The Guardian (USA)

‘Everything is possible’: YMCA football team’s rise to Norwegian top flight

- Daniel Harris

Football’s ability to conjure ridiculous stories is legion, but even so the one about the YMCA club in Norway’s Eliteserie­n is ridiculous. Yet that is exactly where KFUM-Kameratene Oslo find themselves: on Tuesday, they make their top-flight debut with a home game against HamKam.

Though KFUM remain a local community club – their ground holds only 3,000 and is accessed via a zebra crossing – their rise has been meticulous­ly planned. “We have learned year by year,” says Tor-Erik Stenberg, the general manager. “Small changes to be more and more and more profession­al.” So they began by giving players amateur contracts, then moved training from evening to daytime, then focused on better marketing, and so on; this season, fortified with the funds to improve more than one aspect, they have added a match analyst, expanded their medical department, and taken the team abroad for warm-weather training.

Sensible, patient growth may be unusual in football, but Stenberg attributes KFUM’s success not to its processes but to its culture. “We are a YMCA club,” he says. “We have a Christian-based foundation with Christian values: forgivenes­s, love, caring. That doesn’t mean that we don’t fight because on the field, football is football. It doesn’t mean that we don’t get angry, but it has to do with how we behave before and afterwards.”

This philosophy is embodied by Johs Moesgaard, the KFUM manager cleverly brought in as assistant when the club realised Jørgen Isnes, his predecesso­r, was doing so well he would soon be poached by a richer rival. “We are looking for people who understand human beings first, who understand that results are a product of how you treat people,” Stenberg says. “Johs understand­s how to mix a group, develop the people within the group – that’s his main skill. And if you can build a group with a common understand­ing of how to play, how to behave – a group like that will die for each other and you will get better results.”

Consequent­ly, prospectiv­e signings know for sure that if they join KFUM, they will have a good time making good friends. “But you will never be rich,” Stenberg says, “so it attracts people who enjoy those things. And also of course, we have developed many players now so young players like and enjoy to come to us.”

Moesgaard agrees that his main responsibi­lity is creating the right environmen­t for his players, noting that the Christian values KFUM represents are also universal values – there are not many Christians in his squad, but there are Muslims and atheists. “Everyone is important and everyone has equal opportunit­ies,” he explains. “It’s ‘a club for life’ like the slogan says. It’s a place where you will feel respected, you will feel trust, you will feel that you mean something.”

But treating people with kindness doesn’t mean lowering standards. “In Norway we use a lot of excuses: ‘I don’t have money, I don’t have this, I don’t have that,’” Moesgaard says. “We are a small club, little resources, but everything is possible. Stop whining, just go to work and everything can be made.”

The drive to make the best of things is of central significan­ce when scouting potential acquisitio­ns, who must be the right kind of person as well as the right kind of player for the club’s non-negotiable 3-4-3 short-passing style. “I put emphasis on getting in players with X Factor,” Moesgaard says. “I love players who have that extra edge in their game. We find players from lower divisions – players who sit on the bench in other clubs or are told ‘you’re not making it here’ – but we see the extra thing. And we think that I can bring forward their skills by my leadership, and I’m very including, I’m not that harsh. I keep a close contact with my players because I believe that the interactio­n between us makes them more comfortabl­e, more safe – that they’re brave to make mistakes in the game.”

By way of example, Moesgaard references 21-year-old Obilor Okeke, a winger of questionab­le decision-making but rich potential, which no previous manager had been able to extract. Moesgaard, though, was certain he could reach him and, excited by his ability to dribble at extreme pace, rescued him from Fredriksta­d reserves then organised the team to accentuate his strengths. Similarly, Mo Lion Njie is a centre-back extremely good on the ball but who lacked a little defensive nous. “So,” says Moesgaard, “we worked on that weakness, put runners around him to protect him, and he controls the game.”

 ?? Photograph: KFUM ?? Before matches at the KFUM Arena, teams have to cross a zebra crossing from the dressing rooms to the 3,000 capacity stadium.
Photograph: KFUM Before matches at the KFUM Arena, teams have to cross a zebra crossing from the dressing rooms to the 3,000 capacity stadium.
 ?? November. Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy ?? Defender Momodou Lion Njie celebrates KFUM’s promotion to the Eliteserie­n in
November. Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy Defender Momodou Lion Njie celebrates KFUM’s promotion to the Eliteserie­n in

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