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03-23-2004, 07:01 PM
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#1 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 | Turk It Or Leave It - My Story
FOREWORD (Sat. 1st August 2009)
It is quite a busy time for us. We have had a 10 day training camp here in Marbella during which we have taken in games against Torremolinos, Fuengirola and also the home town side today. We then head to Prague and Turkey respectively. The Prague match is part of Tomas Hubschman’s transfer to us in the January window. We then fly to Turkey for a pre-season tour taking in games against my old clubs Eskisehirspor and Galatasaray, as well as a match against Trabzonspor. The Gala match I am hoping will help to try and repair the relationships that suffered around the end of my tenure.
Tonight is another calm and sultry evening after a searing Andalucian day. I have just had dinner with the team and we have all retired for an evening of relaxation. Some of the players are using the complex facilities whilst others are getting ready to let their hair down at a club or at one of the casinos.
I, on the other hand, am sitting down for the first time to work on my biography.
Why am I doing this you may ask? Well two weeks ago I attended a function organised by my employer, Atletico Madrid chairman, Enrique Cerezo. During the evening I met and talked to the Spanish head of an international publisher. During the conversation he suggested that if my stock continued to rise, I may attract interest from publishers wanting to produce a book. He advised me that it might be worth getting things down on paper and then see where things progress. So here goes….
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03-25-2004, 12:05 AM
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#2 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 |
THE EARLY DAYS
I was born on the 29th October 1968 in Munster, Germany. My father was a serving British soldier and my mother a German national. My parents separated soon after and I have not seen my father since the age of 4. We stayed in my mother’s home town of Osnabruck and I led a fairly standard German childhood. I did well academically but was only really interested in getting out on the football pitch.
In my teens, I was spotted by a scout, Hermann Schmidt, and had various trials with my local side VfL Osnabruck. I eventually impressed enough for a part-time contract around my 17th birthday but I struggled to make a real impact due to injuries and my studies at university. I fancied a year away from my studies and a loan spell with SC07 Paderborn was agreed. With the extra concentration on my game I came on leaps and bounds in that season.
I went back to VfL with renewed vigour and confidence and produced two seasons of good football at right back. My endeavours were spotted by Kaiserslautern and a transfer in the summer of 1990 followed. They had just won the German cup and were aiming to really challenge for the title in ’91. I knew when I signed that I would be a fringe player but I couldn’t be sure another opportunity would come.
Within a couple weeks I had met my future wife, Harika. She, like me, is of mixed parentage; a Turkish father and a Swiss mother. Her family moved from Zurich to Munich in the mid 80’s and she started work with MTV Europe. We met at a gig and things progressed from there. Our careers seemed to take off together. I was playing well for the Kaiser ‘A’ side and my wife became a TV presenter with MTV. My performances were recognised by the first team coaching staff and I moved up to the first team squad the following summer.
My playing career ended prematurely in the 95-96 season due to injury. I had had problems with my left knee for a while and after numerous unsuccessful surgeries, the doctors advised me to call it a day. We won the cup that season but were also relegated. It was a frustrating season and I felt helpless on the sidelines. 1FCK had been a reasonable force in German and European football during my playing time there but personal glory had eluded me.
So at the grand old age of 27 I started to coach. I obtained my badges over a couple of years and I worked with the 1FCK youth set up. I put a lot of effort into my work which probably came from the frustration of my curtailed playing career. I travelled to various clubs in many different countries to learn as much as I could. If I was going to make a name for myself this was going to be the way.
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03-25-2004, 12:12 AM
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#3 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 |
THE FIRST BITE OF TURKISH DELIGHT
I had been coaching at Kaiserslautern for just over 7 years during which time my wife continued her TV work. She felt it may have been time to move on. We travelled to Turkey for her to discuss some TV work there. Whilst we were there, we spent time visiting some of her family in the Ankara area. I met my wife’s cousin, Hakan, for the first time. He worked in the commercial department of Eskisehirspor, a Turkish Second Division Category B side. We had a few conversations over the next couple of days which resulted in him asking me to visit the club and discuss some possibilities at the request of the club chairman, Ali Celikoglu.
Celikoglu seemed an honest and decent man. He wanted a lot for the club and was as much a fan of the club as anyone. The heady days of the late 60’s and early 70’s seemed a long way away and had left a cloud over the clubs current position. A Turkish cup triumph and consistent good performances in the league had the fans hankering after glory again, but seemingly unwilling to give it time to happen.
The Eskhisehir Ataturk held over 18000 and had reasonable facilities all round. The club had all the pre-requisites of a good side but just needed a catalyst to ignite everything.
That apparently was where I might fit in. Celikoglu was a follower of German football and Kaiserslautern in particular. He remembered my playing days and what had happened with regards to my injuries. He also knew I had been working with the youth development programme and was gaining a bit of name in coaching circles.
He offered me the chance to start my managerial career with the club in the hope that I might be the aforementioned catalyst.
After thinking about our offers for the next few days my wife and I decided it was time for us both to try something new. My predecessor, Sevket Kesler, was going to see out the remainder of the season and I would officially take charge of Eskisehirspor, on the 1st July 2003.
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03-25-2004, 02:12 AM
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#4 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 |
ESKISEHIRSPOR
2003-2004
I was nervous and a little bewildered during my first days in office. Coaching and managing can sometimes be a whole world apart. It had taken longer than expected to finalise things in Germany and I was not as prepared as I would like to have been. Turkish isn’t the easiest language to learn and I didn’t know much apart from the odd swear word or insult. Though admittedly, it did come in handy when overhearing some player comments and opinions though!
Despite the language barrier, I managed to have some useful discussions with the coaching staff. They gave a good insight into how things stood and they helped me identify some of our strengths and weaknesses. Without wanting to sound harsh, I came to the conclusion that we didn’t have many strengths. I had two good left backs, one good striker and the one real plus, was having what looked like the strongest central midfield pairing in the league. Hossoy Engin and Gundogdu Levent were two players I could build a team around, if given the right support from the board. I decided that a traditional 4-4-2 would be the way forward and I went to work on the training ground to educate the squad on how I wanted to play.
Within a few days, I had set about the player market and made two permanent signings. The first being a strong centre back (Bastik Cihan) and the second was a hard tackling midfielder (Buyukbayrak Serhat), who seemed a good alternative to what I had. Another centre back, a winger a piece for each flank and a striker were also added to the squad on season long loan contracts. The signings made me feel more confident about the season ahead. A confidence which increased after good performances in pre-season friendlies.
The form carried into the new season and we made a healthy start. I think I raised a few eyebrows early on with my team selections. I played Neliker Soner, a left back, in the centre of defence and fan favourite Levent, was rotated between all 4 midfield positions. It may not have been Ruud Gullit’s “sexy football” but we were defensively tight and got into the habit of sneaking victories.
I was enjoying my new career but I did make mistakes. One concerned a young player by the name of Sevgi Mustafa. Although I was a keen advocator of youth in Germany, when it came to me making the decision myself, I had trouble going with my instincts. Mustafa played well whenever called upon and always seemed to have the measure of opposition defenders. I initially resisted making him a first choice striker as we had some good experienced players. Yanik Ferdi, a loan signing was playing well but Mayadag Baris, the club’s star striker was struggling with consistency. I persevered with Baris but as results started to falter around October and November, I finally plucked up the courage to give Mustafa a chance. He took it well and made it a decision I never had to regret. He ended the season our top scorer with 18 goals and was voted fan’s player of the year.
The season’s crunch game was a top of the table clash at home to Gungoren Belediyespor. If we had lost it may have cost us our season as only the league champions are promoted. We went into the game missing key players but produced some quality football on a slick surface in front of 7800 fans. Goals evaded us in the first half even though we created chance upon chance. The deadlock was finally broken on 55 minutes when youngster Parlak Ahmet headed home. A rebound from his shot gave Yanik Ferdi a tap in before Neliker Soner scored a third from a corner. Keles Soner rounded things off on 90 minutes, drilling home from the edge of the box. The 4-0 win over our close rivals gave us the boost we needed and we went on to secure the title and promotion a month later.
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03-27-2004, 09:00 PM
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#5 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 |
2004-2005
Everyone at the club was on a high after winning the title the previous season. I was given a reasonable transfer budget for the upcoming season, but we couldn’t really afford much of an increase on wages. We could make some additions to the squad but the €2.4K maximum wage limit meant I would struggle to add real quality to the side. During July and August it was hectic, with departures and signings alike. We managed to make 200K with three sales including Mayadag Baris, who just didn’t seem to fit into my system. Demirkan Hakan and Dasdan Bulent were added to play down our right side whilst Yavas Mithat was signed, on a free, to play up front with 21yo Mustafa. The further loan signings of Yildirim Erman (Fenerbahce) and keeper Taylan Aydogan from Dutch side Roda made me quietly confident of causing a few upsets in the upcoming season.
Disaster struck just before the summer window closed when we lost one of our key players, Gundogdu Levent. When I arrived at the club both Levent and Hossoy Engin were in the final year of their contracts. I had to include release fee clauses (€1M) in their new contracts, as my wage budget was tight. Unluckily for me, fellow Second Division Cat. A side Kocaelispor decided to exercise the clause. A player of his class is virtually impossible to replace without good financial resources and I knew it would be a void that would take a long time to fill.
Levent came back to haunt me just 2 games into the season. We travelled to the tiny Ismet Pasa stadium in Kocaeli. We, somewhat undeservedly, went ahead after the break with Engin converting a penalty won by Mithat, who was pushed over in the box. Within two minutes they were level. Levent skipped past a number of challenges before crashing a drive from the edge of the box. Aydogan saved superbly only for it to fall to opposition feet. 1-1. Alper made it 2-1 to the home side when he converted another loose ball from the keeper. Levent again was the architect as his wicked, curling cross had almost beaten Aydogan. Levent continued to cause problems until the final whistle and was rightly announced as Man of the Match. I congratulated him afterwards on his performance and he in turn thanked me for helping to kick-start his career.
The three relegated sides - Konyaspor, Malatyaspor and Akcaabat Sebatspor - were favourites to go back up but I felt we had an outside chance if we played to our potential. After our indifferent start, things picked up around the middle of October. We went on a 7 game league run (winning 5) where we didn’t concede a goal, only to follow that by losing three on the bounce.
This led us, at the end of January 2005, to our home game with Kocaelispor. We got our revenge with a cracking performance. 3-0 up inside 11 minutes was more than I could have hoped for and we outplayed them for the full 90 minutes, even if we couldn’t add to our opening salvo.
Home form like this kept us in the hunt as fellow promotion rivals were taking points off each other. 17 points from a possible 21 at the end of the season catapulted us in to second position and one of three promotions spots. In just two seasons we had risen from the depths of obscurity and we were on the verge of the returning to the proverbial big time.
We scored goals from a number of sources through the season but Sevgi Mustafa was again top scorer with 15, in a year when he also gained national recognition for the under-21’s. The best example of our goal scoring prowess was when we set a new club record, which still stands now, with a 6-0 home victory over Antalyaspor. Two identical headed corners from Neliker Soner started things before Mustafa, Engin, Serhat and finally loanee Hamza Samari finished our scoring.
During this league campaign I experienced Turkish cup football for the first time. The fans were out in force to cheer us on through the early rounds as we disposed of 3 decent sides including Premier Division Elazigspor. This led to a home quarter final clash, in February, with Samsunspor, who later in the season became Premier Division champions.
Once again home advantage and our set piece excellence paid dividends. The 4-1 score line did flatter us immensely as the game was generally even. Midfield was well contested and Tuncay Arslan and Bastik Cihan were rock solid in the centre of our defence, giving nothing for the opposition strikers to work from.. Back up striker Aksoy Ilkan scored our first from a corner before loanee Ergun Cakir tapped in our second from a rebound from a Mustafa effort. Demirkan Hakan conceded a penalty just before half time to allow the Premier Division side back in. Aykut Serkan grabbed the goal which turned out to be Samsun’s only reply. The second half saw us go further ahead with Hossoy Engin converting a self won penalty. Bastik Cihan rounded off a fine performance two minutes from time with a bullet header from another corner.
For the semi-final we travelled to Istanbul and the mighty 80000+ capacity Ataturk Olympic Stadium, to face the residents, Galatasaray. Atmospherically it isn’t as intimidating as the Ali Sami Yen, but the attending crowd of 33500+ was much bigger than we previously played in front of. It was an odd experience hearing so much noise in what looked like a fairly empty stadium.
Sadly we were not up to this challenge and we were easily outclassed. Gala ended the contest before half time with three goals from wonderful flowing moves. Penbe Ergun headed the first; Hasan Sas tapped in a second before Buruk Okan volleyed home a third on 45 minutes. In first half stoppage time Dasdan Bulent saw red and we lost a second player to injury. Sevgi Mustafa followed Yavas Mithat to the physio’s room. Mustafa had earlier missed a 35th minute penalty. Haspolatli Cihan volleyed Gala’s fourth on 48 before we scored a consolation, from a corner, with Neliker Soner’s header.
The unlikely cup dream had ended but the whole town had backed us and we had a right to feel proud and believe we could mix it with Turkey’s best
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03-27-2004, 09:20 PM
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#6 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 950
Rep Power: 7 |
This is good stuff. Summarising it well :thup:
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03-28-2004, 03:39 PM
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#7 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 |
2005-2006
The first priority for the summer was to assess what we needed if we were going to carry on our good work. A reasonable pot of transfer funds was available and I had received the green light to add to our wage bill.
To be honest we needed to strengthen our whole squad and 5 new players arrived for less than €750K, which further increased my reputation for finding a bargain. First up was striker Ibrahima Bakayoko who signed on a free from Osasuna. The prospect of playing consistent first team football was the clincher, as he had only played a handful of games in two years. We had previously used loaned in goalkeepers for two seasons and I signed a young Finn, Niki Maenpaa, to be my first permanent first team goalkeeper, from French side Lens. Ex-Turkish international forward, Ahmet Dursun joined us as well as Turkish legend Tugay. Blackburn had been looking to sell Tugay the previous summer, but he chose Portuguese side Braga ahead of us. It was understandable considering we were a second division side but the lure of the Premier Division and a chance to do some coaching was enough to persuade him this time. Guinean winger Ibrahima Yattara was the last of my signings as he joined from Turkish giants Trabzonspor. Trabzon had won the league in 2003-04 but shocked Turkish football by getting relegated the following year. This situation made it somewhat easier to prise away the pacey African.
I also felt the need to add to our backroom staff and fellow German Rainer Kokartis and ex-Turkish international Okan Gedikali came aboard in a coaching capacity.
The fixture computer was a little unkind to us. We were to have home games against the big 3 – Galatasaray, Fenerbahce and Besiktas – in the first six weeks. On the positive side if we got anything out of these games it could set us up for a good season. The negative would be 3 home defeats against the big boys would leave us near the foot of the table.
Up first were Fenerbahce and 12000 fans turned out to watch on a cool August Saturday afternoon. Chances were few and far between but we did have the better of the play. Bakayoko, Yattara and Tugay all had reasonable chances but opposition keeper, Biler Recep, earned his side a point and the man of the match award with a cracking performance in a 0-0 draw.
The following Sunday saw Galatasaray make the journey to Eskisehir. We went into the game with a little trepidation as international call ups had deprived us of our African new boys. Add that to the hammering we took last year and the omens did not look good. We had the early play with ex-Besiktas man, Ahmet Dursun causing Gala’s centre back pairing trouble. We could have gone ahead through efforts from winger Dasdan Bulent and Yavas Mithat but again we had come up against a fine keeping performance. Around the half hour mark Umit Karan got the better of Bastik Cihan in a foot race and slotted past Maenpaa. We were unhappy as Tugay had gone down injured and we wanted them to put the ball out. The same man bagged a second before half time with another fine strike. Tugay couldn’t shake off his problem and he departed early in the second half. Losing his influence meant we had no real way back in to the match and legend Hakan Sukur, a sub on the day, powered home from the edge of the area after more good work from Karan. Ahmet Dursun got just rewards for his endeavours as he tallied our solitary repost, with a fine left footed strike. We had played well but were on the end of a 3-1 loss.
The following week saw us lose 2-1 away to Goztepe. It was the worst possible preparation for playing the last of the big boys but I was able to put out my strongest side for the first time since the opening day. The game was tight with equal possession and shot counts. Our exceptional pace and the wet surface helped us zip the ball around and we opened the scoring twenty minutes in. Dursun added to his impressive form with the opener. Bakayoko opened his Eskisehirspor account, with a fine finish after Yattara had outstripped three players. Straight from the kick-off Olcay Senoglu pulled a goal back for the away side. The second half saw us increase our lead with a second for Bakayoko and a goal from captain, Hossoy Engin. Romanian Daniel Pancu pulled back another but it was not enough to stop us running out 4-2 winners.
The Besiktas game was the highlight for us as we didn’t perform that well for the rest of the 2005. Christmas couldn’t come soon enough and I used the break to try and boost confidence. Young Maenpaa had played well for the most part but I wanted more experience between the sticks. The chance to loan Robert Enke, from Alaves, was too tempting and the big German was inspirational for the rest of the season and let very little past him.
Post Christmas we were a whole different side. We disposed of team after team and put together a fantastic run. After losing 1-0 to Fenerbahce, we beat Galatasaray 2-0 and battered Besiktas 5-1.
Even a long term injury to Dursun couldn’t thwart us. Sevgi Mustafa found the step up in class too much but our other back up striker, Senol Ozkan, was a revelation in Dursun’s place. He bagged 17 goals for us during the season and was our top scorer.
We had no chance of taking the Telsim sponsored Turkiye Birinci Ligi but finished a fine fourth behind champions Bursaspor, Fenerbahce and Samsunspor. To finish above Galatasaray and Besiktas was more than we could have hoped for pre-season and I was pleased to hand our captain, Hossoy Engin, his second sucessive fan's player of the year award at our after season party.
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03-28-2004, 03:42 PM
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#8 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 | Thanks Raptor. At least someone is reading this!! |
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03-28-2004, 07:21 PM
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#9 | | Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 77
Rep Power: 5 |
I'm reading it. It's pretty good, I must say.
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04-01-2004, 05:38 PM
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#10 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0 | Thanks SoS. The support is appreciated.
THE GLORY DAYS RETURN
Our 2005-2006 cup campaign had a quiet start in front of 4500 fans in the small western town of Yalova. The home side played in the Second Division Category B and were eager to turn over a Premier Division side. Our opposition had a strong defensive set up and had barely conceded any goals all season. I took the opportunity to rest some of our bigger names and offer a chance to fringe players. The game was played on a wet and breezy November evening which did help the home team to level things. After a non eventful first quarter of an hour we won a free kick a few yards from the corner flag. Dasdan Bulent swung the ball in and Keles Soner volleyed home whilst unmarked on the far post. No other chances of note were created until the 70th minute when the underdogs scored an equaliser. A corner was glanced home on the near post by Yalovaspor striker Karabulut Muslum. This was the shock we needed and we kicked out of first gear. Within ten minutes we had scored the winner as Senol Ozkan scored his first of the season as he sped his way through the defence.
This led to a second round match a week later against Gaziantep Buyuksehir Belideyespor. It was another wet evening but this time we had home advantage on our lower division rivals. We had most of the play, and chances, but could not find a way through. I had decided to play a strong side as the opposition were performing well in their league and were on course for promotion to the Premier Division. After spurning chance after chance I brought the hero of the last round in the 85th minute. He won us the tie in the 90th minute with a fine strike from just inside the area.
The third round was over two months later and we were given another home game. This time we were drawn against a side who were one of our rivals in my first season, Marmaris Belediyesi Genclikspor. The match itself was very poor with neither side seemingly having the ability to string some passes together. We went ahead in the second half from an own goal. Yuce Ozan spectacularly lobbed his own keeper whilst challenging Yavas Mithat. The only other moment of any note was our second goal which was in complete contrast to the rest of the game. Keles Soner curled a wonderful 25 yarder to give the fans something to savour.
The quarter final was two weeks later and we were pitted against Fenerbahce. The draw was again kind and home advantage was given to us. Tugay and left back Yenihayat Bulent were not available, but I felt that the side that went out on to the pitch were still good enough to get a result. Things started brightly but it took until the 23rd minute for us to break the deadlock. Senol Ozkan stealing the march on his marker before burying a fine drive. The game was even from then on until the 54th minute when Bastik Cihan was adjudged to have brought down Ates Necati in the box. I still to this day believe the decision was harsh and to make matters worse Cihan received a straight red. An anticipant hush spread round the ground and I couldn’t watch as Akin Serhat ran up to take the spot kick. A mighty cheer arose and I looked up to see my players celebrating. Serhat had got underneath the ball and sent it ballooning over the bar. Fenerbahce did not become downhearted and started to make their numerical advantage count by knocking the ball around. A mixture of fine defending, top class goalkeeping and woeful finishing kept the scoreline at 1-0 until the 81st minute when Akin Serhat drove in a rebound from Akyel Fatih’s long range effort. I started to fear the worst and prayed that we would get through this.
Fenerbahce had the best of the play in extra time but we held out to take the game into the dreaded shoot-out. We went first and our captain, Hossoy Engin slotted home before Serhat atoned for his previous penalty by equalising. Ibrahima Yattara put us 2-1 up before Robert Enke saved at full stretch to deny Aslan Kemal. Bakayoko found the corner to put us 3-1 up and under pressure Bayraktar Hakan skied his attempt. This left our right back Demirkan Hakan to be the possible hero. He duly obliged and finished calmly leading to unbridled scenes of delight and a full scale pitch invasion.
The draw was again kind to us in the next round as we avoided Bursaspor and Besiktas in the semi. We were given an away tie at the only Second Division side left. Mersin Idman Yurdu were our opponents and we made fairly light work of them in a very professional performance. Hossoy Engin opened the scoring on 25 minutes before the excellent Yattara made it 2-0 on 35 minutes. Bakayoko made it 3-0 with 10 minutes to go.
The final was 4 days before the end of the season. We were to play newly crowned champions, Bursaspor and it was up to us to stop them doing the double. We were given home advantage and a packed crowd of 18403 cheered both sides on. We easily had the better of the first half and produced a number of good chances. The only one we took was a penalty converted by Bakayoko after Aksoy Ilkan was fouled. It took until the 55th minute for Bursa to register a shot but then they took over and only a series of world class saves from Robert Enke kept the score in our favour. I thought we had blown it in the 80th minute when Romanian Ioan Viorel Ganea finished of a flowing move. Thankfully the linesman came to our aid as he rightfully signalled Ganea offside. We had chances on the counter but could not add to our tally and the game ended in a 1-0 victory,
The heady days of the 70’s had returned and I was a hero. My performance through the year had earned me the personal accolade of being third in the manager of the year award. I was a happy man but as the summer months got into full swing I started to have my first doubts about how things would be in the future. Should I leave for pastures new or did I want to try and crack the Istanbul monopoly and create a fourth Turkish “super club” to replace the fallen Trabzonspor. I decided to start the new season and see how it would go before making any decisions.
Turkish FA Cup final team –
Robert Enke, Demirkan Hakan, Yenihayat Bulent, Tugay, Tuncay Arslan, Bastik Cihan, Aksoy Ilkan (80 – Buyukbayrak Serhat), Hossoy Engin (capt.), Senol Ozkan (80 – Ahmet Dursun), Ibrahima Bakayoko, Ibrahima Yattara.
Scorer(s) – Ibrahima Bakayoko 36 (pen)
Man of the match – Robert Enke
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