"This is unnaceptable, behave yourself"
"Ughhh.......brughhhhh"
"Why can't you act with dignity when in Croatia?"
"[Throws up]"
". . ."
"*Crashes car into nearest Plodine*"
Albert Riera [Former Eintracht Frankfurt coach]: "To be honest, the level of the Bundesliga was somewhat disappointing. Bayern Munich are of course in a league of their own and cannot be reached. Borussia Dortmund can keep up reasonably well with their budget. Then there are surprises like Stuttgart, but the rest was disappointing for me. The teams in the bottom third of the table all play exactly the same way. When you analyze them, you get the feeling you're playing against the same opponent every week. If you look at the sums of money spent in Germany – 20, 30, even 40 million euros – compared to the amounts in the Slovenian league, it's not a different world at all. That's reality. If Celje were to play against Frankfurt, they could hold their own. I'm not saying they're better, but they can compete. The difference is smaller than it appears from the outside" [@Sport_Klub_Slo via @BILD]
“I wrote this because I can’t speak about it.
I wrote this because I want you to know that I will make sure that you live on.”
@RBLeipzig and @equipenatciv winger Yan Diomande on the life of his sister, Roxane. https://t.co/6wQmpdWTSi
Niko Kovač advised Bayern against signing one of his own Dortmund players last year
How? Last summer, after Bayern failed to sign priority target Nico Williams, they turned to alternatives. One of them was Dortmund's Jamie Gittens. The supervisory board, including Uli Hoeneß and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, was skeptical about the player. A club employee was tasked with contacting Niko Kovač to get an honest opinion from him about Gittens. Kovač is said to have made it more than clear that he considers the Englishman "not professional enough" to succeed at FC Bayern. The club then abandoned the pursuit of Gittens and went all in on Luis Díaz. Gittens ended up joining Chelsea
[@BILD, Bayern Insider]