Jesse Marsch and the difficult legacy

by time news

VThree years ago, in Hoffenheim, a tall man approached Jesse Marsch. “Hello Jesse, how are you?” Asked the man. At Marsch, who was co-coach of RB Leipzig at the time, this caused astonishment, as his counterpart spoke with a perfect American accent. A compatriot, march thought. He was right. The man was Pellegrino Matarazzo, today coach of VfB Stuttgart and this Friday evening (8.30 p.m. in the FAZ live ticker for the Bundesliga and DAZN) a guest at Marsch and RB Leipzig.

The 47 year old Marsch, born in Wisconsin, and Matarazzo, a native of New Jersey, are part of a premiere. For the first time, two American head coaches face each other in the Bundesliga. There should be a warm encounter before the game, everyone appreciates each other. “He speaks a much better German than I do. As far as that goes, he’s a role model, ”says Marsch, who also thinks a lot about the football teacher Matarazzo.

Marsch grew up in Racine, a small town between Milwaukee and Chicago. His grandfathers came from Germany, they gave him the German surname, but no longer the language. “Unfortunately, at some point they only spoke English at home,” he says. He had to learn German first, just as he had to get to know the Bundesliga. The year as Ralf Rangnick’s assistant helped him a lot in this regard.

It is by no means due to a lack of language skills that he has not yet arrived properly as head coach. At the start, his team lost 1-0 in Mainz – a bitter disappointment. “We weren’t sharp, weren’t consistent enough,” says Marsch. Sharp is one of his favorite words. Marsch tries to establish it in German usage with the same intensity as he tries to bring his game idea to the team. He has not yet succeeded in either.

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