The Citizen (KZN)

Bosz feels he has a score to settle with Dortmund

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The Hague – PSV Eindhoven coach Peter Bosz (right) has added incentive for today’s Champions League last-16 clash against Borussia Dortmund – he spent a miserable few months at the Bundesliga giants culminatin­g in a humiliatin­g sacking.

The 60-year-old Dutchman has enjoyed a remarkable season with runaway Eredivisie leaders PSV, who equalled a topflight record by winning their first 17 league games.

PSV are now gunning for their first Champions League quarterfin­al since the 20072008 season, as Eindhoven fans dare to dream of emulating Guus Hiddink’s class of 1988 which lifted the cup.

But Bosz will have a personal point to prove against Dortmund, who tempted him away from Ajax in June 2017, paying a Bundesliga record €5 million in compensati­on.

The Bosz reign started brightly enough. Six wins from the first seven games led some to speculate that Dortmund could finally dethrone perennial champions Bayern Munich.

But the rot started to set in by mid-October, when Dortmund embarked on a run of five games without a win, piling the pressure on the new coach.

The domestic woes were compounded by failure in Europe, with Dortmund crashing out of the Champions League group stage without a single win.

However, the low point came on 25 November, in a famous game at home against bitter local derby rivals Schalke 04.

Dortmund were 4-0 up within 25 minutes but somehow contrived to draw the game 4-4, leaving the home fans – and backroom bosses – furious.

At a board meeting the following day, CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke told booing club members: “I feel just as sh**ty as you all...I have never experience­d anything like that.”

Media slammed Bosz’s 4-3-3 system and he failed to get the best out of star striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, who eventually transferre­d to Arsenal after several disciplina­ry issues at Dortmund.

The die was cast and Bosz was finally sacked on 10 December, after just 167 days in charge. “Bye, Bye, Bosz,” headlined mass circulatio­n daily Bild.

When the last-16 draw was made against his old employers, Bosz was diplomatic, describing Dortmund as a “big club” with one of the strongest fan bases in Europe.

“I still know a lot of people at the club and I’m looking forward to it,” he said.

But in an interview with the Algemeen Dagblad late last year, he revealed the behind-thescenes difficulti­es, notably with Aubameyang and French striker Ousmane Dembele.

Bosz said the trouble started when Dembele disappeare­d from training, only to surface in Monaco, where he was in secret contract talks with Barcelona.

Dortmund sit fourth in the Bundesliga but have a strong record in Europe, topping the so-called Champions League group of death ahead of Paris St-Germain, AC Milan, and Newcastle. –

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