Sunday Mirror

HURT LOCKER

Ten Hag haunted by tragic loss of best pal in air disaster...AND sudden death of his Dutch mentor Epi Drost

- EXCLUSIVE By Simon muLLocK @MullockSMi­rror

ERIK TEN HAG was a teenager when one of his best friends was killed in the air crash that claimed the lives of 15 Surinamese footballer­s.

Almost 33 years later, it’s a tragedy that still haunts the man who is favourite to become the next manager of Manchester United.

Ten Hag was a promising central defender just six months away from following Andy Scharmin into the first team of FC Twente.

Left-back Scharmin, 21, was one of the 178 souls lost when a flight from Amsterdam came down on its approach to Paramaribo-Zanderij airport outside the Suriname capital.

He had rejected a call-up from Holland’s Under-21 squad for that summer’s Toulon Tournament so he could join a 19-man party travelling to Suriname to play in a charity game.

He was killed alongside his mother and aunt.

Ten Hag had grown up with Scharmin (below) in the town of Haaksberge­n and was given the honour of carrying his coffin at the funeral.

The 52-yar-old recalled: “Andy Scharmin was an unimaginab­le athlete and my friend. Like me, he came from Haaksberge­n and, although a bit older than me, we travelled to FC Twente together for years, by bus, bicycle or car.

“I will never forget my team-mate Edwin Hilgerink standing on my doorstep to tell me that a plane had crashed with Andy and his mother on board.

“That was a huge blow. At his funeral, I carried Andy’s coffin with other team-mates. It happened on June 7, 1989 – and every year on that date I have a day of mourning.

“The solidarity of that generation of FC Twente profession­als is there to this day. Close friendship­s have arisen and we still meet regularly.”

If Ten Hag gets the job at United, he will learn how the air disaster at Munich that cut down Matt Busby’s brilliant Babes in

1958 has shaped the club ever since.

He is not a man to forget fallen comrades.

Another team-mate, Gino

Weber, committed suicide at the age of 33 after a promising career was wrecked by injury.

Wilfried Elzinga, a forward who won internatio­nal honours at youth level, also failed to fulfil his early promise because of injury problems. And Ten

Hag’s mentor and youth coach, the former Dutch internatio­nal Epi Drost, died at the age of 49 after suffering a heart attack during a friendly game. Ten Hag said: “I often think back to my youth at FC Twente. We had a really good group.

“Three boys from that team were so good that they could have made it to the national team.

“But one of them was seriously injured at a young age and two other boys died young. In Andy Scharmin, Wilfried Elzinga and Gino Weber, we had three top talents.

“Gino was the best talent in Holland at that time, an unparallel­ed football player with a mega technique who was completely two-footed.

“But he suffered a mental illness and took his own life. It puts everything into perspectiv­e. I certainly think about how things can go in life.”

Ten Hag added: “Epi Drost was my idol. He became my coach at the FC Twente academy and he had a soft spot for me because I was by far the youngest in the squad.

“Epy let me participat­e in the Under23 team as a 15-year-old. He was a fan of technical and adventurou­s football.

“He stimulated creativity, because that was the most important thing to him. Epy died suddenly due to a cardiac arrest during a match.

“That was a massive blow for me.”

 ?? ?? idoL Epi Drost (right) played for FC Twente
idoL Epi Drost (right) played for FC Twente

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