Borussia Dortmund coach Edin Terzic faces Paris Saint-Germain in Wednesday’s Champions League semifinal first leg enjoying a rare spell of certainty in the job.

Dortmund’s progression to the last four would have been scarcely believable to anyone watching the 2-0 loss at PSG that opened the Champions League campaign in September. 

A string of domestic setbacks including a German Cup exit in December had Terzic on the ropes. 

He only survived a crisis meeting shortly before Christmas because of Dortmund’s improved Champions League form. 

Terzic’s side qualified first in a group including PSG, last year’s semifinalist AC Milan and Saudi-backed Newcastle United. 

Reaching the semifinals with wins over PSV Eindhoven and Atletico Madrid has all but guaranteed Terzic will be in the Dortmund dugout next season. 

While not all the doubters have been silenced, getting past PSG would make Terzic just the third Dortmund manager, after club legends Ottmar Hitzfeld and Jurgen Klopp, to take the club to the Champions League final. 

‘Super impressive.’ Terzic’s story is the kind the Dortmund hierarchy, not to mention the club’s fans, find appealing. 

He was born in Menden, near Dortmund, in 1982, just two years after his parents had moved to Germany from the former Yugoslavia. 

The life-long Dortmund fan attended his first game in 1991 at the Westfalenstadion against Duisburg, aged just nine. 

“I don’t remember much from my childhood, but that was super impressive,” Terzic told German magazine 11Freunde in May 2021. 

Pictures from the 2012 German Cup final show a boyish Terzic among tens of thousands of Dortmund fans in Berlin’s Olympic Stadium. 

On that day, Dortmund thumped rival Bayern Munich 5-2 to seal a league and cup double in what was the pinnacle of Klopp’s reign. 

After playing in the lower tiers of German soccer, he joined Dortmund as a scout in 2010. Apart from brief spells with Besiktas and West Ham, Terzic has been at Dortmund ever since. 

Taking over as interim head coach in December 2020 and led Dortmund to the German Cup  the following May, by which time Marco Rose had been announced as his successor. 

Terzic stayed with the club as technical director and returned to the dugout ahead of the 2022-23 season, this time as head coach on a permanent basis. 

That season ended with a final-round 2-2 draw to lowly Mainz which cost them the league title on goal difference. 

Despite the heartbreak, Dortmund felt they had its man — a decision which has paid off, in Europe at least. 

SUBSCRIBE TO KEEP READING


Start for $0 & enjoy free unlimited access for 30 days.

  • Daily TV listings for U.S. and global soccer.
  • Inside access to USA’s 2026 World Cup prep.
  • Exclusive interviews with players and coaches.
  • Expert analysis of top soccer headlines.
  • Cancel anytime.

Already have an account? Sign in here.


Not ready to subscribe? Sign up here for our free newsletter.

Already have an account? Sign in here.