SHARE
COPY LINK
WORLD CUP 2014

FOOTBALL

Hitzfeld bids emotional goodbye to Swiss team

Ottmar Hitzfeld said an emotional goodbye to his Swiss team and football Tuesday as he quit the sport after a dramatic World Cup loss to Argentina and following the death of his brother.

Hitzfeld bids emotional goodbye to Swiss team
Hitzfeld says au revoir to team members. Photo: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP

Despite the personal trauma of losing his brother Winfried, 81, to leukaemia, Hitzfeld very nearly masterminded a seismic upset of Argentina in his last hurrah as coach.
   
He said the extra-time defeat reminded him of the 1999 Champions League final, when his Bayern Munich team were minutes from victory before Manchester United scored twice.
   
And Hitzfeld said his "heart was full of emotions" after the Swiss came just two minutes from a penalty shoot-out before Angel Di Maria's extra-time winner in Sao Paulo.
   
"These are emotions you can only have with football, that's why I love football," he said.
   
"Switzerland has won a lot of hearts around the world today, that is something that will make us proud."
   
The 65-year-old German, who won the Champions League with both Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich, had already announced he would retire after the World Cup.
   
"I will go on working for TV," Hitzfeld said.

"I'll go to games but as a journalist basically, so I have a quiet life in front of me," he said.
   
Hitzfelld said coaching is a "difficult" job.

"I'm proud of my career," he said.

"I was fortunate to coach marvellous clubs and also the Swiss national team.
   
"It has been a great time working for them so I say goodbye with a heart full of emotions."
   
After Argentina's winner, Hitzfeld went on the pitch to console his stricken players, just as he did in 1999 with his distraught Bayern Munich team following their 2-1 loss.
   
"It' s normal to go on the pitch at a time like that," he said.

"I did it with Manchester United when we lost the Champions League final in a matter of two or three minutes, and then I did it today.
   
"I went onto the pitch to console the players and tell them they've done a great job for themselves and their country."
   
And he said his team could leave with their "heads held high" after running two-time winners Argentina close on the sport's biggest stage.
   
"I guess every moment in football will stick in your memory and emotions are the same but today, this was a huge dimension," he said.
   
"It's a World Cup and we were nearly at a penalty shoot-out. That of course creates a lot of tension.
   
"Unfortunately we didn't make it but I think we can walk tall and leave with our heads held high."

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.