More on KentOnline
Chief executive Damian Irvine has led the tributes to Ebbsfleetâs title-winning manager Dennis Kutrieb.
Itâs only the fifth league title in their history and the first time theyâve won National League South having twice been promoted via the play-offs.
The 43-year-old German arrived as an unknown to Fleet fans to replace Kevin Watson at the end of the 2019/20 season.
Itâs been a tough journey at times, with Covid restrictions hardly helping Kutriebâs transition to his new surroundings, and thereâs been doubters from across non-league football that his style and methods would never work.
But his classy squad have run away with the title in the second half of the season and - after three years in charge - Kutrieb has justified the faith shown in him by Irvine and Fleet owner Dr Abdulla Al-Humaidi.
âIâm extremely proud of him, and proud of Dr Abdulla who made that decision to look elsewhere when it was tough,â said Irvine.
âIt wasnât a case of anyone not really working here, it was that the club needed a direction, it needed a brief and a character that we were going to build on going forward.
âSo, I looked high and low, all across Europe for the type of person that the brief said we needed. The process was thorough but even I, standing here now, couldnât have dreamt that it would have found exactly what weâre looking for.
âIn such tough circumstances, Dennis has learnt here. You only had to read early on, everyone had a reason why he couldnât do it, why it couldnât work - âyou canât play this sort of football, itâs impossible at this level, the pitches wonât let you do it, you donât know the leagues, where have you come from in German lower leaguesâ - a lot of doubters.
âAll thatâs done every day, and Iâve seen him, and us as a partnership with the chairman and all the staff, itâs just got us a little bit tighter and more focused every time the doubters have said that.
âWe believed from the start that it could be done. To see what has happened now is an endorsement and a justification so Iâm really proud.â
Irvine believes Kutriebâs work ethic has set him apart this term.
Heâs managed to have the squad firing on all cylinders - minus one blip mid-season which saw two defeats to rivals Dartford - and has put to bed the pain of last seasonâs last-gasp play-off Final defeat at Dorking Wanderers.
âI know itâs easy to say, but he works harder and thinks more and is obsessive in making sure this team is best prepared on a Saturday,â added Irvine.
âThat sounds simple and is easy to say but in practice itâs actually very hard to do. He sacrificed a lot to be here, heâs here for the club, heâs a professional and those are all the characteristics a lot of people have got.
âThen as a football manager to have the ability to bring the boys with you in a way where heâs had to manage a squad of 24. Thereâs been boys left out or boys rotated so to do that where they fully believe and buy in because the way we play and the way weâre set up as a club, if you half-doubt yourself then you wonât succeed.
âIf one person on the pitch doesnât back the playing-out culture and how we do it, then it can fall apart.
âTo do what heâs done and have the skill heâs got as a manager and an analyst, and a coach on the grassâ¦heâs a good person and people aspire to play for him, thatâs the secret. Itâs a good package and heâs well balanced.
âItâs a reaction to what happened last year when you get caught not quite finishing the job. Itâs easy for that to manifest itself negatively and really spiral but itâs gone the other way for us and thatâs testament to the characters in the squad, all the backroom staff and Dennis.
âTheyâve used that to springboard and what more can you ask?â