“We have one training session. If we have training here and we want to do a little bit of tactical, with all due respect I think it would be a little bit more obvious what we would do. That’s the thing we like to keep for ourselves. Then, yes, you can say if we train here for how long we are allowed, 45 minutes, Is that going to make a difference? I know the surface is different. If you really want to get used to it, I think you need to train here day in, day out as Bodo do. We are ready for that challenge. But for me, mainly, mainly, mainly, it was the tactical reason.”
“Yeah, I’ve looked at that game [in May], of course. But I’ve also looked at a lot of other Bodø games. I think they’re a fantastic team. I think their club is fantastic. I think their story is unique in many ways. I’m pretty sure that the whole of Europe knows about Bodø, because I think it’s a little bit of a fairytale. I like, of course, that Scandinavian link between Denmark and Norway.
“So of course I follow them a little bit, maybe a tiny bit closer, and the background I’m coming from, to see how they have built that club through years of some core group of people, aligning strategy, structure, hard work over years.
“And then just build a smaller club suddenly to be the absolute force in Norway and now competing in the Europe over many seasons. That’s extremely impressive, I think. Kjetil Knutsen and his staff is remarkable, what they have done. Their style of play is quite unique in many ways. Extremely well-coached team. Big praise, I admire them a lot.”