Euro 2016: How players born in Germany could help Turkey to spring a surprise........
Turkey is a country of almost 80,000,000 people, who make up one of the most enthusiastic football publics in Europe. The big three Istanbul teams all play in impressive modern stadiums, and pay generous wages to top players. Galatasaray have Wesley Sneijder and Lukas Podolski, Fenerbahce have Nani and Robin van Persie, Besiktas, this year’s champions, have Ricardo Quaresma and Mario Gomez.
But Turkish football has a problem. It does not produce enough good players. It never has, which is why Euro 2016 will only be the sixth major tournament the national team has played in, and the first since Euro 2008.
After three games of the qualification campaign for Euro 2016, this was looking like a similar story. Turkey had taken just one point from games against Iceland, Czech Republic and Latvia. They were bottom of Group A, behind Kazakhstan and Latvia.
But then something clicked, and Turkey went on a run that has taken them all the way to the Euros. Fatih Terim’s side took 17 points from their last seven games, finishing with a run of wins against the Netherlands, Czech Republic and Iceland. The ended up in third, five points ahead of Dutch, and qualified automatically for the Euro.
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In March Turkey won difficult friendlies against Sweden and Austria, extending their unbeaten run to 12 games. They arrive at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday with a legitimate claim to be the form team in Europe.
The difference, the reason that Turkey turned Group A on its head, and why no-one will want to play them in France, is in the rise of a new generation of Turkish players, who have solved the issue of Turkish development. Because the new stars of this team were all born and educated in western Europe.
The story of how Turkish migration to Germany has equipped the German national team with players like Mesut Ozil and Emre Can – both in Joachim Loew’s squad for Euro 2016 – is well known by now. The Turkish community in Germany numbers almost 3 million people and quite a few young men, born around 1990, especially in the industrial west, have become professional footballers.
But for every Ozil, Can or Ilkay Gundogan, players who decided to represent the country of their birth, there is another who chose to play for Turkey instead. Germany does not allow adults to hold both German and Turkish citizenship, and almost as many have moved to Turkey as have stayed. These are the players, brought up in the modern academy environments of Germany and its neighbours, who have added a new technical edge to Fatih Terim’s side.
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“Generally these players have received better coaching and have been taught modern football,” explains Emre Sarigul of turkish-football.com. “Germany produces some of the finest players in the world, and they have benefited from the system. Turkey is trying to catch up, but it takes time.”
Turkey did not have time to wait this campaign, but after an awful start the team was invigorated by the performances of these players, players who will be seen at Wembley on Sunday and who will take on Europe next month.
The best of them is 22-year-old Hakan Calhanoglu, an elusive creative midfielder and set-piece specialist who took control of Terim’s side during qualification, scoring the goal that sealed their crucial win in Prague last October. Typically of this generation, he was born in Mannheim and grew up at Karlsruher academy before moving to Bayer Leverkusen in 2014. He may not be there for much longer.
Then there is Nuri Sahin, slightly older at 27, born in Ludenscheid, just south of Dortmund. He was the anchor of Jurgen Klopp’s first great Borussia Dortmund team, and is back there now under Thomas Tuchel.
Another option in a talented midfield is 24-year-old Yunus Malli, who is not from the west but from Kassel in central Germany. He was educated at Borussia Monchengladbach and has spent his senior career at Mainz, playing for G