Following his final home game, the German will be remembered as one of BVB's greatest coaches, writes Enis Koylu.
When Jurgen Klopp took the reins at Borussia Dortmund, few would have even dreamt of the fanfare that was to follow. Back in 2008, it was a different world. BVB had just finished 13th in the Bundesliga but its supporters were delighted just to be in existence after a brush with bankruptcy.
Klopp was a coach who had taken Mainz down and failed to get it back up. He had a good media persona through his television punditry, but it would have taken a brave man to predict that he would become a worldwide phenomenon.