first summer with the club in 2008, he persuaded Dortmund to sign unknown centre-back Neven Suboti? from his old side Mainz for €4.5m, but at 21 the Bosnian is now a recognised master in his position.

Japanese attacking midfielder Shinji Kagawa looked to be a similarly eccentric purchase this summer, but the 21-year-old has justified Klopp's decision to field him ahead of more recognised talents, with seven goals in 14 Bundesliga appearances.

The Stuttgart-born Klopp is also alive to innovations in sports science, using first-half highlights packages to illustrate tactical points to his players during the half-time interval, and while he may have won nothing yet, he has earned acclaim from 'Der Kaiser'. ""Dortmund are in a league of their own at the moment"," said Franz Beckenbauer, with the mighty Zeus of the German footballing world adding: "Klopp is on his way to Mount Olympus."
[/quote]

He sounds perfect and has just become my #1 candidate over Jogi Löw.
 
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