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Niko Kovac: 10 things on Bayern Munich's new coach

autty 2018-04-15 21:26:01 评论

Niko Kovac is the man Bayern Munich have chosen to lead them in search of a seventh straight Bundesliga title, with his admirable work at Eintracht Frankfurt convincing the record German champions he is the man for the job.

bundesliga.com runs the rule over the former Bundesliga winner, providing ten bitesized nuggets on Bayern's new coach…

1) The German Croatian

The word from Bayern as they searched for a successor to Jupp Heynckes was always "we want a German coach". So how has a former Croatia international come to take up the hot seat in Munich? Well, Kovac was in fact born and raised in Berlin to Croatian immigrants from Bosnia-Herzegovina, which at the time was still part of Yugoslavia. Still with us? We'll allow you a moment to consult a map. It meant Kovac was eligible to represent Germany, Croatia and Bosnia at international level. However, Kovac is a German national and the ideal fit for what Uli Hoeneß and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge were searching for.

2) At home with Hertha

A Berlin boy, Niko and brother Robert were raised in the Berlin suburb of Wedding, where siblings Jerome and Kevin-Prince Boateng would also later learn their footballing trade. Hertha Zehlendorf were one of his first clubs, Kovac following in the footsteps of Pierre Littbarski at a side which also helped produce Antonio Rüdiger, John Brooks and Christian Ziege. He would, however, make his professional debut at city's biggest club, Hertha Berlin, where he made 242 appearances, kicking off career that would take him all over Germany and indeed the world.

3) Rummenigge disciple

A boyhood fan of Bayern and idol Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Kovac had a poster of his future boss on his wall as a child. After a five-year spell at Bayer Leverkusen and then Hamburg, Kovac eventually got his dream move as a 29-year-old in 2001 when the record champions came calling. The Intercontinental Cup in his first season, followed by the double of Bundesliga and DFB Cup in his second, show the gamble paid off for both cub and player.

4) A Bayern rarity

While trophies at Bayern are not rare, his return to the club as coach is somewhat. Rummenigge and Hoeneß may have turned out for the club as players, but the trip to the boardroom has proved just as prevalent as the one to the dugout. Kovac is just the third former player to coach the record champions after Franz Beckenbauer and Jürgen Klinsmann. He is, however, by no means the first Croatian to lead the Bavarians in the Bundesliga era. The club's first two coaches in that time were in fact both from Croatia: Zlatko Cajkovski and Branko Zebec.

5) International experience – France 98 third!

Kovac may be yet to lead a team in European competition from the touchline, but he's still vastly experienced as a player on the international stage. Winning 83 caps during a 12-year career with the Croatia national team, Kovac was injured for his countries run to third place at the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France, but he returned to represent his country at four tournaments in a row from the 2002 World Cup to EURO 2008, and captained the side at his 'home' World Cup in Germany in 2006. He led his team out in their opening game against Brazil at the Olympiastadion just minutes away from where he grew up. He also scored in the infamous match against Australia in which teammate Josip Simunic was shown three yellow cards before being sent off by referee Graham Poll.

6) Coaching break

Joining the newly former Red Bull Salzburg in 2006, Kovac scored the club's first-ever Austrian Bundesliga goal and won the title in 2007 and 2009. After hanging up his boots, he decided to make Salzburg his home. Kovac was handed the reins to the club's reserve team before stepping up to become assistant to Ricardo Moniz with the first team. Following Moniz's departure and the arrival of future Leverkusen boss Roger Schmidt, Kovac got a call from the Croatian FA to take charge of their U21s, an invitation he accepted gladly. Five wins out of five saw him promoted to the senior team for their World Cup play-off against Iceland. "It's a great task, but also an attractive one," he said before leading his country to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

7) Brotherly love

Niko will be joined on the Bayern bench next season by his younger brother Robert, who has been by his side for the best part of his life, let alone career. Playing in tandem at Leverkusen, Bayern and with Croatia, they have remained together as a coaching duo since overseeing the Croatia U21s. "He always had my back, and he still does," Kovac told FIFATV. "We complement each other well and understand each other perfectly. I'm very confident about [working with] my brother. I think it couldn't be any better."

8) Humility

Kovac knows what it means to win – he played for Bayern after all – but he also knows what it is to lose. That feeling of seeing your dream shattered is often lost on those who celebrate victories, but after a 2015/16 relegation/promotion play-off between his Eintracht side and Nuremburg, Kovac kept his wits about him on arguably one of the most successful nights of his career – at least as a coach. Consoling the defeated Nuremberg players who were fighting back the tears after a 2-1 aggregate loss, Kovac went to every single opposition player, knelt by their side and offered his support while his own players celebrated with their fans. He earned a national fair play award for the gesture.

9) Courage of his convictions

The decision by Frankfurt to appoint Kovac with 10 games of the 2015/16 season remaining raised a few eyebrows, and with one win and four defeats from his first five games in charge, his critics were out in force. It also didn't help that he dropped fan idol Alexander 'Fußballgott' Meier, but survival followed. There will be many more big decisions to make at Bayern. But the Berlin-born coach appears ready to weather any storm the game can throw at him. In the wake of his appointment at Bayern, Kovac stated, "I have broad shoulders and can bear any criticism that comes my way."

10) The United Nations of Frankfurt

The Berlin-born son of Croatian immigrants is a figure of successful integration, and he leads his side with the same values. "This isn't Brexit or Fraxit, we're not concerned about politics – we play football. It's about performing," he once said. "Those doing best will play, regardless of their age, looks or whether they're German or not." Kovac has overseen one of the most international dressing rooms in the Bundesliga, with 17 different nationalities represented – and he gets them all speaking the same language, on and off the field.

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