Los Angeles Times

Klinsmann takes a step away from dad’s shadow

- By Erik Kirschbaum sports@latimes.com Kirschbaum is a special correspond­ent.

BERLIN — Jonathan Klinsmann remembers being thrilled, if a little uneasy, when Hertha Berlin coach Pal Dardai tapped him on the shoulder and told him he would be playing his first profession­al game at Olympic Stadium.

So he called his dad, Jurgen — who played in that stadium, coached in that stadium and won a World Cup with the German national team — for advice in calming his nerves.

“It was a couple of days before the game and you start thinking, and start overthinki­ng,” the younger Klinsmann remembered. “I didn’t know what to think. So I called my dad. After that I was good, I was fine.”

With his mind at ease the younger Klinsmann made a brilliant save on a late penalty kick in his debut, preserving a 1-1 tie with Swedish club Ostersunds in a Europa League game and briefly becoming the toast of the town in the German capital. And making his father proud as well.

“Over time Jonathan will learn how to channel nervousnes­s into extra positive energy once the game gets going,” said the elder Klinsmann, a former U.S. national team coach who watched his son’s first game from Southern California. “By nature he’s a gamer. Mastering his profession­al debut in a Europa League game is really special.”

It was an auspicious start for Hertha Berlin’s thirdchoic­e keeper who, until then, was best known as Jurgen’s son. But on that dark, cold Dec. 7 night he took at least a tentative step away from his father’s long shadow, first with a fantastic fingertip save in the first half, then with a lunge to his left to stop Brwa Nouri’s wellplaced penalty kick in the 87th minute.

“It was a crazy feeling, definitely,” he said. “We scouted the penalty takers before the game and I was debating in my mind where I was going to go. Right before he took the penalty, I decided where I was going because of the scouting.”

It proved to be the right decision. But it wasn’t the only time Klinsmann has found himself in the right place at the right time at Hertha.

He played six games in his first four months with the club’s junior team this fall, which drew the attention of Dardai. So when the coach chose to rest regular keeper Rune Jarstein while backup Thomas Kraft was sidelined because of an illness, he had no reservatio­ns about starting Klinsmann, just 20.

“I can remember walking out onto the field for my profession­al debut and that’s something I won’t ever forget,” he said. “Just the energy in the stadium was so incredible. Getting a save in the first half was really important for me and, obviously, the penalty save is something I’ll always remember as well.”

Something his father, who coached Germany in the 2006 World Cup quarterfin­als in the same stadium, will always remember as well. “You’re naturally nervous as a parent when your son gets the chance to perform in such a special occasion,” said the elder Klinsmann, who made his living scoring goals, not stopping them.

Although he was born in Munich and is a dual national, Jonathan Klinsmann moved to Orange County when he was just a year old, so Germany is a foreign country to him. And adjusting to winter in Germany, where the sun can disappear for weeks under dark clouds and freezing rain, hasn’t been easy.

But those were obstacles he was willing to confront when he decided to leave UC Berkeley after two seasons.

“I wanted to challenge myself,” said Klinsmann, who started on a U.S. team that reached the quarterfin­als of last spring’s U-20 World Cup, success that could set him on course for a call-up to the U.S. senior national team. That’s the team his father coached for five years before being sacked 13 months ago after back-toback losses in World Cup qualifying.

“I have confidence in myself to become a really good player, a really great player,” the younger Klinsmann continued. “After the U-20 World Cup, I saw myself taking the next step. And obviously the Bundesliga is a big step.”

So weeks after the World Cup, Klinsmann had a summer tryout with Hertha that went so well the club rushed to sign him even before the 10-day audition was finished. At the time team officials said privately they could hardly believe their good fortune to uncover such a gem overlooked by other European clubs.

“It’s tough and it’s always going to be tough,” said Klinsmann, who lives in an apartment in the Mitte section of the German capital, not far from where the Berlin Wall stood in what was formerly East Berlin. “But I’m really happy that I made that step.”

Language has proved to be another challenge.

His father is learning a new language, too, studying Spanish while plotting his next move, one he hopes will land him with another national team.

“I would be comfortabl­e now coach[ing] a Spanishlan­guage team,” he said. “I just want to be prepared for the next adventure. Who knows what will happen in the future?”

Five months after his move to Germany and nearly four weeks after Dardai’s fateful tap on his shoulder, the younger Klinsmann could say the same thing.

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