Swiss Review 5/2021
Swiss Review / October 2021 / No.5 Images 10 Granit Xhaka Xherdan Shakiri, Vladimir Petkovic From zeroes to heroes The sight of Swiss international Xherdan Shaqiri consoling his distraught young team- mate Ruben Vargas touched many of us this summer. Standing behind the two was the fatherly figure of Vladimir Petkovic, the national coach already looking as if he had processed what was a painful end to Switzer- land’s Euro 2020 campaign. They almost did it. After holding Spain to a one-all draw after 120 minutes of football in the quarter-finals, Switzerland were a penalty shoot-out away from reaching the last four. Alas, it was not to be. Vargas was not the only Swiss player to fail from the spot, but his miss was decisive. It marked the emotional end of a rollercoaster campaign – for players and fans alike. At the beginning of Euro 2020, the Swiss public was less than enamoured with its multicultural national side. Petkovic’s men were derided as pampered, overpaid prima donnas whose expensive cars and dyed hair meant more to them than giving their all on the pitch. Two victories later, and everything was fine. Switzerland managed to knock overconfident favourites France out of the tournament in a pulsating encounter. Back at home, Shaqiri and co. were no longer pariahs but heroes for progressing further in the competition than ever before. Be that as it may, coach Petkovic – much criti- cised, now suddenly fêted – stepped down from his post a fewweeks later to join French club Bordeaux. By which time Ruben Vargas’s tears had probably dried. JÜRG STEINER
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