As he nears the centre spot before kick off at Hamburg’s Volksparkstadion on Wednesday, Turkish pennant in his hand, palm extended to his rival captain and the referee, Hakan Calhanoglu might just pause for a moment to remember a moment of inspiration.
Just outside this very centre circle, Turkey’s captain scored a breathtaking goal they still talk about in Hamburg. He struck it from more than 40 metres from the target, and its flight path was so full of unexpected swerves and sudden dips it seemed to defy the laws of physics.
Calhangolu’s wonder strike, in a late-season Bundesliga fixture for Hamburg against Borussia Dortmund, announced his special skill with a dead ball to a wider world. In the decade since, Calhanoglu has become acknowledged as one of the game’s great virtuosos with free kicks and corners, and a masterly passer over ambitious distances, assets that have taken him a long way from Hamburg, where, as a 20-year-old he was often helping stave off relegation.
After he left – a fractious departure – the club struggled on through various battles against the drop but the arena Calhangolu revisits today, leading a Turkey anxious about their progress to the knockout stage of Euro 2024, has long become used to hosting club games in Germany’s second tier.
For Turkey-Czech Republic, a rousing atmosphere at the Volksparkstadion is guaranteed. Hamburg is home to the fourth highest urban concentration of Germans of Turkish heritage and, in a country where the community numbers an estimated seven million, support for the Crescent-Stars at the championship so far has been conspicuous.
Seldom has that community had such prominence at the top of the sport in both Turkey and Germany.
Calhanoglu, fresh from winning last season’s Italian league title with Inter Milan, was born in Mannheim, his parents having moved from Anatolia, to lend their skills to a German labour market that had been eagerly recruiting in Turkey from the 1960s onwards.
As it turned out, the family would also bequeath a great deal of future sporting talent to their adopted home. Hakan’s brother Muhammed has also pursued a professional football career; likewise his cousin, Kerim, who has represented Germany at various youth levels.
The same choice, Germany or Turkey, was open to Hakan Calhanoglu, whose creative passing and improvisation at Hamburg made him prized first by Bayer Leverkusen – beneficiaries of a contested transfer from Hamburg in the summer of 2014 – then AC Milan, and then Inter, where his adaptation to a deeper midfield role has advanced still further his reputation.
His stock in German club football remains high. Rumbling along in the background to the Euros is Bayern Munich’s sustained interest in luring Calhanoglu, now 30, back to the Bundesliga. Inter will only let him go for a very significant fee.
Meanwhile, the German national team have, over the past five or six years, had cause to regret Calhanoglu’s decision, taken in his teens, to represent the country of his heritage rather than his birth. They could have done with a passer like him.
Germany’s blessing is that Ilkay Gundogan, whose grandfather Ismail left Balikesir in Turkey to work as a miner in the Ruhr, did elect to play for his native country. The Barcelona and former Manchester City star is captaining the host nation at these Euros, leader of a squad that also includes Borussia Dortmund’s Emre Can and Deniz Undav, other footballers of Turkish heritage.
Among Calhanoglu’s Turkey teammates are the German-born quartet of Salih Ozcan, Kaan Ayhan, Cenk Tosun and the teenager Kenan Yildiz, also in Serie A with Juventus.
Turkey 0 Portugal 3 – player ratings
All of them follow in a distinguished line of Turkish-German players, many of whom confronted prejudice rising through the sport. Mesut Ozil, a stellar contributor to Germany’s World Cup triumph in 2014, retired from representing the country four years later with the observation that “I am a German when we win and an immigrant when we lose.” Ozil and Gundogan had been criticised by the German Football Federation for posing, in London in 2018, for a photograph with Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Ozil’s direct contemporary, Nuri Sahin, German-born but committed to Turkey, from youth level upwards and through more than 50 senior caps, encountered criticism within Germany for his choice of national jersey when he was a young midfielder, starring for Dortmund, and, like Ozil, later signing for Real Madrid.
Sahin, still only 35, remains a high-profile and pioneering figure in the sport – earlier this month, he was appointed new manager at Dortmund, second only to Bayern in the hierarchy of Germany’s best supported clubs and runners-up to Real Madrid, three weeks ago, in the Uefa Champions League.
For Calhanoglu, the task in the city he used to call home, will be to channel the noisy local backing that has accompanied Turkey through their group stage matches so far, and to re-establish the command his team showed in their opening 3-1 victory over Georgia.
An error-strewn 3-0 defeat to Portugal in their second match has left Turkey vulnerable going into matchday three. Defeat to the Czechs could mean an early exit. Avoiding defeat would guarantee second place, behind the Portuguese in Group F, and a last-16 game in Leipzig on Monday.
Turkey will be without the suspended Abdulkerim Bardakci in central defence, have a doubt over whether first-choice goalkeeper Mert Gunok, who missed the Portugal defeat with injury, will be ready to return. A good deal of attention will be cast on whether the Real Madrid starlet, Arda Guler, is included in the starting line-up. Guler, 19, struck a sensational goal to regain the lead against Georgia but was left out of the XI in the following fixture.
“I didn’t want to risk him for more than 30 minutes,” Turkey manager Vicenzo Montella explained, citing a light injury the striker had been carrying. Fans made it clear through the Portugal game they wanted to see Guler on the pitch for more than just his 20 minutes at the end, chasing a three-goal deficit.
“We have to look forward,” said Calhanoglu. “We gave away goals against Portugal but these things can happen. We need to focus now on getting second place in the group.”
Benefits of first-time home buyers' scheme
- Priority access to new homes from participating developers
- Discounts on sales price of off-plan units
- Flexible payment plans from developers
- Mortgages with better interest rates, faster approval times and reduced fees
- DLD registration fee can be paid through banks or credit cards at zero interest rates
Tearful appearance
Chancellor Rachel Reeves set markets on edge as she appeared visibly distraught in parliament on Wednesday.
Legislative setbacks for the government have blown a new hole in the budgetary calculations at a time when the deficit is stubbornly large and the economy is struggling to grow.
She appeared with Keir Starmer on Thursday and the pair embraced, but he had failed to give her his backing as she cried a day earlier.
A spokesman said her upset demeanour was due to a personal matter.
MATCH INFO
Karnataka Tuskers 110-5 (10 ovs)
Tharanga 48, Shafiq 34, Rampaul 2-16
Delhi Bulls 91-8 (10 ovs)
Mathews 31, Rimmington 3-28
Karnataka Tuskers win by 19 runs
At a glance - Zayed Sustainability Prize 2020
Launched: 2008
Categories: Health, energy, water, food, global high schools
Prize: Dh2.2 million (Dh360,000 for global high schools category)
Winners’ announcement: Monday, January 13
Impact in numbers
335 million people positively impacted by projects
430,000 jobs created
10 million people given access to clean and affordable drinking water
50 million homes powered by renewable energy
6.5 billion litres of water saved
26 million school children given solar lighting
Score
New Zealand 266 for 9 in 50 overs
Pakistan 219 all out in 47.2 overs
New Zealand win by 47 runs
New Zealand lead three-match ODI series 1-0
Next match: Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi, Friday
MATCH INFO
Champions League quarter-final, first leg
Ajax v Juventus, Wednesday, 11pm (UAE)
Match on BeIN Sports
The specs
Engine: 2.0-litre 4-cyl turbo
Power: 201hp at 5,200rpm
Torque: 320Nm at 1,750-4,000rpm
Transmission: 6-speed auto
Fuel consumption: 8.7L/100km
Price: Dh133,900
On sale: now
Punchy appearance
Roars of support buoyed Mr Johnson in an extremely confident and combative appearance
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
THE BIO
Favourite holiday destination: Whenever I have any free time I always go back to see my family in Caltra, Galway, it’s the only place I can properly relax.
Favourite film: The Way, starring Martin Sheen. It’s about the Camino de Santiago walk from France to Spain.
Personal motto: If something’s meant for you it won’t pass you by.
Company%20Profile
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Killing of Qassem Suleimani
Will the pound fall to parity with the dollar?
The idea of pound parity now seems less far-fetched as the risk grows that Britain may split away from the European Union without a deal.
Rupert Harrison, a fund manager at BlackRock, sees the risk of it falling to trade level with the dollar on a no-deal Brexit. The view echoes Morgan Stanley’s recent forecast that the currency can plunge toward $1 (Dh3.67) on such an outcome. That isn’t the majority view yet – a Bloomberg survey this month estimated the pound will slide to $1.10 should the UK exit the bloc without an agreement.
New Prime Minister Boris Johnson has repeatedly said that Britain will leave the EU on the October 31 deadline with or without an agreement, fuelling concern the nation is headed for a disorderly departure and fanning pessimism toward the pound. Sterling has fallen more than 7 per cent in the past three months, the worst performance among major developed-market currencies.
“The pound is at a much lower level now but I still think a no-deal exit would lead to significant volatility and we could be testing parity on a really bad outcome,” said Mr Harrison, who manages more than $10 billion in assets at BlackRock. “We will see this game of chicken continue through August and that’s likely negative for sterling,” he said about the deadlocked Brexit talks.
The pound fell 0.8 per cent to $1.2033 on Friday, its weakest closing level since the 1980s, after a report on the second quarter showed the UK economy shrank for the first time in six years. The data means it is likely the Bank of England will cut interest rates, according to Mizuho Bank.
The BOE said in November that the currency could fall even below $1 in an analysis on possible worst-case Brexit scenarios. Options-based calculations showed around a 6.4 per cent chance of pound-dollar parity in the next one year, markedly higher than 0.2 per cent in early March when prospects of a no-deal outcome were seemingly off the table.
Bloomberg
MATCH INFO
Manchester City 1 Chelsea 0
De Bruyne (70')
Man of the Match: Kevin de Bruyne (Manchester City)
Sole survivors
- Cecelia Crocker was on board Northwest Airlines Flight 255 in 1987 when it crashed in Detroit, killing 154 people, including her parents and brother. The plane had hit a light pole on take off
- George Lamson Jr, from Minnesota, was on a Galaxy Airlines flight that crashed in Reno in 1985, killing 68 people. His entire seat was launched out of the plane
- Bahia Bakari, then 12, survived when a Yemenia Airways flight crashed near the Comoros in 2009, killing 152. She was found clinging to wreckage after floating in the ocean for 13 hours.
- Jim Polehinke was the co-pilot and sole survivor of a 2006 Comair flight that crashed in Lexington, Kentucky, killing 49.
Andor
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MATCH INFO
Manchester United 6 (McTominay 2', 3'; Fernandes 20', 70' pen; Lindelof 37'; James 65')
Leeds United 2 (Cooper 41'; Dallas 73')
Man of the match: Scott McTominay (Manchester United)
Match info
Manchester United 4
(Pogba 5', 33', Rashford 45', Lukaku 72')
Bournemouth 1
(Ake 45 2')
Red card: Eric Bailly (Manchester United)
ELIO
Starring: Yonas Kibreab, Zoe Saldana, Brad Garrett
Directors: Madeline Sharafian, Domee Shi, Adrian Molina
Rating: 4/5
Joker: Folie a Deux
Starring: Joaquin Phoenix, Lady Gaga, Brendan Gleeson
Director: Todd Phillips
Rating: 2/5
Abu Dhabi Grand Slam Jiu-Jitsu World Tour Calendar 2018/19
July 29: OTA Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan
Sep 22-23: LA Convention Centre in Los Angeles, US
Nov 16-18: Carioca Arena Centre in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Feb 7-9: Mubadala Arena in Abu Dhabi, UAE
Mar 9-10: Copper Box Arena in London, UK