Every now and again a surprise team comes along and flies high in the Spor
Toto Super League. This year, for now at least, it is Manisaspor.
The Aegean side rose to third spot in its standings following Trabzonspor’s
slump against Beşiktaş. Its rise is definitely a big surprise, but for those who
were watching close, the Tarzans did not come out of the blue.
Manisaspor, whose odd nickname comes from local environmental activist Ahmet
“Tarzan of Manisa” Bedevi, is the team with the best form in the standings. In
the last six weeks, the team is unbeaten with four wins and two draws.
The team is also on an eight-game unbeaten record that has lasted for two
months, the longest in the league.
Looking closely, Manisaspor’s squad is not one to be underestimated. Most of
its squad was unchanged from last year, which is somewhat of a novelty in
Turkey. Nigerian forward Isaac Promise, who leads the team with four goals, and
Brazilian attacker Kahe are two players well accustomed to Turkish football,
each having played in the division for seven and five seasons, respectively.
In addition to the duo, Canadian midfielder Joshua Simpson and former Turkey
top-scorer Ariza Makukula shoulder the team’s attacking duties. Frankly, scoring
is not Manisaspor’s main weapon. They have only 13 goals in 12 matches – only
three teams have scored less. However, Manisaspor excel in defense, having only
conceded eight goals, the best in the division.
It should be noted that with a squad remaining largely unchanged, the main
difference has been the coach. Kemal Özdeş, a former U-19 and U-21 national
football team coach, took over Manisaspor earlier this summer and turned the
team into a solid and winning team. It let in three goals every two games last
season and but Özdeş has managed to turn things around. That was not down to the
personnel change on the pitch, since only a few members have changed, right back
Jerry Akaminko from Ghana and center back Michael Klukowski from Canada. So it
is apparently down to Özdeş.
Özdeş, having his first head coach experience apart from a six-week
caretaking duty at Konyaspor in 2004 deserves the praise. Most of his Super
League experience stems from being a long-time assistant of Ersun Yanal, who led
Manisaspor to its most successful periods in the last decade. With Yanal, the
team enjoyed a flying start of nine unbeaten matches to top the standings in
2006, but suffered an agonizing fall and managed barely to survive in the
league. Yanal is known for his all-out attacking style. His mentality won him
successful but short-lived spells at Ankaragücü (finishing fourth in 2002),
Gençlerbirliği (finishing third in 2003) and Trabzonspor (third in 2009). He was
then appointed the national football team manager, which ended prematurely after
a feud with legendary striker Hakan Şükür.
One can only hope Özdeş might enjoy a long and illustrious career, which
seems to take off like his former master. Their playing mentality might seem
starkly different from each other, but both share a wisdom that is hard to find
in Turkish football.
When asked if his team would play for bigger achievements now, Özdeş was
calm.
“[Against Kayserispor] We were dominant when we had the possession but we
were forced to pull our defensive line to the center of our area. And as a whole
we defended well,” he said. “We take it one game at a time. We are going
forward, improving all the time. I hope we do well at the end of the year.”
While not exactly serving up a goal feast in their games, Manisaspor seems to
be learning know how to win. Now a bigger challenge will be on the way as they
become the team to beat. The Tarzans’ – and Özdeş’s – path will become clear
based on the way they cope with the pressure.