Palace schemer Max Meyer, Werder
Bremen playmaker Nuri Sahin and
Hamburg striker Pierre-Michel Lasogga.
The man at the coaching controls? Why
not go for Borussia Monchengladbach’s
Dieter Hecking.
While the southern German states of
Bavaria and Baden-Wurttemberg churn
out their share of top professionals,
when it comes to sheer fervour for the
game, the Ruhrpott leaves every other
Deutschland territory in the shade.
Football here is much more than
22 players kicking a ball around. It’s an
absolute way of life, with tribal loyalties
paramount and fans regarding their
clubs as their second family. Even the
word “obsession” does not quite fit
the bill. Mother’s milk is infused with
incurable football fever.
“A Ruhr without football is simply
unthinkable,” says ex-Dortmund and
Schalke midfielder Ingo Anderbrugge.
“In this region, the game is a religion,”
aptly comments Dortmund coach
extraordinaire Ottmar Hitzfeld, the
man who led the Schwarz-Gelben to
their one and only Champions League
title in 1997.
Not for nothing is the Ruhr – the
largest urban area in Germany with
a population of around five million –
known as “The Land of a Thousand
Derbies”. The place is awash with proud,
long-established clubs and at one time
or another, seven Revier outfits –
Dortmund, Schalke, Bochum, Duisburg,
Wattenscheid, Rot-Weiss Essen and
Rot-Weiss Oberhausen – have taken
part in the Bundesliga.
These days, only Dortmund and
Schalke, two of the best-supported
sides in Europe, remain in the top flight.
But that’s not to say the scene has lost
its vibrancy. Second division Bochum
and Duisburg still have substantial fan
bases, while in the fourth tier of the
German pyramid (the Regionalliga)
Rot-Weiss Essen enjoy the biggest
gates in that league by a country mile,
attracting as many as 11,000 through
the turnstiles.
Whereas in other parts of the country,
a lack of class on the ball is a cardinal
sin, Ruhrpott supporters generally have
other priorities, usually satisfied as long
as their favourites on the pitch play with
energy, commitment and drive. That’s
why Jurgen Klopp was such a good fit in
his coaching heyday at Dortmund. The
signature Ruhr style demands intensity
and mental toughness. Young players
have to truly compete or sink. This
grounding is what makes them so
marketable when they come of age.
The school of hard knocks is what
it’s all about.
What a pity that so few Ruhr natives
are currently plying their trade for the
region’s two flagship clubs. Only two
members of the current Dortmund
squad (Reus and Gotze) come from the
locale, while Schalke do not have any at
all. In contrast, second division Cologne
- not a million miles away – boast eight
men born in the Rhineland city.
Of Germany’s 16 federal states, North
Rhine-Westphalia – of which the Ruhr
is a part – is the best in the business at
spawning Bundesliga professionals, with
some 60 players currently earning a
living in the top-flight.
W
hether on the
international stage or
at club level, Austrian
football has been in the
doldrums for decades. But that does
not mean the game in its capital city has
lost its primal force.
Football still inspires and fascinates
in this cultural melting pot, with players
from immigrant backgrounds a strong
currency right now.
West Ham United striker Marko
Arnautovic, the son of a Serbian father
and Austrian mother, was born and
raised here; so were Bayern Munich
left-back David Alaba – who is of mixed
Nigerian and Filipino heritage – and
the Bayer Leverkusen and Austria
centre-back Aleksandar Dragovic,
another product of the local Serb
diaspora. Incidentally, all three of them
came through the academy of top
local club Austria Vienna, a set-up
which owner Frank Stronach has
invested heavily in.
These are bright times for the next
generation of Viennese talents. At Rapid
- the other half of the metropolitan
big two – 21-year-old
defensive midfielder Dejan
Ljubicic is quite a prospect,
while keeper Daniel
Bachmann, currently
on loan at Kilmarnock
in Scotland from Premier
League Watford, could be
a senior national teamer
one day soon.
Central defender
Maximilian Wober, who
recently moved from Ajax
to Sevilla, is coming along
very nicely, making his
international debut in
October, and although
rather inconsistent, Austria
Vienna attacking midfielder
Dominik Prokop certainly
has the technique and
vision to go places.
Every time Austria’s
national team has been
successful, Viennese stars
have played instrumental
parts. In the 1930s, the
revered Wunderteam
was defined by brilliant
Vienna
AUSTRIA
When it comes to
fervour for the game,
the Ruhrpott leaves
every other territory
in the shade
“In this cultural melting pot, players
from immigrant backgrounds are a
strong currency right now”
Football’s Talent Hot Spots
Technique...Dominik
Prokop of Austria
Vienna
Locals lads... Marco
Reus (right) and
Mario Gotze
Prospect...Rapid
Vienna’s Dejan
Ljubicic (right)