Quick fix Sancho shines but long-term Dortmund questions loom large | Andy Brassell (2024)

Some 966 days later, it resumed as if time had simply been paused. OK, he was clad in the No 10 shirt this time rather than the No 7 but in most other senses, it was as if Jadon Sancho had never been away.

Whether that is positive or negative is not an easy question to answer. The immediate fillip that the on-loan Manchester United winger has given his old team is not in question. This is, however, the most typical of January transfers. Three desperate parties coming together to hammer out the best, least-worst solution to their very immediate problems. The opening stanza of the renewed player-club relationship underlined exactly why they’ve come together and why, at this point in time, they need each other like they do.

It would take a hard heart not to be pleased for Sancho. Entering the field as substitute at the same time as his friend Marco Reus in Saturday’s trip to Darmstadt, it took him just over 20 minutes to make his statistical weight felt. With BVB a goal to the good but labouring, he drifted out to the right, darted on to Donyell Malen’s cunning ball inside the full-back and put the perfect cross in front of Reus for the veteran to walk in the second.

That Sancho was able to provide such instant satisfaction, decisive and unfussy, was a relief. Edin Terzić, who was a big ally of Sancho in his first spell in charge (in which they won a DfB Pokal together, with the England winger and Erling Haaland taking Leipzig to pieces in the Berlin final in 2021), knows him well and spoke at length before the match about how he expected it would take “two to three weeks” to get the new (old) man up to speed. Still, unimpressed by his team’s performance here, he sent Sancho on 10 minutes into the second half. It reflected how BVB’s feelings about a potential return have evolved in recent weeks. In autumn, they had politely declined inquiries when asked whether they might be willing to welcome him back to relaunch his career.

That, however, was before BVB crawled to one win in seven Bundesliga games to finish 2023 six points adrift of the Champions League, out of the title race and leaving Terzić’s future in question. In a season largely defined by Harry Kane’s superhuman ability to paper over some of his team’s unsightly faultlines, Dortmund were now hoping for a bit of the same, as quickly as possible. Indifference to an idea had become impatience to see its realisation in recent days.

While United and BVB spent days picking over the last details of the temporary detail – salary splits and bonuses, an exercise in face-saving optics on the English giants’ side as much as it was in financial gains – the latter party betrayed a little frustration. They had hoped to get this done for Sancho to join them at their traditional Marbella training camp, and there was certainly disappointment among the coaching staff when it became clear that the player wouldn’t be cleared in time to do so.

Quick fix Sancho shines but long-term Dortmund questions loom large | Andy Brassell (2)

“Where have you been?” called a smiling Terzić to Sancho from a first-floor window at the club’s Brackel training centre on Thursday as the player arrived for training, in a wry nod. “You don’t like training camps?” There was a serious point behind the bonhomie. Marbella was where Terzić turned a tanking season almost into a title-winning one this time last year, using the time away to connect with his senior players and motivate them to help him raise standards.

If Marbella was again going to be a turning point this year, then there were no instant results. This was a stodgy, work-in-progress Dortmund, in which individual quality made the difference at moments in a game which, from the visitors’ perspective, didn’t have enough of it between the two teams. With only Julian Brandt’s fine strike separating the teams Gregor Kobel was again called upon to bail them out, making a fine point-blank save to prevent a Luca Pfeiffer equaliser. Then Sancho, Reus and fellow substitute Youssoufa Moukoko sealed the deal.

Terzić now has plenty of help. Maybe more than he might have requested, with two new assistants in club legends Nuri Sahin and Sven Bender having recently arrived. Sahin’s brief is to make BVB more refined in possession, but it looks like taking time. In the meantime Sancho is the ultimate quick fix. And a happy Sancho, it appears, is already a productive one.

Talking points

Bayern got the Bundesliga under way in 2024 on Friday with tributes to the late Franz Beckenbauer, as they played their first match since his passing. The 3-0 win over Hoffenheim that followed was even more comprehensive than it looked on paper, give or take a short second-half flurry from the visitors that called a previously, and subsequently, frozen Manuel Neuer into action. At the other end Kane’s 22nd of the season, following on from Jamal Musiala’s brace (Beckenbauer’s song Gute Freunde was played after the goals instead of the Can Can), equalled Robert Lewandowski’s record total for the first half of a Bundesliga season (the England captain actually has a game to beat it, the delayed fixture against Union Berlin, which is played next week).

Quick fix Sancho shines but long-term Dortmund questions loom large | Andy Brassell (3)

In more medium-term news, reports on Monday suggest that Bayern have finally found a deal with the coveted Max Eberl (and his previous club Leipzig) to join, though he will start work after the current transfer window, in which the club still have plenty of work to do.

Bayer Leverkusen made sure that they lead the Bundesliga at the halfway stage but they left it late, with Exequiel Palacios rifling in a late, late winner at Augsburg, inevitably from an Alejandro Grimaldo assist. It was the perfect boost at the end of a week in which they lost Victor Boniface, who pulled out of Nigeria’s Afcon campaign, with a thigh injury until April (it has been suggested the club might now accelerate their interest in Red Star’s teenage prodigy Jovan Mijatovic). The manner of the victory, if anything, made it more galvanising for Die Werkself. “The goal wasn’t luck,” insisted Xabi Alonso. “It was reward.”

An extra bonus for Alonso and company – and for Dortmund in their efforts to make up ground to the top four – was that the remaining two in the top four, Stuttgart and Leipzig, both lost. The former (without goal machine Serhou Guirassy, away with Guinea) were blown over 3-1 at Borussia Mönchengladbach after conceding to Robin Hack inside 20 seconds, while Marco Rose’s team were conquered by Ansgar Knauff’s early, brilliant goal in Leipzig for Eintracht Frankfurt.

Quick Guide

Bundesliga results

Show

Bayern 3-0 Hoffenheim, Köln 1-1 Heidenheim, Augsburg 0-1 Leverkusen, Mainz 1-1 Wolfsburg, RB Leipzig 0-1 Eintracht, Freiburg 0-0 Union, Darmstadt 0-3 Dortmund, Mönchengladbach 3-1 Stuttgart, Bochum 1-1 Werder

It remains tight above Darmstadt at the bottom, with Köln and their new coach Timo Schultz failing to build on a Davie Selke-bequeathed lead and only drawing with Heidenheim, Mainz needing a Silvan Widmer netbuster to take a point from Wolfsburg and Niklas Stark’s late deflected goal getting Werder Bremen a point at Bochum in an ugly game that produced 11 yellow cards (and it felt as if the overworked Tobias Stieler had been lenient).

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Bayer Leverkusen 17 35 45
2 Bayern Munich 16 37 41
3 Stuttgart 17 16 34
4 RB Leipzig 17 20 33
5 Borussia Dortmund 17 8 30
6 Eintracht Frankfurt 17 7 27
7 Freiburg 17 -5 25
8 Hoffenheim 17 -1 24
9 Heidenheim 17 -7 21
10 Borussia M'gladbach 17 -2 20
11 Wolfsburg 17 -7 20
12 Augsburg 17 -8 18
13 Werder Bremen 17 -7 17
14 VfL Bochum 17 -15 17
15 Union Berlin 16 -14 14
16 Mainz 17 -15 11
17 Cologne 17 -18 11
18 Darmstadt 17 -24 10
Quick fix Sancho shines but long-term Dortmund questions loom large | Andy Brassell (2024)

FAQs

Who sold Sancho to Dortmund? ›

Manchester United and Borussia Dortmund have concluded a deal for Jadon Sancho to join the Bundesliga club on loan for the rest of the season.

Does Jadon Sancho have Instagram? ›

Jadon Sancho (@sanchooo10) • Instagram photos and videos.

Where did Jadon Sancho? ›

Jadon Sancho was born on 25 March 2000 in London and plays for Borussia Dortmund. He played for Watford FC from 2007-2015, for Manchester City FC from 2015-2017, for Borussia Dortmund from 2017-2021, for Manchester United FC from 2021-2024 and has played for Borussia Dortmund since 2024.

When did Sancho leave Dortmund? ›

Having left Borussia Dortmund for Manchester United in 2021, Jadon Sancho is now back at the Signal Iduna Park.

How much did Dortmund pay for Sancho? ›

Sancho signed for German Bundesliga club Borussia Dortmund on 31 August 2017 for a fee reported to be in the region of £8 million and was immediately included in the first-team squad.

Who is Sancho Idol? ›

Jadon Sancho: An idoliser of Ronaldinho, Dortmund's English wonderkid| All Football.

Why did Jadon Sancho leave? ›

Ten Hag felt his comments were supportive of the player, while United believed that to offer no reason for his absence would have fuelled speculation. The manager reiterated that Sancho was not fit enough the following month, repeating that: “It's physical, but physical is also the connection with mental.”

What is a Sancho slang? ›

Sancho is a common slang term in the Spanish speaking world for the other man in the relationship. As in a spouse or girlfriend who is being unfaithful with a Sancho. Sancha is the feminine equivalent.

Who bought Jadon Sancho? ›

Erik ten Hag says that Jadon Sancho's performance for Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League semi-final shows why Manchester United bought him. Sancho, 24, was the standout player during Dortmund's 1-0 victory over Paris Saint-Germain in the first leg on Wednesday.

How good is Jadon Sancho? ›

He is hugely effective in one-on-one situations. His ability to take lots of touches can, however, sometimes undermine his progress; if an opposing defender can match him for pace over a short distance, a high volume of touches can slow him down and reduce his chances of beating them.

Is Jadon Sancho left wing? ›

Sancho began the first half of the 2020-21 relatively slowly (he did not score a league goal until the 14th matchweek of that Bundesliga season) but he eventually came alive playing on the left wing ahead of attacking full-back Raphael Guerreiro.

How old was Sancho when he moved to Dortmund? ›

He arrived in Germany as an untried 17-year-old and left in 2021 with the world at his feet. Now back at the Signal Iduna Park for a second spell, this is how Jadon Sancho's time at Borussia Dortmund made him into the world-class England international he is today.

What age did Sancho join Dortmund? ›

Manchester United's Jadon Sancho threw himself into the great unknown when, at the age of just 17, he took the bold decision to leave Manchester City for Borussia Dortmund.

Who did Man Utd buy from Dortmund? ›

Man Utd signed Sancho from Dortmund in the summer of 2021 in a deal worth £73m.

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