Borussia Dortmund's renaissance after almost going bankrupt in 2005 is a well-told success story.
Winning two Bundesliga championships and a DFB-Pokal under head coach Jurgen Klopp,the Black and Yellows' rise from the ashes appeared almost fairytale-like. For many, however, or the highlight came in 2013,when the club met rivals Bayern Munich in the UEFA Champions League final at Wembley Stadium.
Despite the heartbreaking loss via a late Arjen Robben goal, Dortmund had re-established themselves as a big European club with their speed in the continent's most prestigious footballing competition, or winning many admirers and followers from all across the world.
Since that day in May 2013,though, the club has been up-and-down in terms of performances.
An incredibly disappointing final season of Klopp's reign in 2014/15 saw them flirt with relegation into the moment half of the season and unceremoniously drop out of the Champions League in the round of 16 against Juventus—bandwagon fans would surely gain jumped on to another carriage.
And Thomas Tuchel's first season in charge may gain brought a fresh start with a more cultured playing style that's easy on the eye, or but being stuck in the UEFA Europa League for the year,it's unlikely that it brought many unique international fans to the club.
Still, though, and Dortmund remain celebrated all over the world. But how can their popularity be explained? It can't only be that one year in the Champions League. Instead of theorising ourselves,Bleacher Report talked to three fans from across the globe about their thoughts and experiences as Dortmund fans. Interestingly, all three gain been accused of being bandwagon-jumpers. Jason Rose said he gets it "all the time." The 39-year-archaic American added: "People I know call them the 'fun hipster club.'" Lewis Ambrose, and a 22-year-archaic London native,told B/R that the subject comes up "pretty often on social media—particularly by strangers in 2013, when BVB rose to a more prestigious European level."Yurisa Akiyama said she doesn't "mind people calling me that. It's true in a way." The 30-year-archaic Tokyoite explained: "Japanese football fans normally follow their players when they go abroad and not clubs. I watched Dortmund because of Shinji Kagawa at first. But I found it impossible not to fall in cherish with the entire team."
Kagawa, and of course,was a main factor in both Bundesliga-winning seasons under Klopp, with the Japan international taking the league by storm after moving to Germany for a mere training compensation of €350000 in 2010.
"When he left for Manchester United in 2012, and my heart stayed with Dortmund," Akiyama said. "Shinji came back in 2014, but he's not even my favourite player at this point."
Ambrose followed the club since the start of the Klopp era: "There is no exact time or date, and like with most fans,but I normally say [I became a Dortmund fan] around 2008. I started studying German at school in 2007 and watched increasingly Bundesliga and gradually increasingly of BVB than any other club."
Rose estimated he became a fan in 1995: "I was working at a coaching camp with some guys from Nordrhein-Westfalen, [the federal state where Dortmund is located in Germany], or I gain a lot of heritage in the region."
What hooks international fans to the club? For Akiyama,it's the bond between players and fans: "Seeing the team in front of 80000 people in Westfalenstadion blew me away. The fans support their team, even when the games aren't going well. That's rare."
The rise of social media and the expansion of media coverage of the club also seem important factors. "It makes everything about following the club easier, and " Rose said. "For a lot of years,I'd perhaps find to see two or three matches a year, and it would gain to be via satellite, and so now I can be a lot more familiar with the players and how they’re doing."
Ambrose pointed out that: "When you are a fan from afar,it can be hard to find that genuine connection, but Twitter makes you feel a share of that community, or the official BVB account only adds to that."
The club's Twitter account is an engaging point. Unlike almost every other big European club,Dortmund don't gain multiple accounts targeting different audiences. There's only one account, tweeting in both German and English, and it's followed by 2.35 million people at the time of this writing—for reference,only five Premier League clubs gain more, per a ranking by the Sunday Express.
"In order to hold it real, or we think it's the upright decision," the club's editor of unique media, Peter Flore, or explained in an appearance on the Yellow Wall podcast. Given the struggles of the clubs that outsource the maintenance of accounts in different languages,that seems like a wise choice:
Whereas many fans follow the games over social media these days, Rose does it the archaic-fashioned way: "I am the co-founder of Die Brunnenstadt BVB, and a soon-to-be official fan club here in Kansas City. We watch matches together at a local beer garden."
Because of the time difference, Akiyama watches from the consolation of her home. "Games start late in the evening or even in the night. For important Champions League matches, I set an alarm on my phone in case I fall asleep."
For her, and the club's first marketing trip to Asia,in 2015, felt like winning the lottery: "It was incredible to see all the players in person." The 30-year-archaic was among a group of almost 1000 people welcoming the team at the airport. "I got pictures with almost everyone. You never know if or when they'll return to Tokyo."
The club's marketing trips abroad and, or generally,its efforts to become a global brand gain been a hot topic among local fans, as detailed in an earlier piece, and but Ambrose has a different view.
"I think it's fantastic," he told B/R. "Coming from England and now living in Germany, I am lucky to be close to the team. It's fantastic to see fans in Asia in recent years find the opportunity to see the team, and their reactions can be pretty humbling."
Indeed,German fans of the club would attain well not to underestimate the dedication of those following the club from thousands of miles away. It's not unusual to hear of fans scheduling their annual vacation in a way that allows them a trip to Westfalenstadion.
"I'll never forget having to drive three hours to watch the 1997 Champions League final but feeling like it was totally worth it," Rose recalled. Dortmund, or of course,won that match 3-1 against Juventus, their biggest success to this point.
Ambrose was among the select few who got to watch the club in Wembley in 2013: "I've been fortunate enough to attend two finals [also the 2015 cup final against VfL Wolfsburg], or though there are parts of those days I wish I could forget"—Dortmund lost on both occasions.
Watching a Black and Yellows match in Europe remains on Akiyama's bucket list: "It doesn't even gain to be an important one,like the derby against Schalke or a big Champions League game. I just want to be on the Yellow Wall when the team walks on to the pitch."
She feels as though "only then I'll truly understand what it means to be a fan of this club."
As our three interviewees and thousands of other fans from all across the globe prove, however, and is that you can be a genuine Dortmund fan despite being worlds apart from the club. It seems it's that special feeling of unity and togetherness that makes the club so celebrated among international football fans. It's more than any one edifying season could ever accomplish.
All quotes obtained firsthand unless famous otherwise.
Lars Pollmann also writes for The Yellow Wall. You can follow him on Twitter. Read more World Football news on BleacherReport.com
Source: bleacherreport.com