Pep Guardiola seems to be an inspirational boss even for the most-seasoned professionals.
So imagine just what it is like to be 20 years old, playing for RB Leipzig and in the second division of German football one minute and having Guardiola delivering a personal tactics lesson in full public view the next.
A tutorial that is so passionate and animated that it causes you literally to take three step back to accommodate his extravagant body language.
Shortly after Joshua Kimmich had joined Bayern Munich, he played in a 0-0 draw with Borussia Dortmund and, after the match, Guardiola stalked on to the pitch and sought him out.
Then Bayern Munich coach, Guardiola began by remonstrating with the young player. So passionate is Guardiola's face that you feared you were intruding on a humiliation, before smiles replace the furrowed brow and Guardiola throws his arms around Kimmich's neck in a paternal embrace.
It is an iconic clip and it turns out Kimmich enjoyed the tete-a-tete. 'I like this,' he says, smiling at the memory of his former coach. 'I enjoyed it. When someone is that emotional, this intensity for the game, this love for the game, I think that's good. When you know how he is, his type of being coach, his style of being coach, as a player you think it's 100 per cent natural.'
It would have been normal to have been a little over-awed. RB Leipzig may have played in the Champions League last season but when Kimmich was there they were still rising through the leagues. They were in the second tier when the call from his agent came. Kimmich, now 23, explains: 'He said, 'Bayern Munich wants to have you'. I was like, 'Really?!'
'I thought he was joking. I was 20 years old playing in the second division. I was like, 'Why do they want to get me when they can have every player in the world?' So it was a bit strange for me. But I knew I had this great opportunity.
'I asked if it was possible to hear the same from Pep Guardiola and ask him some questions; 'Why me? Where can I play in this squad of great quality? I'm from the second division'. This was really important for me. After that I thought this is the right step and I have to take it.'
Like most who have played under Guardiola — Zlatan Ibrahimovic being an honourable exception — Kimmich will not quickly forget what he learned. 'It was a different type of playing football,' he says. 'At RB Leipzig, we nearly only had a concept against the ball and now it was completely different as we had 70 per cent possession.
'I played different positions. With Pep, it's really important to know where team-mates are in every moment and also where the opponents are. So you learn and get another feeling of the space. You know every time you get the ball I can pass it to this player and this player. You know where your team-mates are, in which space. And so you think a bit different about the whole game of football.'
And the legacy is enduring. At Bayern they are still adjusting to life after Pep. Carlo Ancelotti seemed an unlikely fit, lasting just 15 months. Niko Kovac has taken the baton after Jupp Heynckes' successful interim rescue mission.
Seven consecutive wins at the start of the season have been followed by four games without a win, culminating in a 3-0 home defeat by Borussia Monchengladbach.
The jury remains out as to whether the 46-year-old Croatian is the long-term answer. The new style though is a more modern fit: gegenpressing is back in, according to Kimmich, who plays right back for Kovac.
It is with the German national team though that Kimmich seems to be finding his range. There, Joachim Low has installed him as the pivotal holding midfielder as he attempts to reboot the 2014 World Cup winners. And his ability to switch from holding midfield to full-back makes comparisons with Philipp Lahm natural.
'I'm not that calm all the time like Philipp,' he says. 'He's more able to control his emotions. Sometimes I'm screaming. Maybe not off the pitch but on the pitch I'm sometimes a different person.'
Fittingly, given the Pep connection, his inspiration is more Iberian. 'Xabi Alonso was really special, especially for me,' he says. 'When I came [to Bayern] I played in centre midfield as a holding player and of course I looked a lot at him and tried to learn everything that he is doing.
'He was a perfect Pep Guardiola player, in every moment he knew where his team-mates are, where his opponents are. He had a great feeling of passing the ball in the right moment, the right speed to the right players. He knew the game and was the brain of it.'
But it is his nuanced evaluations of difficult issues that marks Kimmich as the face of the new generation, earmarked as a future Germany and Bayern captain.
Take the issue of Mesut Ozil, a divisive one after the Arsenal player had posed with Turkish President Erdogan prior to the World Cup. Given Erdogan's human rights abuses, it was singularly ill judged. But what followed in some German media and among some commentators was an onslaught, questioning Ozil's very commitment to the German cause.
When he quit the national team, citing the national federation's failure to protect him from a racist backlash, the default response seemed to bewilderment among the hierarchy of the German FA and some team-mates that Ozil could suggest such a thing.
But Kimmich admitted that, while he did not understand all of Ozil's reasoning, he added an important qualifier: 'But that may only work if you're in my skin.'
And Kimmich is adamant that he wants the national team to be seen as a symbol of Germany's ethnic diversity. 'Football is the best way for integration. You see it with the national team, we have a lot of players with different backgrounds. We live this integration.
'When I played in the youth team for VfB Stuttgart, we had a lot of different players from different nationalities and for me it is normal to integrate. It is no big thing for me. It is normal for me and my generation. It doesn't have to be a big thing. It has to be normal, because it is the world nowadays.'
Noeknoptuz
0
Trust me, I’m a Bayern fan myself and Kimmich isn’t the guy Man City should look for on that position. Moreover we won’t sell him. Thiago (😍), Frenkie, Rodri or even Verratti/Neves/Weigl would be close to perfection. Still hoping to see Frenkie or Thiago under Pep (once again).
I would love to have kimmich as our RB
Riclwz
0
I want pep back
CityMan
0
kimmich is for me the best rightback in the world. and to know that some english guy said that trippier is the best rightback in the world is the best joke I heard for a very long time. as a bayern fan and football fan by far, I can say that kimmich is the best that happend to bayern in long time sins the ucl 2013.
From what I’ve seen I think I agree with you. Also trippier isn’t even the best RB in premier league so idk what that guy was on about. Lol
wunmight
1
To me pep is good coach
humidityi
1
pep got them playing beautiful football
UFO000
2
Pep needs to go all out for Rodri, Kimmich, Torreira or Weigl.
Keviis
1
Trust me, I’m a Bayern fan myself and Kimmich isn’t the guy Man City should look for on that position. Moreover we won’t sell him. Thiago (😍), Frenkie, Rodri or even Verratti/Neves/Weigl would be close to perfection. Still hoping to see Frenkie or Thiago under Pep (once again).
uselesss
0
he is schweini's successor not lahm's and pep knew it
Guccilife
0
any player pep borught and ancelotti except for gnabry and kimmich has to leave and thats fast as hell
Charlesgarrett
1
If this season turns out to be a disaster, I'm afraid that Kimmich will express his wish to leave. We all know how ambitious he is and how badly he wants a CL title. City could bid for him, I mean Pep loves him, and Fernandinho isn't getting any younger.
NBA22
1
Kimmich helped greatly by his time being coached by Pep, which coincided with and catalised regular playing time as a midfielder for him
xvidoeos
1
I'm done. 0 hope for Germany. Bad decisions - unusual formations - players playing different roles for national team - Kimmich in midfield - Timo,Sane,Draxler 3 on left flank - Can in the top attacking four - Brandt on right wing - no good left or Right back
twentieth
1
Pep really knows how to nurture diamonds.
idleness
0
Run as fast as you like... Kimmich will catch you 🤷♂️
Marryhoward
1
Pep thought the world of Kimmich, and never once played him in midfield. Food for thought.
Brodericck
0
Kimmich: "Those who booed us after the game are not real fans. The real fans get behind us"
planning
0
I’m almost sure Kimmich was on steroids before the World Cup, then stopped for the testing , and lost all ability to do anything since
Tim5533
0
Poor midfield selection. 2 slow CBs pushing up and getting caught out because of their lack of pace. Both issues could be fixed easily but for Löw's stubborness.
Pogbalove
0
The Kimmich midfield experiment needs to end.
MilanMilan
0
Kimmich as a CDM thus far....
Ashutosh545
0
lol pep's face
[image]
His face have many other weird expressions too.... And nothing is wrong with it because he always try to speak out with players... Thats why they take inspiration from him... [Spittongue]
venish40
2
doesn't matter where does pep goes he make record history change playing and more over he can change a ordinary player to world class he will always remain in my heart and hope he will return to barca soon......
cruijff14forever
1
kimmich is for me the best rightback in the world. and to know that some english guy said that trippier is the best rightback in the world is the best joke I heard for a very long time. as a bayern fan and football fan by far, I can say that kimmich is the best that happend to bayern in long time sins the ucl 2013.
swagchicken
1
lol pep's face