03 July,2024 06:51 AM IST | Leipzig (Germany) | AFP
Turkey’s Merih Demiral celebrates his goal against Austria at the Football Stadium Leipzig in Germany on Tuesday. Pic/Getty Images
Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella said beating Austria 2-1 to reach the quarter-finals of Euro 2024 was extra special after being thrashed by the same opponents in a friendly in March.
Centre-back Merih Demiral was the unlikely hero with both goals in Leipzig as Turkey reached the last eight of a major tournament for the first time since Euro 2008. It was a cathartic triumph for Montella and his players after their 1-6 loss to Austria earlier this year.
"We were heavily criticised for our friendly results. They didn't pan out well and the peak of that was against Austria," Montella told reporters.
ALSO READ
England must come before club: Kane
UEFA investigates English ref Coote over footage of alleged drug use at Euro 2024
Denmark hires Riemer as permanent coach following departure of Hjulmand after Euro 2024
Kroos responds as UEFA admits referee erred in Euro 2024 QF
Mbappe confident of France return after Euro flop show
"That was a horrible stain on my career. That was the team I was waiting for to get this monkey off my back. We coaches, like players, we are competitors and I have that deep competitive instinct in me to reverse this result. This wasn't exacting revenge but me setting things right because I've never lost by this scoreline in my coaching career."
Turkey will face the Netherlands in the quarter-finals on Saturday in what is sure to be a fervent atmosphere in Berlin.
Germany is home to nearly three million people of Turkish descent and Montella's men have been backed in huge numbers in every game at the tournament so far.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever