Danish media hit Kosovo: ” Andde is played in football fields where cows” are passed.

The players of Denmark's national team will visit Kosovo this week for a friendly match with “Dardians”, which will take place Thursday at stadium “Fadil Vokri”. Because of this match, Danish type newspaper has written about the football situation in Kosovo, telling its readers what they can expect for the match [...]
Because of this match, Danish newspaper type has written about the football situation in Kosovo, telling its readers what they can expect for the match against Kosovo.
One of the elements this newspaper emphasises is that Kosovo was accepted only three years ago in FIFA and UEFA football homes, and that is why professionalism is lacking in this sport.
You can read the complete article published by the Danish newspaper below:
Age Hareides (Den Denmark coach) likes to say that his team has not missed 24 matches, but he has to make some maneuvers for this claim, including the removal from the World Cup, in the match against Croatia, which he lost in penalty.
On the other hand, Kosovo does not need such maneuvers to show a good performance of victories. Their team has suffered no defeat since October 2017 and has played ten matches since then.
These matches have been against teams like Albania, Malta, Axerbajhan and the Faroe Islands, but as it says in Great Britain: “You can defeat only those you face”, “You can't beat teams against which you don't play”
Kosovo was admitted to FIFA and UEFA in 2016 and is the youngest member in these two football homes, along with Gibraltar. At the same time, they are Europe's newest country, having declared independence in 2008. Serbia, from which Kosovo declared independence, still refuses to recognise Kosovo as a state.
This has made the national team not yet have the best possible organisation. Players can tell stories about cows in the field for training, piercing gate nets, and in general for lack of professionalism.
But their team consists of a large number of players who grew up in Western Europe, such as the Brondby Besar Hallim, who was born in Germany.
Most of Kosovo players have grown out of the country's borders, often as children of parents who had left Kosovo because of the oppression in Yugoslavia in the late 1990s. Only two players in Kosovo's current team did not have the possibility of representing any other country.
Players on Denmark's national team have more experience, play in larger clubs and have been playing together on the national team for a longer time. In addition, Denmark's Football Federation is a more professional organisation than the Kosovo Football Federation.
However, Kosovo can prove itself through good players technically, and their team seems to be only improving over time.












