Should I Stay or Should I Go? The Impact of Social Networks on the Choice to Play for a National Team in Football
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Network Theory
2.2. Youth Elite Sport as a Network
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results and Discussion
“Yes, and then they just left the decision to me and said: You are the player, it’s your decision, and then I just decided to play for the Turks.”(Interviewee 2, Youth International TFF)
4.1. Parents, Family and Peers
“Generally, I discuss everything with my family. But basically, in the end, they leave the decision up to me.” (Interviewee 3, Youth International TFF)
“My father supports me in every way. He told me to make up my mind. And he asks, he tells me what’s coming and then he tells me what he thinks, but in the end I decide. So, of course my family tells me what they advise. But in the end I have to decide what’s best for me.”(Interviewee 7, Youth International TFF)
“So they also left the decision up to me. They said: ‘You can decide for yourself because in the end it’s you who’s playing.’ And yes, that was good, so I wouldn’t let others tell me where to play, either. That’s important for me. And in the end, as my parents have already said, I am the one who is playing and so I also get to decide.”(Interviewee 8, Youth International DFB)
“They also asked: Did you get an invitation? [...] They were happy that I got an invitation. [...] What else is there to discuss then.”(Interviewee 1, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“The [family and relatives] were just as proud when I then played in the German national team. That was not the question at all. They’re happy about everything I’ve achieved, they’re really happy with me.”(Interviewee 4, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“My father and mother wanted me to play for Turkey because there is a bit of pride and honour somehow and this is very important for the Turks.”(Interviewee 2, Youth International TFF)
“My uncle thought differently to them, he thought more about my future. And he said: ‘You’d better play for the Germans.’”.(Interviewee 2, Youth International TFF)
“So my father always said: ‘If you want to be successful, play for the German [national team] and if you want to play for your fatherland, play for the Turkish [national team].’”(Interviewee 6, Youth International TFF)
“Actually–to be honest—my [parents] wanted me to play for Germany, but if I don’t play there, why should I not play for Turkey instead?”(Interviewee 1, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“They supported me every time, regardless of whether it was with Turkey [or Germany]—I took pictures, sent them pictures, and of course they thought it was really cool.”(Interviewee 4, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“I didn’t talk about it with my mates because I didn’t want it to get around in [place name], for example, around town, which isn’t that big, and then it would get around everywhere.”(Interviewee 2, Youth International TFF)
4.2. Coaches and Sport Associations
“Well, the first thing I did was go directly to my [club] coach. So I just asked: ‘Well, coach, I got an invitation. What‘s the deal? Should I go? What should I do?’ And at that time my coach said: ‘Well, you don’t even need to bother going. There’s no point in your case.’ So he only said negative things. I shouldn’t bother trying. (...) And I just said: ‘Well, why shouldn’t I go? If I have the chance, I want to take it.’ And he just said: ‘Well, the players I had before also went.’ The Turkish players he had as a coach. ‘And they didn’t make it.’ And then I said to him: ‘Yes, okay, but if they don’t make it, that doesn’t mean that I won’t make it either.’ And then he said: ‘Yes, it’s your decision. If you come back, you might not play or this and that.’ So they did threaten me with things like that. And then I just said: ‘No, I’ll go. I’ll give it a shot. And if I make it, then I make it. And if I don’t, then I’ll have just gained the experience of what it’s like there.’”(Interviewee 5, Youth International TFF)
“The thing that was very decisive for me was the coach of the German [U-]national team. (...). I had a conversation with the German national coach, a very long conversation actually, and he actually made it clear to me that I should not look at my career, but rather at what my heart says. And because I had been on both training courses, the decision was made relatively quickly.”(Interviewee 3, Youth International TFF)
“He [the DFB’s national U team coach] definitely said that there are a lot of players who take advantage of this opportunity and first go back and forth and play a few games with Germany and then play a few games with Turkey. (.) He advised me not to do that because it would make a bad impression later on (-). He said that I should only listen to my heart and my feelings, and that’s how I decided in the end.”(Interviewee 3, Youth International TFF)
“And then [name of the DFB national youth team coach] called me in especially for the selection course because I had somehow said something to his secretary because I was also with Turkey and that it’s better here [at the DFB]. And then he said: ‘But one thing has to be clear, if I get you now, you’ll stay with me’, and so on. So that was a cool conversation he had with me. But, so then it was clear to me for the first time that I would be playing for the Germans. [Name of the coach] is a very good coach and also outstanding as a person, and the way he talked to me, it was already clear to me that I would be playing for him.”(Interviewee 4, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“Last year, after the European Championship qualifiers [TFF], we were at the airport and our Turkish national team coaches, I don’t know how, had heard that two or three players had been invited [by the DFB]. So, the coach said, but I also thought he was right: ‘Whoever goes there won’t be invited to the Turkish national team because you all think we’re only second choice and we don’t need players like that.’ [...] I thought he was right. Then, I think two players left anyway. They weren’t invited back for a while, but they were invited back the other day.”(Interviewee 1, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“I was often not sent to the invitations sometimes. So I wasn’t allowed to go sometimes. Because they said: ‘Yes, okay, you have (-) if you left now, then if you came, you wouldn’t play. And (.) there were just a lot of problems with me because I’m with the Turkish national team.”(Interviewee 5, Youth International TFF)
“At school, it was just that I (-) had an extremely large number of international matches for a while. And the school didn’t want to let me go, which I understand. But I was at a cooperation school, which [club name] is associated with, and they often said: ‘Well, it doesn’t make sense for you to go. Because of course you have a lot of times of absence. And sometimes they caused problems. But otherwise not.”(Interviewee 5, Youth International TFF)
“The [club and YPC] wanted me to play for Germany if I had both options.”(Interviewee 1, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“They called me into the office, talked to me about it and they had the opinion that I should play for the Germans. They said (-) at that moment they said we have two invitations, Germany, Turkey, you have to decide, but they told me: ‘Play for the Germans because with the Turks you’ll belong to the best’, he said. ‘And they’ll always invite you, even if you turn them down’, he said, ‘they’ll always invite you back because you’re one of the best or just the best with them.’ And they also wanted me to represent the [club name] with the DFB.”(Interviewee 2, Youth International TFF)
“Yes, there had already been contact before. Mr. Keser [then head of the European office of the Turkish Football Federation in Cologne] made a lot of effort to get in touch with him, he often called, we often met or just met and discussed the whole thing, how it is there and how it should work or what he is planning.”(Interviewee 4, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“Constant calls from the [Turkish] federation and constant exchange with the coach. I had a lot of conversations there and that’s why I had a good feeling.”(Interviewee 3, Youth International TFF)
“At the federation’s office in Cologne there was a young woman who is also responsible for us, for the Turkish players, and she was always in touch. She called my parents. How I was doing. How they were doing. And I think that’s extremely strong, these actions. And they care. That’s the trust I mean. When I (-) I simply need this trust. When I know they’re behind me. They invite me. I’m in the national team, that makes me much stronger.”(Interviewee 5, Youth International TFF)
4.3. Players’ Agents
“Well, I mostly talked to my agent about that kind of thing.”(Interviewee 1, Youth International DFB & TFF)
“I already had an agent back then. I just discussed it with him, what it looks like, what I should do. And he said: ‘Well, it’s a difficult decision. Do it the way you think is right for you, the way you feel comfortable.’”(Interviewee 5, Youth International TFF)
4.4. Broker Positions and Structural Holes
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Seiberth, K.; Thiel, A. Should I Stay or Should I Go? The Impact of Social Networks on the Choice to Play for a National Team in Football. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 7719. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18157719
Seiberth K, Thiel A. Should I Stay or Should I Go? The Impact of Social Networks on the Choice to Play for a National Team in Football. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(15):7719. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18157719
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeiberth, Klaus, and Ansgar Thiel. 2021. "Should I Stay or Should I Go? The Impact of Social Networks on the Choice to Play for a National Team in Football" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 15: 7719. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18157719
APA StyleSeiberth, K., & Thiel, A. (2021). Should I Stay or Should I Go? The Impact of Social Networks on the Choice to Play for a National Team in Football. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(15), 7719. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18157719