logo
From refugee to coach - Muslic plots Liverpool upset

From refugee to coach - Muslic plots Liverpool upset

Yahoo07-02-2025
On Sunday, Miron Muslic will try and plot what many in football think is impossible - a win for his bottom-of-the-Championship Plymouth Argyle side against Premier League leaders and six-time European champions Liverpool in the FA Cup.
But compared to the story of Muslic's start in life, beating Liverpool in the FA Cup seems relatively easy.
In 1992, as a nine-year-old, Muslic - who took over as Argyle head coach from England star Wayne Rooney last month - was forced to flee his home town of Bihac in Bosnia.
They got out just in time. In June 1992, just a month or two after the Muslic family left Bihac, it fell under a three-year siege by Serb-led forces during a bitter civil war.
"We had to leave Bosnia, and Bihac, our home town, literally overnight, grabbing things you can grab with your hands," he explains powerfully to BBC Sport.
"That's where our journey, or our new life, started."
Muslic, his sister and parents fled 400 miles (650km) to Innsbruck in Austria with no idea what they would find and unable to speak the language with the local German accent, particularly hard to understand.
"We struggled our whole life, and this part of struggling is part of my journey, and that's why I'm always very optimistic and very positive," says Muslic, who guided Cercle Bruges to the Uefa Europa Conference League this season.
"I've been in more challenging situations in my life than being a head coach and facing a possible draw or a defeat at the weekend.
"And that's also the message I want to deliver consistently towards the players, that life is a struggle with beautiful surprises, and there is always something worth fighting for.
"Nothing was easy for me, or for my family or for my sister. We became refugees, and it's not a pretty thing, but I never had the feeling that I missed something in my life.
"My parents tried very hard to provide us with the things that we needed - my father worked for over 30 years as a waiter, my mother was a cleaning lady, and they tried very hard to give us a good life.
"All the things that have happened over the last 30 years helped me become who I am today and also achieve some things that maybe have been impossible.
"But nothing is impossible if you truly believe, if you commit, if you convince, and if you go really, really fully."
Miron Muslic's first words to the squad 👊 pic.twitter.com/tcrV5HTFLO
— Plymouth Argyle FC (@Argyle) January 13, 2025
It is that belief and commitment that Argyle will need if they are to upset a Liverpool side who have finished top of the Champions League group stage and have a healthy six-point lead at the summit of the Premier League under Arne Slot.
Conversely, Muslic inherited an Argyle side spiralling towards League One and bottom of the Championship.
To add to his tough start, he saw his best defender, Lewis Gibson, and star forward, Morgan Whittaker, leave the club during the transfer window.
But, just like Muslic's new life in Austria, the shoots of recovery could well be sprouting under him at Argyle.
Last Saturday, the Pilgrims paid a club-record fee for Ukraine defender Maksym Talovierov and came from a goal down to beat play-off contenders West Bromwich Albion 2-1 - a victory that ended a club-record 15-game winless run in the league.
And it is football - and a love of its ups and downs - that has driven Muslic from a child who could not speak the language to a coach so fluent in English that his rousing first speech to Argyle's players has been watched by the best part of four million people on social media.
As a teenage forward, he joined Wacker Innsbruck before a career that took in the top five tiers in Austria and a short spell in Croatia.
He credits the sport with helping him adapt to his new homeland, allowing him to "have the privilege to call not only Bosnia, but also Austria, my home."
"That's why football is so important, because it's universal," he says.
"Because when you're on a football pitch or somewhere on the street, it's not about your name, your last name, it's not even about your refugee status or not; it's only about the game.
"Where religion, nationality, is my mother a cleaning lady or a lawyer has no impact, has no influence.
"That's why we love this beautiful game, and that's why I always call it 'the game we love', and that's the magic of football."
Muslic's passion is apparent to anyone who meets him.
He is a man who has a steely look in his eyes but a warm and welcoming nature and is able to engage a room - just ask anyone who watched the video of his first speech to Argyle's players.
It all comes down to his background. "It's the definition of who I am today as a coach, but most important, who I am today as a human being," he says of his early life.
Whether his side wins or loses on Sunday against Liverpool, Muslic shows that you can make it no matter what hurdles are in your way.
"If I look to the locker room of Argyle, they are just lads from all over the world, and it works," he says. "So imagine the world as a locker room; it would be a good place to be."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Arteta backs Arsenal signing to ‘destroy' Premier League defences
Arteta backs Arsenal signing to ‘destroy' Premier League defences

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Arteta backs Arsenal signing to ‘destroy' Premier League defences

Mikel Arteta has backed Viktor Gyokeres to destroy Premier League defences at Arsenal this season. Gyokeres scored his Arsenal goal during the club's 3-0 win over Spanish side Athletic Club on Saturday. The Swedish striker opened the scoring at the Emirates with a brilliant header from Martin Zubmendi's cross. Excitement at Arsenal is high for the arrival of Gyokeres, who scored 97 goals in 102 games over the last two seasons for Sporting Lisbon. Arteta has backed the new recruit to thrive in North London, insisting the 27-year-old has the attributes to destroy defenders. Asked what Gyokeres will bring to his side, Arteta told the media: 'I think his goals, his threat, I think he pins both centre-backs. 'He is a player that when you leave him with space one-against-one, he's going to destroy you. He's going to create a lot of space as well for us. In any situation there's a player there that can score a goal.' Read – See more – Follow The Football Faithful on Social Media: | | | |

🎥 Tributes to Diogo Jota continue in Community Shield build-up
🎥 Tributes to Diogo Jota continue in Community Shield build-up

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

🎥 Tributes to Diogo Jota continue in Community Shield build-up

The 2025/26 domestic campaign in the top flight of English football may be underway, but the memory of Diogo Jota continues to be honoured as Liverpool and Crystal Palace get been a little over one month since the footballing world was shocked into sadness when Jota and his brother André Silva perished in an automobile accident in Spain. A beloved figure at Anfield and his native Portugal, Jota continues to be remembered by Reds supporters and neutral fans alike, and today, to the sound of applause from the stands, club legend Ian Rush and Palace chairman Steve Parish paid respects while laying wreaths on the Wembley pitch in front of Liverpool supporters. Banners could be seen in the stands, and tributes from supporters could be heard ringing around the ground. A fitting way to remember a player who will remain in the fabric of one of England's greatest clubs. 📸 GLYN KIRK - AFP or licensors

📊 Liverpool starlets combine to break Community Shield deadlock
📊 Liverpool starlets combine to break Community Shield deadlock

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

📊 Liverpool starlets combine to break Community Shield deadlock

Liverpool are up and running to kick-start the new season after bagging their first goal inside the opening five minutes against Crystal Palace in today's Community Shield claiming Premier League honours in 2024/25 in Arne Slot's first season at the helm, the Reds went on to impress in the transfer market to not just reinforce, but improve their strongest XI, including a massive deal for German wunderkind Florian Wirtz and Frankfurt starlet Hugo Ekitike. The former Bundesliga pair have already endeared themselves to Liverpool fans just four minutes into proceedings at Wembley, combining to get the Reds out of the blocks. Wirtz found Ekitike just outside the area before he would dance his way into a good shooting position, ultimately dispatching a low drive into the bottom corner past Dean Henderson before Jean-Philippe Mateta restored parity 13 minutes later from the penalty spot. It was a brilliant start for two young players who are meant to push the club to even greater heights, putting the accent point on an attacking move that showed just how dangerous the Reds could very well be in 2025/26. 📸 Clive Mason - 2025 Getty Images

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store