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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

Philipp Gollner

The academic treatment for English-speakers who get that soccer is more than gamedays, stars and goals. Who wonder about the histories, subcultures and politics that make the game so different from many American sports cultures; and who care about a critical take on soccer as a global capitalist machine. A European-guided journey, with one expert "visiting professor" each episode.

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Top 10 The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - The Match That Started a War? Dinamo Zagreb and the Conflicts of Croatian Nationalism

The Match That Started a War? Dinamo Zagreb and the Conflicts of Croatian Nationalism

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

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01/31/23 • 66 min

In front of the Stadium Maksimir, home to the World Cup's 3rd place finisher, Croatia, and to its biggest club, Dinamo Zagreb, a large memorial put up by Dinamo's fan group Bad Blue Boys is dedicated "to Dinamo fans for whom the war started on May 13 1990, and ended by laying their lives on the altar of the Croatian homeland.” That war is the Croatian war for independence, part of the larger bloody Yugoslavian war of the early 1990s. And the May 13th they mean, was the day of Dinamo played Crvena Zvezda (Red Star Belgrade) in Zagreb, a match that descended into chaos and violence on and off the field.
With Dario Brentin, researcher and well-published author on nationalisms, sports, culture and politics of the Balkans, we'll trace Dinamo's and Croatia's history to today and ask not how soccer can push against nationalism - but actually construct it.
HELPFUL LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE:
Dario Brentin on twitter
TV footage from the 1990 game between Dinamo Zagreb and Crvena Zvezda

Bad Blue Boys in Action

Bad Blue Boys for Ukraine - recent video

War Memorial at Maksimir Stadium
Maksimir Stadium on Stadiumguide

HŠK Građanski Zagreb

3 Minute History: The Yugoslavian War

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - A Soccer Culture Playlist - Preliminary Punk, Ballads, Ska and Indie About Fans, Footballers and Clubs
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04/11/23 • 48 min

Back from Spring, or Easter, break, an unusual episode: a - very preliminary, but very varied - playlist of 12 soccer culture songs that you wont find in this constellation on any English-speaking website. From punk perspectives on the game and the fate of Hooligan culture, to ballads about football, God and sexual orientation, from the Antifa ska-punk of Southern Europe to German indie-rock with an FC Bayern strikers’ voice mixed in, from the 1990s to the present - I hope you have as much fun listening to this as I had curating it. As the leagues heat up and the teams we root for seem bound for either glory or desperation (or perpetual mediocrity), here is the musical long view to distract us a little:

Los Fastidios, Antifa Hooligans

Branden Steineckert, Believe RSL

Billy Bragg, God’s Footballer

The Business, Terrace Lost Its Souls

Vanilla Muffins, Saturday

Bolchoi, Hooligan

Pizzera und Jaus, Hooligans

Ska P, Como un Rayo (Live in Madrid)

De Höhner, Mir Stonn zu Dir (1.FC Köln, in the stadium)

Stage Bottles, Kick Out the Parasites

Matt Fishel, Football Song

Sportfreunde Stiller, Ich Roque

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - A Soccer Culture Playlist 2.0 - 12 Football-Related Songs from 8 Countries

A Soccer Culture Playlist 2.0 - 12 Football-Related Songs from 8 Countries

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

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02/19/24 • 38 min

Indie, Hip Hop, Punk, Reggae, Ska and Choruses- from Leeds to Istanbul, from Vienna to Mexico City, from Darmstadt to Buenos Aires. Your second soccer playlist is here - with some background info, and plenty of quirky football lyrics.
PLAYLIST FOR THIS EPISODE - links to videos:
Puma Hardchorus - England, France, Germany and Italy
Alberto Colucci - Die Sonne Scheint (SV Darmstadt 98)
Manu Chao (with Diego Maradona) - La Vida Tombola
Sultans of Ping - I'm in Love with a Football Hooligan
Luke Haines - Leeds United
Mono & Kreiml - Verteilerkreisflavour
Athena - Hooligans
Biberstand Boys - Unioner im Haus
Ky-Mani Marley's live rendition of Bob Marley - Three Little Birds
Maldita Vecintad - Fut Callejero Pura Diversión

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - The Footballer who Defied the Nazis? The Myth of Matthias Sindelar, and the Myth of Austrian Victimhood
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10/16/23 • 81 min

Matthias Sindelar was, and is, the most famous Austrian footballer between World Wars 1 and 2. Known for his elegant style of play during a period when Austrian soccer was admired as an innovative model, he defined Austria’s national team, known as the "miracle team," and his club, Austria Vienna. Austria joined Nazi Germany between 1938 and 1945. And when it arose as an independent nation again, Sindelar's legacy was more than that of a footballer: he became a myth - the elegant Austrian who defied the Nazis. This version of Sindelar has reached a wide international audience, from Italian graphic novels and Latin American books to articles in well-known English-speaking newspapers, complete with the story of how Sindelar celebrated a goal “by dancing in front of a directors' box packed with high-ranking Nazis."

Until recently, no historian has attempted to probe these stories. The story of the elegant footballer who defied the Nazis was too endearing for antifascist football fans worldwide - and for Austrians, who wanted to see themselves as victims of the Nazis.

As far as the international, English-speaking discussion is concerned, this episode is a first. David Forster, a historian from Vienna, has published research in German into Sindelar’s life and death that offers a pathbreaking counter-narrative to the story of Sindelar, the resister, and Austria, the victim. We will journey from 1903 to 1938, but ask many hard questions of today along the way, about truth, about the nature of history, about collective forgetfulness, and about our responsibility as fans of and storytellers about the beautiful game today.
HELPFUL LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE:
David Forster, Georg Spitaler, Jakob Rosenberg, "Fussball unterm Hakenkreuz in der Ostmark" (book, website in German)

David Forster, Viennese Football and the German Wehrmacht (academic article in English, via JSTOR)
WBUR Radio, “Dancing Before The Nazis: A Soccer Star's (Supposed) Act Of Defiance” (Interview with Georg Spitaler)
Matthias Sindelar - the Footballer Who Defied the Nazis (popular YouTube video that tells the heroic story of Sindelar)
"The P

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - How Are They Now? Season 1 Reunion with 7 Visiting Professors of Football (song links in the shownotes)
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07/24/23 • 63 min

Today's Season 1 wrap-up is a tour of Europe in 1 hour. Some listeners contacted me with the same great idea: check in with a lot of the visiting professors from season 1 again, and have them tell us briefly how they are now, and how things went. So I called all those with whom I talked a while ago about a club, a country, an ongoing situation, to look back at the season that was, the stories, the joys and the problems of soccer that were. Somewhere toward the end I’ll also say who the top 3 downloaded episodes of the season were, so hang tight. All the guests for today are, in the order that they appeared here:

Matt Ford, for United We Stand on Manchester United

Katerina Chernii, center for Contemporary Historical Research, Potsdam Germany on Ukraine

Eva Lotta Bohle, Germany 2nd Bundesliga Podcast on Arminia Bielefeld

Viktor Asp from Football Stockholm on the three Stockholm teams

Andy Payne, Hammers United

Claus Melchior, 1860 Munich

Christian Hummer, Tivoli12 on Wacker Innsbruck and, by implication, Los Angeles FC

Most of them also bright a song, so you will also hear these interesting soccer songs today:

Marc Antoine Charpentier - Te Deum (Prelude)

Stone Roses - I Wanna Be Adored

Gogol Bordello - Києве Мій (Kyiv My Dear)
Ed Sheeran - A Beautiful Game

Dinamo Ja Volin
Cross Wires - Drowning

Lustfinger - Löwenmut (live at 1860)

Die Toten Hosen - Steh' Auf Wenn Du am Boden Bist
Barrio Collete - Souris Chérie

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - “Ordinary Morality is for Ordinary Football Clubs” - the Visions of Dulwich Hamlet F.C.

“Ordinary Morality is for Ordinary Football Clubs” - the Visions of Dulwich Hamlet F.C.

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

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07/10/23 • 78 min

Probably no other English club below the professional leagues has gathered more media attention than Dulwich Hamlet, located South of the river in London and around in that neighborhood since 1893. Any quick search on the club will turn up grand phrases like “a different vision for football” or “the small club with the big vision.” And that vision - inclusive, humanitarian, egalitarian - draws around 3000 spectators (critics would say 3000 hipsters) who often wouldn’t feel comfortable at other soccer grounds to the Hamlet’s South London home for most games. But despite such record numbers for the lower leagues, the club just got relegated. It also is planning a new stadium, after briefly being thrown out of the old one by developers. And it is both shaped by and wrestling with its identity in a gentrifying neighborhood. Tim Scott, chairman of the Dulwich Hamlet Supporters trust, shares about the vibe around the club, the ups and downs and growing pains of the atmosphere at home games, and the work of a supporter's trust.
HELPFUL LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE
Dulwich Hamlet Supporters Trust (also on twitter)
Dulwich Hamlet FC (also on twitter); Club Shop
2018 piece in the Guardian re. the stadium conflict
Recent piece in the local newspaper re. current stadium plans with statement from DHFC
"First all-trans masc side makes football history" - hosted by DHFC

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - The Flight of the Bumblebee: Live from Degerfors in Sweden's Rustbelt, a Football Family on Soccer's Big Stage
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06/26/23 • 81 min

Degerfors IF in Sweden's top tier surely must have one of the most unusual, lovely and countercultural stories that professional football in Europe has to tell at the moment. It's roots lie in a rich history of steeltown football that led the club to national fame in the mid 20th century, and its present is headed by a chairman who is a sociologist without any football background until he ended up on the board of a first league professional team. How he and his club chart the course of a largely volunteer-run club in a small steeltown in which football means so much to the people there amidst the pressures of global soccer capitalism is a fascinating story. On top of that, the little town houses Sweden's only football museum. A little audio tour is included in the episode.

I think this hour and 20 minutes will be enough for you to find your sentimental favorite among European professional teams.
HELPFUL LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE:

There is extremely little beyond results, the odd international transfer news etc. on the club that is in English. Nevertheless:
30 Photos from my visit to Degerfors
Degerfors IF (official website, Swedish)
Degerfors Football Museum (Facebook, Swedish)
Degerfors Football Museum (Värmland tourism site, English)
Heja röda vita laget (Come on red-white team, Degerfors hymn, Youtube)
Degerfors hymn by Blakk Petter and Rob Inc., heard at the end of the episode (Youtube)
("The Alternative/Countermodell), article by Gabriel Kuhn, also known from this podcast, in German. Analyse und Kritik, 5/17/22.

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - Live from East London: Clapton CFC - Left-Wing Soccer on the Pitch that Fans Mowed

Live from East London: Clapton CFC - Left-Wing Soccer on the Pitch that Fans Mowed

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

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06/12/23 • 74 min

Clapton Community Football Club is a very special member-owned club in East London, just two Tube stops east of West Ham United. Its members saved its own ground, rebuilt it, host workshops on how to monitor police violence in the neighborhood, will host St Pauli’s women’s team from Germany in a few weeks - and have very good reasons for why they do not want to play too high up in the league pyramid.
Kevin Blowe, one of the a club's longest-standing officeholders and current treasurer, talked to me at the famous Old Spotted Dog Ground, London's oldest senior football ground, about the place, the club and the people that make it an unusual and heady and fun and beautiful place to love soccer: member-run, committedly political, community oriented, and rooted in the history of this part of East London. We recorded outside, in the stands, which gets you a good sense of the place I hope, and we’ll give you an audio tour - but it also means you don’t have studio quality, though the audio giot considerably better with mastering. I trust that is fine.

HELPFUL LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE:
Clapton CFC, official website
Clapton CFC on twitter
Clapton CFC on YouTube, incl. games
Old Spotted Dog Ground, website of the trust, with photos of the ground
"Clapton CFC: How Our Antifascist Football Shirts Found a Global Audience," The Guardian, September 2018
"The Contested Legacy of the Antifascist International Brigades," Guardian, October 2020

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - Teaching Soccer: Three Actual Professors of Football on their College Classes, and Soccer Literacy in the U.S.
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06/02/23 • 98 min

It's the first episode with American guests - and the first one with three of them. For this episode of The Assistant Professor of Football, I am joined by three (real) professors who regularly teach, in American university classrooms, about football - its culture, its meaning, its history. We talked about how that teaching is going, what would it be like to take a class with them, what do they assign, and how did they get into this subject in academia in the first place, and what good books are being written about the beautiful game beyond the well-known popular ones. And then we went on to opine more broadly, about the future of the game globally as well as here in the US, the next World Cup, why awful people run clubs, and what makes the beautiful game such a unique angle to understand the world.

These guests are:
- Dr. Brenda Elsey (Hofstra University, History Department), co-editor of Football and the Boundaries of History: Critical Studies in Soccer (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017) and author of Futbolera: A History of Women and Sports in Latin America (University of Texas Press, 2019)
- Dr. Peter Alegi (Michigan State University, Department of History), author of African Soccerscapes: How a Continent Changed the World's Game (Ohio University Press, 2010) and Laduma! Soccer, Politics and Society in South Africa (University of KawZulu-Natal Press, 2004); founder of The Football Scholars Forum
- Dr. Pablo M. Sierra (University of Rochester, Department of History), author of Urban Slavery in Colonial Mexico: Puebla de los Ángeles, 1531-1706 (Cambridge Press, 2018)

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

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The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. - Hertha Berliner SC: In Memoriam Kay Bernstein

Hertha Berliner SC: In Memoriam Kay Bernstein

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.

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04/15/24 • 76 min

Kay Bernstein was elected the president of Hertha BSC, then in the 1st Bundesliga, in June 2022. He died at his home near Berlin on January 16th of this year, with Hertha being in the 2nd Bundesliga. What sounds like a short and - on the pitch - unsuccessful presidency is in fact the most significant shift and opening up of possibilities in club leadership in German and, possibly, European club leadership over the last years.
In his memory, are dedicating an hour today to his club, to his life and to his impact. Bernstein grew up in Eastern Germany and Berlin, and was a founding leader of the oldest ultra group of Hertha, the Harlekins. When he became president, he was an event manager with networks in various fancultures, and a visionary for his club who placed an emphasis not just in success on the pitch, but in a football club as a community of belonging, togetherness, listening, patience, modesty as well as excitement and fanaticism.
The Visiting Professor of Football is Misha Joel, from Hertha podcast Herthabase and an active fan in Hertha's curve.
HELPFUL LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE:
Deutsche Welle English, "Hertha Berlin President Kay Bernstein dies aged 43"
Deutsche Welle English, "Hertha Berlin Chooses former Ultra as Head"
General Assembly at Hertha where Kay Bernstein is elected president (Hertha TV)
March in Mourning after Kay Bernstein's death
RTL Sport, Rest in Peace Kay Bernstein (Youtube)
bundesliga.com, Minute of Silence for Kay Bernstein at Hertha BSC vs. Kaiserslautern

NEW: send me a text message! (I'd love to hear your thoughts - texts get to me anonymously, without charge or signup)

Please leave a quick voicemail with any feedback, corrections, suggestions - or just greetings - HERE. Or comment via Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook.
If you enjoy this podcast and think that what I do fills a gap in soccer coverage that others would be interested in as well, please

  • Recommend The Assistant Professor of Football. Spreading the word, through word of mouth, truly does help.
  • Leave some rating stars at the podcast platform of your choice. There are so many sports podcasts out there, and only ratings make this project visible; only then can people who look for a different kind of take on European soccer actually find me.

Artwork for The Assistant Professor of Football is by Saige Lind
Instrumental music for this podcast, including the introduction track, is by the artist Ketsa and used under a Creative Commons license through Free Music Archive: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ketsa/

bookmark
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FAQ

How many episodes does The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. have?

The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. currently has 51 episodes available.

What topics does The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. cover?

The podcast is about Premier League, Europe, History, Bundesliga, Podcasts, Sports and Soccer.

What is the most popular episode on The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.?

The episode title 'The Shirt: A Material History of Soccer, from Rags to Fashion and Cotton to Polyester' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.?

The average episode length on The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. is 67 minutes.

How often are episodes of The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. released?

Episodes of The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. are typically released every 14 days.

When was the first episode of The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History.?

The first episode of The Assistant Professor of Football: Soccer, Culture, History. was released on Nov 18, 2022.

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