Bayern Munich: Hansi Flick
Not even a year after starting the paintings and Flick has already secured their position in history at Bayern by leading them to the treble in the Bundesliga, DFB Cup and UEFA Champions League after replacing Niko Kovac in November. 2019. Record-breaking champions Germany looked even more convincing when the assistant to 2014 FIFA World Cup winner Joachim Löw claimed victory in 33 of his 36 fites due to problems thanks to the adjustment of all the coaches of the Bayern of history. With this “Mia san mia” feeling restored in Munich, can we avoid Flick’s winning machine?
Video: Bayern’s adventure with the name of the 2019/20 season
Borussia Dortmund: Lucien Favre
Favre is entering his third season at the helm in Dortmund with the call to borrow cutlery outside his obvious home in Bavaria. The Swiss coach has the most productive win rate of any BVB coach in the Bundesliga, leading them to back-to-back finals, and now he has the combined power of Jadon Sancho, Erling Haaland and Marco Reus. The former boss of Hertha Berlin and Borussia Mönchengladbach knows this may be his chance.
RB Leipzig: Julian Nagelsmann
Records keep falling for Nagelsmann on the bench. The youngest permanent head coach in Bundesliga history laid a foundation forged in his first year as Leipzig manager, guiding the club into the Herbstmeisterschaft as Bundesliga leaders halfway through and a Champions League semi-final in the eleventh season of the club’s existence. Like Dortmund with Favre, Nagelsmann’s Leipzig is expected to push Bayern deep into the league and create even more history.
Borussia Mönchengladbach: Marco Rose
The Rose Revolution began in Mönchengladbach after leading the Foals to a first Champions League crusade since 2016/17. It may have been a lot more after Borussia dominated the table for the longest time since they won the last of their five Bundesliga names in 1976/77. A former assistant to Thomas Tuchel in Mainz and a series winner in sprint at Red Bull Salzburg, where he led the Under-19s to the UEFA Youth League name and the first team to the national double, Gladbach knows Rose is capable of it. move along.
Bayer Leverkusen: Peter Bosz
Bosz and Bayer appear to be the best couple, with the Dutch coach putting into practice the club’s philosophy of attacking football with young players. This led them to the DFB Cup final last year, they were disappointed to miss a moment of the consecutive Champions League season on the final day. The former Dortmund and Ajax boss faces the challenge of having to rebuild the team after the departures of Kai Havertz and Kevin Volland, but don’t expect this to replace his attacking technique in any way.
Hoffenheim: Sebastian Hoeneß
A notable call is back on the Bundesliga scene when Sebastian Hoeneß succeeds Alfred Schreuder in Hoffenheim. Son of the legendary Dieter Hoeneß and nephew of Uli Hoeneß, the 38-year-old coach arrives in Sinsheim after taking the Bayern subsidiary to the Third Division call-up in 2019/20. This is his first senior assignment after climbing the youth ranks in Leipzig and then Munich. You will also get a quick overview of European action in the organizing phase of the UEFA Europa League, having overseen Bayern U19 in the Youth League in the past.
Wolfsburg: Oliver Glasner
A seventh place and one position in the Europa League qualifying rounds was noted as a successful first crusade for Glasner with Wolfsburg. The Austrian is off to an undefeated start of 13 games and guided the Wolves to the final 16 in continental competition. The same is true at the Volkswagen Arena.
Freiburg: Christian Streich
Streich is by far the oldest Bundesliga coach in service for over 8 and a half years, six years older than any of his rivals, and it means he took office at a time when the German champions were not called up. Bayern Munich. A notable figure who travels to paintings via motorcycle and whose press meetings are far more important than football, the 55-year-old has remained unwavering with his home club, ensuring a return to the Bundesliga. in 2016 just one year after the decline.
See: See how Freiburg started the season in 2019/20
Eintracht Frankfurt: Adi Hütter
Another Austrian and former Red Bull Salzburg manager, but the former foreign Austrian midfielder made his mark in Switzerland, where, in 2018, he guided the Young Boys to their first league name since 1986. It was a three-year success, but the Hütter’s moment of year in Frankfurt was not as successful as the first. A ninth-place finish last season means there will be no European football next season after Hütter led the Eagles to the UEFA Europa League round of 16 in consecutive campaigns. An effort to return to Europe in 2021/22 will be his ultimate goal.
Hertha Berlin: Bruno Labbadia
Labbadia only took over from Hertha, his fifth Bundesliga season as a coach, and a 10th record as a player or bench, in April alone, and a four-game undefeated start in his tenure was auspicious. a team that still deserves to have done more than complete 10th place last season, apologies can be made. Former German Bayern forward and foreigner, and the only player to score a hundred goals in the country’s two most sensible divisions, Labbadia was Hertha’s fourth manager of the season.
Union Berlin: Urs Fischer
When Union got to the point just over 12 months ago, their ambition was simply to make their tenure among the greats bigger. On the eve of his third season at the club, Swiss Fischer, who guided Basel to back-to-back league titles in his homeland between 2015 and 2017, now expects something a little bigger than mere survival after a final. promising in 11th place last quarter, only the Hertha neighbors in the difference of purpose.
Schalke: David Wagner
For everyone, the 2019/20 crusade was “ a season in two halves. ” This was even more the case for Wagner, who in the past was a forward for Schalke, Frankfurt and Mainz. The Royal Blues finished third after matchday thirteen and fifth in the middle of the season; they finished 12 after winning just one and losing 10 of their 17 games at Rückrunde. The former Dortmund reserve team coach and Huddersfield Town manager, who grew up in Los Angeles, knows that with the departure of Weston McKennie and others this summer, he has a team to restructure when he leaves. Time of the season in Gelsenkirchen.
Mainz: Achim Beierlorzer
Beierlorzer controlled 11 games at Sandro Schwarz last season, just days after leaving Cologne, his first role as Bundesliga head coach. The surprising 5-1 win at Hoffenheim that followed his appointment proved to be a false dawn, as the 05ers hovered dangerously just above Rear 3 during the season high before their wonderful loss to Dortmund in the day 32 gave them a break. Although in his early fifties, Beierlorzer, who in the past worked at the Leipzig Youth Academy, still finds his marks at the highest point after advancing through a successful two-year stint with Jahn Regensburg in the Bundesliga 2 between 2017 and 2019.
Cologne: Markus Gisdol
Gisdol had pulled Hoffenheim out of relegation at the end of the 2012/13 season, so there is no question that he appointed Cologne boss in November 2019. The Billy Goats had only seven problems from their first 11 games and were a moment behind. under the table when Gisdol took over; In this context, finishing 14th is a feat for the former Hamburg manager. A midfielder in the German amateur leagues, Gisdol had worked as an assistant to Ralf Rangnick and Huub Stevens at Schalke before landing Hoffenheim, his first senior job.
Augsburg: Heiko Herrlich
Herrlich, winner of the Champions League with foreign striker Dortmund and Germany, coached the youth groups of both organizations before a short stint as Bochum’s coach in the Bundesliga in 2009/10. He had to wait until the summer of 2017 when Leverkusen called to get back on the more sensible flight. Just 18 months after assuming this role, he left football until Augsburg appointed him in March 2020 as successor to Martin Schmidt with the project of keeping the club in place. He did. Fair.
Werder Bremen: Florian Kohfeldt
In the Bundesliga without a break since 1981, Bremen only endured with the skin of their teeth last season. Only the final day’s win against Cologne and the defeat of Fortuna Düsseldorf gave Bremen a play-off chance, and then they did an incredibly difficult task to see Heidenheim on away goals. This gave Kohfeldt, who left the club’s reserve to take over the first team in October 2017, a fourth season at the helm, and he has not yet turned 40. he would have the rookie quarterback as an assistant between 2014 and 2016. After completing 12th and then a promising eighth place in his first two seasons at the helm, Kohfeldt expects 2020/21 to be a smoother ride.
Arminia Bielefeld: Uwe Neuhaus
Neuhaus, a former defender who has played more than a hundred Bundesliga games for Wattenscheid, began his coaching career at the club where he hung up his boots in 1995. He worked as an assistant to various coaches in Dortmund, adding Udo Lattek and Matthias. Sammer, before making his call on the bench, spent seven years at Union Berlin since 2007. He led them to Bundesliga 2 before joining Dynamo Dresden in 2015, then Bielefeld in December 2018. He guided the club to seventh place in his debut season already the Bundesliga 2 crown in position so far, setting a positional record so far of seven straight away wins on the road, to lead Bielefeld in a big way after an 11-year absence.
VfB Stuttgart: Pellegrino Matarazzo
Born in New Jersey, Matarazzo has lived in Germany since joining the Eintracht Bad Kreuznach amateur team in 2000. The former defender never made it to the Bundesliga as a player and began his path to the elite as an assistant coach at Nuremberg, his last club as a player. player, in 2010. He then worked with the Bavarian U17 and U19 groups before taking the U17 position at Hoffenheim in 2017, which ultimately led to him being Nagelsmann’s assistant in Sinsheim. At the Stuttgart post since January 2020, his first role as senior head coach, brought the club back to the Bundesliga after a one-season absence.
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