The two managers spoke to the media following Sunday's league match.
Henning Berg:
"I am naturally very happy with the win. We had a very difficult 120 minutes of football during the week, and we played 60-70 minutes of that with 10 men. It was time that we won our first game in the league. There was a mistake by the match official in our game at Paks, which helped towards that result. We missed "200" chances against Vasas and we should have won that match as well. We have managed to pick up 3 points within 3 days of our game against Midtyjlland. I am very satisfied with the attitude of the players and the state of our fitness. We are trying to find out best team and there are good central defenders in the squad. We played a little differently in Europe, which is when we thought about playing Roland in the middle. I feel that this post suits him, and he was very good in the battles, and he has the experience and is a real leader on the pitch. He had only 5 days to rest after the European Championships, and he performed well in that tournament. It is true that he has not played in every match since then, but it is good to see that we can count on him in this position. I feel that he performed well in the last two games."
István Urbányi:
"I would like to congratulate Videoton, not only for today's performance, but for the way they played in Europe. The fact that they scored 4 goals today is down to the fact that they managed to convert the majority of chances, unlike in previous games. We also had a part to play in this. I do not know just how much people know, but there are serious problems with when it comes to putting the team together. There are 6-7 key players out with injuries, which makes things very hard for us to be competitive in the NB1. I have told the players that this is a learning curve. The games are coming thick and fast, Ujpest, Ferencvaros and Honved and there is not too much chance of players coming back from injuries by then. We did score a goal today so I will have to take a look to see what the exact problem was."
Author: David Rechnitzer