After the Nati coach was fired: now the women’s boss of the SFV responds to Grings’ Blick interview

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Marion Daube: Born in Zurich with German roots, she has been head of women’s football at the SFV since January.
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Mattias DubachSports reporter

The women’s national team will meet in Pfäffikon SZ on Monday for the last meeting of the year. Under interim coach Reto Gertschen (58), the miracle of avoiding relegation in the Nations League must be achieved in the remaining matches on Friday in Lucerne against Sweden and on Tuesday in Italy.

But at the media meeting in the team hotel with SFV women’s football boss Marion Daube (47), dismissed national coach Inka Grings (45) is again a big topic. Daube describes that she could not immediately return to work after the dismissal of her former FCZ colleague. “There are always people behind such decisions. It is normal to have many thoughts afterwards.”

Daube puts Grings’ information about the case into perspective

But the Zurich resident with German roots also emphasizes: “The decision was right. It was inevitable.” As a reminder, the SFV heard through the media about Grings’ involvement in investigations against her former employer SV Straelen and local club chairman Hermann Tecklenburg (75), and this breach of trust subsequently led to her being expelled.

But Grings countered in the exclusive SonntagsBlick interview that her direct boss at the SFV was well aware that something from Straelen’s time could come out in the media. So the SFV knew about it? Daube puts it into perspective: “It’s true, Inka once called me and said there was a case involving Hermann Tecklenburg. The message was not that we should expect Inka to be involved somewhere and for the case to be of this magnitude. The information that she was also investigated would certainly have been important.”

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In principle, it is a fact that the Straelen case and Grings’ suboptimal communication with the SFV were the straw that broke the camel’s back for the national coach. She was counted with just one win in 14 matches, plus there were questions about tactics and the complicated relationship with record player Ana-Maria Crnogorcevic. “It was certainly an accumulation,” Daube says now, suggesting that serious discussions about the future would have taken place during the winter break anyway.

This is what Captain Lia Wälti says

The women’s boss wants to take seriously the fact that Grings felt there was not enough support internally. She also wants a kind of ‘Pierluigi Tami’ for women.

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The players’ reactions to the Grings-Out? Lia Wälti (30) and Meriame Terchoun (28) who attended the media event were certainly professionally cool. The duo was anything but part of the Pro-Grings faction in the team. Captain Wälti says: «There are things in life that work and things that don’t work. It was a difficult year. There wasn’t much coming together both on and off the field.” But Wälti and Terchoun also know: now the team has a duty to respond.

Nations League Women – League A / Group 1
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
The Netherlands
The Netherlands
4
5
9
2
Belgium
Belgium
4
1
7
3
England
England
4
0
6
4
Scotland
Scotland
4
-6
1
Nations League Women – League A / Group 2
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
France
France
4
4
10
2
Austria
Austria
4
1
7
3
Portugal
Portugal
4
-3
3
4
Norway
Norway
4
-2
2
Nations League Women – League A / Group 3
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Denmark
Denmark
4
8th
12
2
Germany
Germany
4
8th
9
3
Iceland
Iceland
4
-6
3
4
Wales
Wales
4
-10
0
Nations League Women – League A / Group 4
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Spain
Spain
4
13
12
2
Sweden
Sweden
4
1
7
3
Italy
Italy
4
-1
4
4
Switzerland
Switzerland
4
-13
0
Nations League Women – League B / Group 1
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Ireland
Ireland
4
12
12
2
Hungary
Hungary
4
-3
5
3
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland
4
-3
4
4
Albania
Albania
4
-6
1
Nations League Women – League B / Group 2
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Finland
Finland
4
10
12
2
Slovakia
Slovakia
4
1
7
3
Croatia
Croatia
4
-8th
3
4
Romania
Romania
4
-3
1
Nations League Women – League B / Group 3
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Poland
Poland
4
4
10
2
Serbia
Serbia
4
4
7
3
Ukraine
Ukraine
4
-2
3
4
Greece
Greece
4
-6
3
Nations League Women – League B / Group 4
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnia and Herzegovina
4
2
8th
2
Czech Republic
Czech Republic
4
2
7
3
Slovenia
Slovenia
4
-2
3
4
Belarus
Belarus
4
-2
2
Nations League Women – League C / Group 1
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Malta
Malta
4
11
12
2
Latvia
Latvia
4
8th
7
3
Andorra
Andorra
4
-11
3
4
Moldavia
Moldavia
4
-8th
1
Nations League Women – League C / Group 2
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Turkiye
Turkiye
4
10
12
2
Luxembourg
Luxembourg
4
-3
4
3
Lithuania
Lithuania
4
-1
4
4
Georgia
Georgia
4
-6
2
Nations League Women – League C / Group 3
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan
4
5
10
2
Cyprus
Cyprus
4
0
7
3
Montenegro
Montenegro
4
-1
6
4
Faroe Islands
Faroe Islands
4
-4
0
Nations League Women – League C / Group 4
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Israel
Israel
3
7
7
2
Estonia
Estonia
4
2
7
3
Kazakhstan
Kazakhstan
4
-1
5
4
Armenia
Armenia
3
-8th
0
Nations League Women – League C / Group 5
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
Kosovo
Kosovo
3
4
7
2
Bulgaria
Bulgaria
2
1
4
3
North Macedonia
North Macedonia
3
-5
0

Source : Blick

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Emma

Emma

I'm Emma Jack, a news website author at 24 News Reporters. I have been in the industry for over five years and it has been an incredible journey so far. I specialize in sports reporting and am highly knowledgeable about the latest trends and developments in this field.

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