Jobe Bellingham finding his feet as Dortmund head to City
Borussia Dortmund's players react after loosing the German first division Bundesliga football match between Holstein Kiel and Borussia Dortmund in Kiel, northern Germany, on January 14, 2025. (Photo by Axel Heimken / AFP)
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Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jobe Bellingham is gradually making his mark after a slow start ahead of his return to England to face Manchester City on Wednesday.
Jobe joined
Dortmund in the summer aged 19 for a reported fee of 30.5 million euros ($35
million) from Sunderland, among the most expensive transfers in Dortmund's
history.
Jobe followed in
the footsteps of his brother Jude, who moved to the Westfalenstadion five years
earlier, aged 17.
Jude became one
of the most sought-after players at Dortmund and is now a true superstar after
moving to Real Madrid in 2023.
While Jobe has
returned to England to play for the under-21s side he captains, Wednesday's
match will be his first on English soil for his new club.
Like City,
Dortmund sit in the top eight, having won two and drawn one of their three
Champions League games so far.
The younger
Bellingham understood a move to Dortmund would provoke comparisons with Jude,
but felt the club offered the best place for him to develop.
Like he did at
Sunderland, the younger Bellingham has 'Jobe' on his jersey rather than his
last name, due to his famous brother.
On arriving in
Dortmund, Jobe admitted in pre-season comparisons with his older brother were
on his mind.
"It's
something you do think about. You have these anxieties, especially me as I'm
only young," he told reporters, adding "I'm not perfect. I do think
about these things."
With Jude's
exploits in black and yellow fresh in the mind, Jobe took longer than many
expected to find his feet in Germany.
A decent Club
World Cup showing -- Jobe started three games, scoring a goal and assisting
another before missing a showdown with his brother due to a yellow card
suspension -- was followed by a more difficult time when the season started.
Jobe was hooked at
half-time in his opening Bundesliga game. Jobe's father and agent Mark
confronted Dortmund sporting director Sebastian Kehl in the player tunnel after
the match.
The incident
forced Dortmund to publicly reiterate "the active area is and remains
reserved for players, coaches and management, not families and advisors."
Jobe started his
next league match but was then benched, only picking up minutes in the dying
stages of matches and failing to record any goals or assists during his brief
cameos.
In mid-October
at Bayern Munich, Jobe made a high-profile error, failing to clear the ball off
the goal-line, allowing Michael Olise to score what would eventually be the
winner.
The setback
seemed to spark the midfielder, however.
Three days
later, Jobe started in the Champions League at Copenhagen, laying on two
assists in a 4-2 win.
On Tuesday, Jobe
helped create Dortmund's equaliser in a German Cup clash at Eintracht
Frankfurt, which his side won on penalties.
And last Friday,
the 20-year-old put his body on the line late to block a potential equaliser in
the dying stages of a hard-fought 1-0 win at Augsburg.
A Dortmund
source told German tabloid Bild on Monday Jobe was in line to start against
City.
While the noise
had grown louder around Jobe -- perhaps also from inside the Bellingham family
itself -- Dortmund feel his development is not lagging, but actually ahead of
schedule.
Speaking on
Friday, Dortmund coach Niko Kovac praised the midfielder.
"You could
see in our last game against Frankfurt what qualities he has. He's present.
He's physical.
"I'm not
concerned, on the contrary, I know what he can do.
"We're
building him up slowly here and it's going even faster than what I had imagined
myself, because the lad really has a lot of quality."
Dortmund
goalkeeper Gregor Kobel echoed his coach's words, saying: "Jobe is doing
great, he's been good in the last few games too.
"He's
getting better week to week -outstanding."


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