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A deal for the good of both the clubs futures
Bayern Munich is known for its commitment toward identifying young talent
and nurturing it into professional young players
who came through the youth system and is now a legend of the club
Desiring to improve their youth system even further, the club has come to a strategic agreement with 3. Liga team SpVgg Unterhaching. According to the report from FCBayern.com
the agreement is meant to be a long-term one that aims to cover multiple areas such as youth development and scouting
Unterhaching has also produced multiple talents from its youth system
who has made his mark in the Bundesliga with his talent
“Unterhaching has been known for many years for its outstanding regional youth development work
We expect this long-term partnership with a club right on our doorstep to ensure smooth
uncomplicated integration in the development of our youth players,” said Max Eberl
Unterhaching would like to establish itself as a down-to-earth
We want to accompany the club on this journey.”
Various board members from both clubs commented on the partnership:
director of youth development and the campus: “We’re delighted to be able to expand our existing FC Bayern Campus partner club network with Unterhaching
It will further improve the opportunities for regional talent development at both clubs
We have already had good experiences with Haching and are sure that we will achieve further new synergies through this partnership.”
the partnership with FC Bayern is a milestone in our club’s history
just in time for our 100th anniversary next year
We’re delighted that there will be a structured and strategically sensible exchange between our two clubs in the future
I am sure that both clubs - and especially the talented youngsters - will benefit from this.”
Unterhaching sporting director: “In recent years
we have continuously proven that Unterhaching is an excellent place for young players to establish themselves in professional football
The agreements with FC Bayern will mean that we will not only jointly scout and promote talented young players but also gain new insights behind the scenes across departments.”
Fans will be excited to see this addition to Bayern’s regional partnerships
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St. James' Park
The Magpies ran out 3-1 winners thanks to goals from Harvey Barnes, Jacob Murphy and Alexander Isak, with Eddie Howe naming different XIs in each half.
Barnes fired United ahead after five minutes when he cut inside and fired home with a trademark finish.
The second goal arrived in the 24th minute after a superb move, which resulted in Sean Longstaff finding Barnes, who cut the ball back to Jacob Murphy to sweep past the goalkeeper.
More slick approach involving Murphy and Barnes saw Isak cannon a shot against the crossbar, but he was on the scoresheet on the stroke of half time.
Last season's 25-goal top scorer raced in on goal and finished smartly in the 43rd minute.
A much younger side played in the second period - Ben Parkinson's substitute appearance at Bournemouth last term was so far the only senior match for Newcastle United between them, although 42-cap Greece international Odysseas Vlachodimos replaced Nick Pope in goal.
Parkinson and Garang Kuol both had opportunities to add to the scoreline before Simon Skarlatidis pulled one back from the spot for the German side, but it was a strong start to United's pre-season preparations.
Newcastle United (first half): Nick Pope, Jamal Lewis, Emil Krafth, Dan Burn (c), Lewis Hall, Jacob Murphy, Joelinton, Sean Longstaff, Joe White, Harvey Barnes, Alexander Isak
Newcastle United (second half): Odysseas Vlachodimos, Jamie Miley, Cathal Heffernan, Ellis Stanton, Leo Shahar, Johnny Emmerson, Jay Turner-Cooke, Alfie Harrison, Trevan Sanusi, Garang Kuol, Ben Parkinson (c)
Map
Predicted lineups are available for the match a few days in advance while the actual lineup will be available about an hour ahead of the match
The current head to head record for the teams are Unterhaching 3 win(s)
Unterhaching and VfB Stuttgart II have not drawn any of their last 5 matches against each other.
Simon Skarlatidis has created the most big chances for Unterhaching (7)
Have scored 7 goals in their last 5 matches
Have conceded the most penalties this season (10)
Dennis Seimen is ranked 1 in saves per match in the competition (4.3)
12 Apr 2025 12:00:00 GMT?Unterhaching vs VfB Stuttgart II on Sat
12 Apr 2025 12:00:00 GMT ended in a 2–2 tie.InsightsHave scored 5 goals in their last 5 matches
Unterhaching and VfB Stuttgart II have not drawn any of their last 5 matches against each other
Unterhaching is playing home against VfB Stuttgart II at Uhlsport Park on Sat
One last attempt to save the club from relegation
Back in December of 2024, Bayern Munich officially announced the partnership struck up between them and SpVgg Unterhaching
One of the many facets of the partnership was the ability for up to 3 Bayern players to join the 3
Liga side on loan and gain experience at a higher level than the FC Bayern Campus could allow
via the FC Bayern Campus’ official twitter account:
#FCBU19 Striker Jason #Eckl will be loaned until the end of the season
Striker Jason Eckl has had a difficult season with the U-19s
struggling to establish himself as the main striker
though he does still have the talent to succeed
how good of a place of development is Unterhaching at the moment
7 points from safety and facing major managerial upheaval
it is a pretty safe bet that Bayern’s partners will drop back down to the Regionalliga next season
none of this turmoil will prevent Bayern’s youngsters from developing
ShareSaveCommentBusinessSportsMoneyBayern Munich Set To Sign Historic Cooperation Agreement With UnterhachingByManuel Veth
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights
I write about the German football with a focus on the Bundesliga.Follow AuthorApr 09
12:02am EDTShareSaveCommentJamal Musiala in action at the Sportpark in Unterhaching
More agreement with Unterhaching will lead to more players like Musiala to emerge from the academy
(Photo by Harry Langer/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)
“There will be no statement from us,” Unterhaching President Manfred Schwabl said when asked for a statement by the Süddeutsche Zeitung
The newspaper cited anonymous sources working in Unterhaching’s city hall that Bayern was working on a deal with Die Spielvereinigung
the CEO of SpVgg’s local rivals Fortuna Unterhaching
told SZ that Bayern Munich was the potential investor to buy the city’s stadium
“Bayern is planning a cooperation with SpVgg,” Darchinger said
SpVgg has been trying to buy the Sportpark Unterhaching and the sports field located around the stadium from the city for some time
Owning the Sportpark outright rather than renting it from the city would give the club more flexibility and increase marketing possibilities
Haching often had to think outside the box to remain financially viable
The club currently holds 58.02% of those shares
The other biggest shareholders are club president Schwabl (19.34%) and Andreas Kögl (10.44%)
The remaining 12.2% are widely spread shareholdings
the club hoped to generate enough money to return to the 2
But the club was relegated to the Regionalliga (fourth division) in 2020 instead and only returned to the 3
While playing in Germany’s third division can be financially challenging
the regional fourth divisions can be described as a financial wasteland
not surprising that Haching is once again looking for investors to strengthen the club’s infrastructure
highlights that the club bosses around Schwabl are willing to think outside the box to find investors
Schwabl might be best known as a long-term captain of 1860 Munich
But the Holzkirchen native is actually a Bayern product and remains close with former Bayern president Uli Hoeneß
Liga side Unterhaching hopes that a cooperation agreement with Bayern Munich could see the club ..
(Photo by Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images)
the idea of the two clubs has been around for some time but has recently been intensified by Bayern’s Campus boss Jochen Sauer and sporting director
has a cooperation partner in Austria’s second division: FC Liefering
That particular relationship has been fruitful
The idea is simple: Bayern talents not ready for the first team but too good for the youth or second team
which currently plays in the fourth division
will no longer be loaned out but sent to Unterhaching instead
Bayern invested a reported €70 million ($76 million) in the Campus
Located on the Ingolstädter Straße on the outskirts of Munich
the state-of-the-art complex was supposed to help Bayern develop their own talents rather than buying expensive players
the Campus has been lacking when it comes to producing talent for the club
With talents from the Campus potentially playing for Haching
the club hopes to increase the talents to graduate from Bayern’s academy
According to a report by Sky
up to three Bayern talents from the U19s/U23s would join Unterhaching every season once an agreement is reached
Bayern will pay training compensation in the low single-digit million range
The fee will depend on the amount of time the players have played for Haching
Sky added that the finer details of an agreement are still being worked out between the two clubs
The German Football Federation (DFB) and the governing body of the Bundesliga
what would happen if Unterhaching ever reached the Bundesliga again
The regulations within German football are pretty straightforward: clubs with the same owner cannot play in the same division against one another
Bundesliga teams can currently not play above the 3
Reaching an agreement with Haching could circumnavigate that agreement
This is a creative deal that could lead to more homegrown talent reaching the highest level of competitive football in Germany
Fabio Torsiello (19) will be hunting for goals in the third division for the rest of the second half of the season: The offensive player
Paul Fernie: “We are pleased that Fabio has the opportunity to gain match practice at third division level
It is a very good opportunity for him to take the next step in his development
We wish him much success for the rest of the season and will follow his time in Unterhaching closely.”
Torsiello has been with the club since 2016 and was trained at the SV 98 youth academy
the Darmstadt native signed a professional contract with the Lilies
We Lilies – Together for Nature Conservation
This was the motto of the 6th Clean-Up Day organised by SV Darmstadt 98 and the Krombacher Brewery last Sunday (May 4)
and litter pose a major environmental problem
around 90 Lilies fans gathered in front of the Merck Stadium at Böllenfalltor
they set out to keep the Bölle and the surrounding region clean
A bitter afternoon and defeat for the SV Darmstadt 98 U21 team
The young Lilies lost 3-2 to SC 1960 Hanau on matchday 32 of the Lotto Hessenliga
Although the blue and whites demonstrated their ability to stage comebacks twice on Sunday (May 4)
they were defeated shortly before the final whistle due to a late goal
This decisive result was displayed on the scoreboard at the Merck Stadium after the final whistle
SV 98 finally suffered a decisive defeat to Hamburger SV on Saturday afternoon (May 3)
The decisive factor in the defeat in a largely evenly matched game was two set pieces
which HSV used to score their first two goals
we look back at a match that could have taken a different direction
No points for SV Darmstadt 98 at the Merck Stadium at Böllenfalltor
The Lilies appeared to be at least on par with the current 2
SV 98 suffered a decisive 4-0 defeat against Hamburger SV
We've compiled all the comments from the game for you
A courageous performance by the Lilies ended without a happy ending: SV 98 had to admit defeat to Hamburger SV 4-0 (1-0) – it was the first defeat after four home wins in a row
Florian Kohfeldt makes one change to his starting eleven for the clash with the Rothosen (May 3rd at 1pm)
Philipp Förster replaces Luca Marseiler in the starting lineup
The Lilies host Hamburger SV on Saturday (May 3rd at 1pm) at the Merck Stadium at Böllenfalltor
Everything you need to know about Matchday 32 can be found in "Matchday Compact."
The Lilies will host Hamburger SV at the Merck Stadium at Böllenfalltor next Saturday (May 3rd
1pm) in the 32nd matchday of the second division
Florian Kohfeldt spoke about this match at the press conference on Friday (May 2nd)
We’ve summarised the key points for you
the Lilies aim to extend their impressive run of four consecutive home wins
the clash against Hamburger SV is also about ending another run: No home team has celebrated a victory in a competitive match between Darmstadt and Hamburg in 44 years – time to change that
At a sold-out Merck Stadium at Böllenfalltor
will aim to take three points against the Hamburg club
Here are the key facts and figures for the clash
Tobias Kempe spoke in a media briefing on Wednesday (April 30) about his final games with SV Darmstadt 98 and his departure
The Lilies' long-standing team also aims to defend their title at the RW Walldorf small-sided tournament on Labor Day (May 1)
We report on these and other topics related to SV 98 in our weekly column "Lilien Across the Board."
"We were dead for 90 minutes," Pierre-Michel Lasogga
summed it up honestly about one of the most emotional relegation matches in Bundesliga history
the "football dinosaur," was on the verge of relegation to the 2
HSV was the last club never to have been relegated since the Bundesliga's founding
the Hamburg team had kept the race for survival open with a 1-1 draw
a knockout loomed: Reinhold Yabo gave KSC the lead in the 78th minute – HSV seemed beaten
the first relegation in the club's history all but sealed
But then came stoppage time – and with it the brilliant performance of Marcelo Díaz
who beautifully converted a free kick to make it 1-1
Nicolai Müller put the finishing touches to the game: with his goal to make it 2-1 in the 115th minute
On Saturday (3 May/1pm) SV Darmstadt 98 will host the Hamburger SV team and asks you to observe the following information
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Harvey Barnes, Jacob Murphy and Alexander Isak got the goals for the Magpies, with head coach Eddie Howe fielding a different 11 in each half at adidas’ global headquarters in Herzogenaurach.
Serena Taylor was there to capture the best of the action for this newcastleunited.com gallery.
is Bayern Munich looking to bring back one of its own
According to a report from Tz journalists Nico-Marius Schmitz and Philipp Kessler (as captured by @iMiaSanMia), Bayern Munich could be eyeing up one of its former campus prospects — Unterhaching attacking midfielder Maurice Krattenmacher:
The name of Unterhaching’s attacking midfielder Maurice Krattenmacher is being mentioned at Bayern again
The 18-year-old is a former Bayern youth player - who didn’t get his chance in Munich
The idea is to sign him and loan him out immediately to sister club SSV Ulm in the 2
Unterhaching want around €2.5m plus add-ons
Krattenmacher had one goal and seven assists in 35 games across all competitions for Unterhaching
but seems to have shown enough to pique Bayern Munich’s interest
With a plan reportedly in place for what to do with the youngster
the Bavarians seem to have everything lined up except a final agreement with Unterhaching
Bayern had hoped he would do well but he is exceeding expectations
Maurice Krattenmacher’s return to Bayern Munich was a surprise
it was announced in June this year that he was signed from SpVgg Unterhaching and loaned away again to SSV Ulm in the 2
it has been easy for Bayern fans to forget he is under contract at the Bavarian giants
But if the announcement of his transfer was not that eye catching
Pointing to the player of the month at SSV Ulm award he won in September would be the easy way of demonstrating his impressive form
had his own verdict to give on the talented 19-year-old:
“His development is absolutely positive. You can feel, every minute he plays, that he is getting better,” Clemens explains, via @iMiaSanMia_GER
he still has areas where he needs to develop further
“We are working on this with him week after week
we are very happy that we were able to convince such a player to join us
And that we are also able to accompany him on his development - which will definitely lead towards the Bundesliga.”
Ulm are not trending towards the Bundesliga
with the newly promoted side languishing in 16th while on an eight match winless run
Krattenmacher may soon outgrow Ulm and then one has to wonder what his next step will be
Looking to catch-up on all of the weekend action in the Bundesliga? Awesome, then check out the Bavarian Podcast Works — Bundesliga Rundown with Marcus Iredahl on Patreon, Spotify
please tell me Wagner’s teams will not be as thuggish as his Unterhaching team..
“accompanied the training sessions and attended meetings” and exchanged ideas with De Zerbi
This all points to a rather poorly hidden secret: Being assistant coach at Germany is not the peak of Wagner’s ambition
Though he recently renewed his contract with Germany until 2026 (along with head coach Julian Nagelsmann)
Plettenberg reports that Wagner firmly has an eye on a job in the Bundesliga
the reporter says that “it is possible that he could become a head coach in the Bundesliga as early as next year.”
Going from the Regionalliga to the Bundesliga within a span of two years would be scarcely believable
every Bundesliga fan will have to hope that if Wagner does land a job in Germany’s top division
he does not bring his rugby-style football he was infamous for at Unterhaching with him
Former Bayern Munich player Sandro Wagner has his first ever senior coaching job
The Munich native has taken over at SpVgg Unterhaching as their new head coach after the club was relegated from the 3
Wagner is now tasked with bringing the club back into professional football
Wagner was originally brought in to coach Unterhaching’s U-19 team
and is still technically at the helm of the juniors
who are currently in the midst of a promotion playoff to the A-Junioren Bundesliga
Wagner sat on the bench while his team won 2-0 in the first leg against 1
“In the past few months I have had a lot of time to get to know the club better and I feel very much at home here
The opportunity to take over the first team as a coach makes me proud
and I am very grateful for the great trust the club management has shown,” said Wagner
Unterhaching president Manfred Schwabl did not waste words in praising Wagner
he proved in just a few months that he has tremendous quality on the sidelines and that he is a perfect fit for us as a person
his leadership qualities and the very good discussions with Sandro convinced us that he is exactly the right person for the Spielvereinigung.”
It is indeed impressive that Wagner landed himself a coaching gig so soon, especially considering he called it quits on his playing career just a year ago. As a player, Wagner played for the likes of Werder Bremen, Hertha BSC, MSV Duisburg, 1. FC Kaiserslautern, Darmstadt 98, TSG Hoffenheim, and Bayern Munich before ending his career in China
even younger than incoming Bayern coach Julian Nagelsmann
We at BFW hope that Wagner enjoys enough success to carry him through the ranks of the Bundesliga
maybe he could coach his old Bayern team one day
It is always important to work as hard for the future as the present
Shortly after signing Maurice Krattenmacher from 3. Liga outfit SpVgg Unterhaching, Bayern Munich has now made the loan of the talented attacking midfielder to SSV Ulm official, as per the club’s official website
It was rumored from the very first day Krattenmacher signed for the club that he would go to the 2
Sporting director Christoph Freund had this to say
as per his statement on Bayern’s website: “Maurice Krattenmacher is a young player with top class potential
We expect a lot from him in the future and young talent like him must be developed carefully
It is now important for Maurice to get make the next step while regularly getting game time
Ulm currently provides the best combination of the two
We will watch him carefully and continue to guide him on his way.”
the Greek side have changed their pre-season plan and had to cancel a friendly match against us
we are now due to face German third division side SpVgg Unterhaching on Saturday 29 June at 17:00 CEST (at a changed time!)
The club developed youngsters like Karim Adeyemi and Nico Mantl before they moved to Salzburg
An overview of all our summer fixtures can be found below
Karim Konate challenging Asger Sörensen: in January 2023
we faced Sparta Prague in a winter training camp
Ticket sales for our friendly matches are to be organised by the respective host teams
All the information will be provided in due course ahead of the matches so that you can support our boys
Bayern didn’t want to pay too much for a 16-year old Adeyemi
but he’s not one of Germany’s most promising young talents
Adeyemi did start his youth career at Bayern back in 2009
but as former CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge recently revealed
there was also an opportunity to buy him back when he was 16-years-old
playing for SpVgg Unterhaching’s U-18s and U-19s
Unterhaching president Manfred Schwabl had contacted Uli Hoeness regarding a potential return to Bayern for Adeyemi
Bayern did not want to have to pay around €3 million for him
Rummenigge didn’t want to entirely rule out a potential return to Bayern for Adeyemi as captured by Tz’s Philipp Kessler
#Rummenigge über #Adeyemi: „Ich kenne ihn ja noch aus Unterhaching
Manni Schwabl hat damals den Uli kontaktiert
Der Transfer sollte um die drei Millionen kosten
was für einen 16-Jährigen zu der Zeit eine sehr stolze Summe war." 1/2
"Er hat sich gut entwickelt. Ich habe ihn beim Länderspiel gesehen, mir auch beim letzten CL-Spiel angeschaut. Er ist ein interessanter Spieler. Man muss abwarten, was passiert. Jetzt kostet er mögl. eine Null hinten mehr, als er damals gekostet hätte.“ #Adeyemi #FCBayern 2/2
The transfer should cost around three million
which was a very proud sum for a 16-year-old at the time
I saw him at the international match and also saw him at the last CL game
Now it may cost a zero more than it cost back then would have.”
Unterhaching took the lead thanks to a power shot by Simon Skarlatidis into the far corner: 0-1
Gabriel Misehouy was close to equalising moments later
but he failed to capitalise on a clever pass from Brobbey
Final pass missingWith the industrious Francisco Conceição
Ajax popped up dangerously in front of the German goal several times
Unterhaching tried to come out and threaten a few times
but it did not cause Jay Gorter any major problems.A second German goal still found its mark after a Markus Schwabl effort was deflected and ploughed behind Gorter
The Ajax reply did come this time: first Misehouy hit the crossbar and in the attack that followed
the referee pointed towards the spot after the ball landed on the hand of a German defender
The Amsterdam team started the second half with 11 different names
Through Bergwijn and Branco van den Boomen
but the goalkeeper got in the way both times
The same Van den Boomen put Hlynsson in a perfect position to score not much later
The Icelander did not fail and brought Ajax level: 2-2.Branco important once moreAjax's third goal originated with the midfielder again
who transferred from Toulouse FC this summer
A delightful opening from Van den Boomen ended up with Godts
The Belgian quickly passed his opponent and found the long corner: advantage Ajax
it was Tahirović who scored his first Ajax goal
The midfielder was not tackled and shot from the edge of the box
Ajax continued and made it five with Bergwijn
after Godts released the ball well for the Amsterdam left-winger: 5-2.The final goal came from the Germans
a shot that changed direction ploughed into the Amsterdam goal
giving Ajax a 5-3 win over Unterhaching.Ajax – Unterhaching 5-3 (1-2)2
Gottmeier 5-3Ajax first half: Gorter; Jermoumi
Editor’s Note: This story was included in The Athletic’s Best of 2020. View the full list.
In keeping with a manager fond of pressing football
Ralph Hasenhuttl starts his working day on the front foot
“He’s a man on a mission in the mornings,” says Ross Wilson, the former Southampton director of football operations
really planned to detail on training and things and works closely with Richard Kitzbichler
Andrew Sparkes and Alex Gross with breakfast every morning.”
“A normal working day in Southampton usually started between 7.30 and 8am,” says Danny Rohl
who spent six months as his assistant in England
then we had breakfast together with all the coaching staff
I would analyse the training to give Ralph feedback — what was good and what was not
we’d go jogging together every now and then
often talking about the line-up and the next game.”
A typical Hasenhuttl day has a heavy emphasis on coaching
but the Austrian is just as dedicated to the macro as well as the micro-management of Southampton
He is a manager who has made precision and clarity the guiding principles of his life
Once in a while Hasenhuttl will pause mid-sentence during a press conference to settle himself
The Austrian will cross his arms and with his right hand
rub his thumb and forefingers together as he searches for the correct English word to use
The word he is looking for tends to be similar — “instinct” or “feel” — and he always finds it after that little ritual
In his first meeting with Wilson at Heathrow in 2018
Hasenhuttl repeatedly — and unnecessarily — apologised for his poor grasp of the language
“He was convinced he couldn’t speak English but he was literally speaking it,” Wilson recalls
It did not stop them talking from day into night
It’s the smallest window into how Hasenhuttl works
The Southampton manager speaks excellent English
but resorts to the hand motion when he wants to describe how close a player is to match fitness
or how close his team is to learning his automatisms
Hasenhuttl rubs his thumb and forefingers together when he’s looking for the perfect word to describe how his team yearns for perfection
“One of the best moments for me was hugging and cheering with Ralph after the first home win against Arsenal,” says Rohl
“I still remember after the game we sat together until 3am and analysed everything
and we realised our players were already able to implement a lot of our principles.”
Those principles have taken Hasenhuttl from the third tier of German football to a new four-year contract and a long-term project on the south coast of England with Southampton
Along the way he has learnt to hone his tactics
motivated players to run through locked doors for him
made a comedic hello and earned a reputation as a “force of nature”
This is the rise and rise Ralph Hasenhuttl
Despite winning four Austrian Bundesliga titles in his playing days
Hasenhuttl would never describe himself as the most talented of footballers
“My talent in football was not the highest
and this focus made me better and better,” he said in 2015
his 6ft 3in frame making him something of a target man for clubs including Austria Vienna
Following the better part of 17 years as a player
Hasenhuttl concluded his playing career at Bayern Munich II — their reserve side — serving as one of the experienced veterans as up-and-comers such as Bastian Schweinsteiger and Philipp Lahm began their careers
He offered his guidance on the pitch, and off it. “Our bus driver had a tendency to drive fast,” explained Hasenhuttl’s former Bayern II coach Hermann Gerland in 2018
“Ralph would run right to the front of the bus and tell him: ‘Are you mad
joining lower division SpVgg Unterhaching as under-18 coach — his progress was a sign of things to come
His positive mindset was very captivating,” says Steffen Galm
Unterhaching’s under-19 coach at the time and now their technical director
“He took over our under-18 squad in a difficult situation and led them with plenty of joy and hard work to a top position in the league
He was able to do the same thing with all his following teams
so Southampton can look forward to this in the upcoming seasons.”
Modern-day Hasenhuttl will often speak of the importance of giving young players opportunities
A Hasenhuttl side is able to press so relentlessly in part because of how the Austrian frequently puts young players into his team
Hasenhuttl’s commitment to young players and the collective was clear from day one
had no problem with letting me borrow some of his under-18 players for my under-19 squad
so he was an absolute team player,” he says
Hasenhuttl would eventually be promoted from Unterhaching’s youth teams
becoming an assistant to both Werner Lorant and Heribert Deutinger while further refining his approach to the game
A four-day spell as interim manager of the club in March 2007 gave him his first taste of senior-level management
2007 that “Ralph Hasenhuttl: Football Manager” was born
Hasenhuttl was a qualified success during his two and a half seasons in charge of Unterhaching
taking the side to a sixth-place finish in 2007-08
The third tier of German football underwent a revamp the following season
as a nationwide division replaced the previous regional competition
but Hasenhuttl continued his upward trajectory
He utilised a 4-2-2-2 shape (sound familiar?) and empowered a star striker — Anton Fink — to take his side to a fourth-place finish in 2008-09
and Hasenhuttl’s tactics and particular sense of humour (“Dry
Typical Austrian irony,” says Galm) made him a known quantity in the German third tier
The Austrian’s third season at Unterhaching saw the team start well but fade in the winter
and in February 2010 after 88 games in charge (40 wins
Hasenhuttl admitted later in his career that while pressing tactics can be successful at lower league clubs
there is only so much running and tactical awareness he could ask for from players at that level of the pyramid
“I can do more pressing (higher up the leagues)
have more solutions of what to do with the ball
To fill his time out of the game he had a go at being a semi-professional tennis player in Munich
“I just wanted to see how far you could get at that age if you really trained,” he said
It would be another year before Hasenhuttl returned to football management with Aalen
but his connection to Unterhaching continues to this day — his son Patrick Hasenhuttl joined the club this June
When Hasenhuttl came to Aalen in January 2011
he found a club a point above the relegation zone in the German third tier and in desperate need of invigoration
So Hasenhuttl did what Hasenhuttl tends to do: play a 4-2-2-2 (although the Austrian also used a 4-1-4-1 and 4-5-1 in his first half-season) steady the defence
and ask his players to be brave going forward
Results were solid rather than promising — five wins
eight draws and six losses kept Aalen in the German third tier
releasing 14 players from the club while bringing in eight “open-minded” players of his own
Then they won eight games in a row in the spring to finish second in the league and gain promotion to the Bundesliga 2 for the first time in the club’s history
Take a look at footage of Aalen’s promotion party below and take in the fan chants of Hasenhuttl’s name
Here was a manager getting better and better
Hasenhuttl suffered a worrying start to pre-season in the summer of 2012 when he contracted hantavirus
a potentially fatal disease that left him suffering from a fever
Hasenhuttl gained a stone and a half in weight while receiving treatment from the disease and missed the start of the season
Hasenhuttl returned three weeks into the 2012-13 campaign and employed some of his most radical football ever
Out went the 4-2-2-2/4-4-2 and in came a counter-attacking 4-5-1 style
and while they could not maintain a bright run of form that saw them reach fifth place by the winter break
Aalen finished their first season in Bundesliga 2 in ninth position
It was the club’s highest position in the club’s 92-year history
and the record still stands seven years later
Hasenhuttl was a manager on the rise and on the radar of clubs around Germany but off the field Aalen were heading in the opposite direction
Financial difficulties struck in the summer of 2013 when they lost their sponsor and
sensing he had taken the club as far as possible
Hasenhuttl asked for his contract to be terminated and left
Hasenhuttl would go on to spent the rest of his summer combining two of his favourite hobbies, as he took to mountain biking around the Alps and “studying” Borussia Dortmund and Borussia Mönchengladbach during pre-season
This was not the common case of a coach being invited into camp
Hasenhuttl was watching the work of Jurgen Klopp and Lucien Favre from a distance
“It’s better to be incognito because otherwise everyone is talking to you because they know you — and you can’t concentrate on the training because everyone is talking to you,” he explained to The Set Pieces in 2015
Hasenhuttl would have to wait a little to apply his new learnings
staying away from football management until October 2013
Again he’d be summoned to a small team near the relegation zone
Again he’d take them to new levels of success
“What is your opinion of Ralph Hasenhuttl?” asks Ralph Gunesch
a television pundit for DAZN and youth coach at Ingolstadt
When Gunesch first met Hasenhuttl in October 2013
he was an experienced lower-league defender
trying his best to help Ingolstadt climb away from the Bundesliga 2 relegation spots
“All we knew about him was that he’d take a very close look at how much you run
“He also had an emphasis on physical strength
with some experience of playing at a high level… how do I say it
I wasn’t the guy who covered the most ground in a game
I was the guy who would try and be in the right place
“Our first meeting was in the dressing room
please tell me why do you run so little?’ And I was like… OK
the new coach is asking me in my first chat why do I run so little
‘Do you think I was missing in an important situation?’ And he said ‘No
I used to coach Benjamin Hubner who’s the same!’
“So he knows how to handle different kinds of players
You have guys like me who have their own style of play
and he didn’t try to change me because this is his way of playing
He asks: ‘Is this player useful for my kind of playing or not
One person not on the bench for Hasenhuttl’s first game in charge was… Hasenhuttl
“He was announced (as manager) on a Thursday or Friday and we played on the Sunday against VfL Bochum,” says Gunesch
“He said he didn’t want to be near us before the game because we (the players) needed to concentrate
He said he’d be on the pitch after the game
So for the first game that Hasenhuttl was officially in charge
He was in the stadium and his assistant coach was on the bench.”
According to football journalist Archie Rhind-Tutt
Ingolstadt has a peculiar reputation in Germany among football fans
“Audi owns 20 per cent of the club and are principle sponsors
but they still adhere to the 50+1 ownership rule,” he explains of the youthful Bavarian club
born of a merger of ESV Ingolstadt and MTV Ingolstadt in 2004
“As a team, they’re pretty inoffensive, but they are not seen as a traditional club in Germany. You also have to consider that Ingolstadt as a place is an Audi town in the same way Nuremberg is for Puma, or Wolfsburg is Volkswagen
It can be a relatively low-pressure environment most seasons
but Hasenhuttl took over in a very bad time and became their man of big successes.”
drawn one and won one of their first nine matches
leaving them bottom of Bundesliga 2 at the start of the 2013-14 season
“The first thing he wanted to improve was reducing how many goals we conceded,” says Gunesch, who served as Hasenhuttl’s captain at Ingolstadt along with Marvin Matip, brother of Liverpool’s Joel
we changed it to a 4-4-2 or 4-4-3 after a few weeks
but the focus was to stay compact and to be defensive for the first few weeks
It’s interesting (Hasenhuttl’s approach to fixing a defence first) as he was a striker when playing
“At first he asked us (Marvin and himself) how we wanted to play corners and free kicks: Did we want to mark people or stay on the space (zonal marking)
We wanted to mark the people at first but he said after a few weeks he wanted to change it so we would use the free space and try to get the ball.”
“I don’t think it’s a coincidence that he had such a dramatic effect at Ingolstadt,” adds Rhind-Tutt
with good ideas and a good group of players.”
“He was all about how they make the most of the resources they have
rather than trying to play the most free-flowing football,” says Rhind-Tutt
“He lifted his players up to more than the sum of their parts.”
“He has a very remarkable way of playing football
and of coaching — his feeling for what is happening inside his team,” says Gunesch
before you drive to the stadium for example
But in the last team meeting before the game
when he tells you who is playing and so on
“He really knows how to catch every player and say
but the promotion party was much better,” jokes Gunesch
It was a big party and it was the first time I saw Ralph Hasenhuttl dancing
I’m happy he tried to get a career playing football and not dancing.”
that Rhind-Tutt interviewed Hasenhuttl as part of BT Sport’s European Football Show
who is not afraid of the big names waiting for us”
“I’m sure that we will perform really good.”
Ingolstadt made good on Hasenhuttl’s promise to perform well as the team defied expectation in their debut Bundesliga season
The Austrian garnered headlines in September 2015 when he was too nervous to watch an injury-time penalty for Ingolstadt away at Werder Bremen and hid behind the bench
after his Bayern Munich side had beaten Ingolstadt 2-0
Pep Guardiola said: “Today we encountered the best team we’ve been up against so far this season”
with 60 per cent of their league goals coming from set pieces aimed in from Pascal Gross
but it got points on the board at a steady rate
a football club who were only 12 years old
was also the year Hasenhuttl first appeared on Southampton’s radar
Hasenhuttl had again outperformed expectations with a club flirting with relegation but again chose to leave after budget constraints left him feeling he had taken the side as far as it could go
Choosing to not renew his contract with Ingolstadt earlier that spring
Hasenhuttl faced Guardiola and Bayern on May 7
2016 knowing it would be his last home game in charge of the club
Ingolstadt fans waved “Danke Ralph” banners from the stands as Bayern took a 2-1 win and secured the Bundesliga title
but the enduring image of that game would be Hasenhuttl breaking down in tears in his post-match press conference
overwhelmed with emotion for the club in which he had achieved so much
At RB Leipzig
Leipzig had just been promoted to the top flight after finishing second in the Bundesliga 2 and their manager
had decided to move upstairs and work as sporting director
appointing a seemingly kindred spirit in his place
biodegradable kind of plastic,” jokes Rhind-Tutt
explaining the leap from little Ingolstadt to Leipzig
whose commercial structure and relationship with Red Bull has made them the most hated club in German football
“They also had a sporting director Ralf Rangnick who… how can I put this… is a very demanding figure.”
As a former manager of Stuttgart, Hannover and Schalke, (and currently being linked with a role at AC Milan) Rangnick was dubbed the “Fussball Professor” ever since an appearance on a late night Bundesliga highlights show in 1998 (watch it, in German, here)
One of the earlier advocates of counter-pressing in German football
Rangnick has long stressed his belief in proactive
It is under Ragnick’s stewardship that all Red Bull football teams try to win back the ball within five seconds of losing the ball
and from Ragnick that many football coaches believe winning the ball and having a shot on goal within 10 seconds can be the best method of goalscoring
He is one of the most influential figures in modern German footballing history
Such a belief made Hasenhuttl the perfect fit for Leipzig in 2016
and that summer the Austrian worked feverishly with Rohl to turn Leipzig into a Bundesliga mainstay
No one in football has a relationship with Hasenhuttl quite like Rohl
who is now the assistant manager to Hansi Flick at Bayern Munich
the players believe his pressing sessions in training are one of the reasons behind the team’s improvement this season
Ralph quickly arranged it so that every member of the coaching team could get involved in their respective fields,” Rohl says
he trusted me and Zsolt Low with a lot of the training in Leipzig
took advice from sports psychologist Sascha Lense and consulted with his team of coaches about possible match plans and line-ups
Hasenhuttl’s Leipzig may have had their detractors off the pitch
going unbeaten for the first 13 games of the 2016-17 season — the record for the longest undefeated streak of a promoted team
Players such as Emil Forsberg, Naby Keita and Timo Werner blew opposition teams away
pressed high up the pitch and boasted rampaging full-backs as the team roared to a second-place Bundesliga finish behind Bayern Munich
but at the time they were unproven in the Bundesliga,” explains Rhind-Tutt
“It was fun working with the young team in Leipzig every day
watching players like Keita or Werner and seeing how they continued to develop,” says Rohl
who was promoted from video analyst to assistant coach at Leipzig shortly after Hasenhuttl’s first season at the club
this requires a high quality of training and above all a team of coaches with many experts in all areas who can accompany and support the players in the next step of their development.”
“The aim was to capture the ball, switch and quickly advance, in not more than 10 seconds,” Hasenhuttl explained in a 2018 interview with the Football Paradise.
it depends on where on the pitch we win the ball
We scored a lot of goals in this manner in their first season
“Champions League qualification and finishing second in our first year in the Bundesliga was certainly a special moment for us,” says Rohl. “But the victories over Dortmund and Bayern in the Bundesliga, and against Napoli in the Europa League
Hasenhuttl would be less successful in his second season at Leipzig
as the added workload of Champions League football and friction with Rangnick saw the team fall to sixth place in 2017–18
For his first Champions League group stage game he ditched his usual tracksuit for a smart suit before realising he was not that sort of manager
Hasenhuttl wanted to ease up on the principles a bit and Rangnick was not in favour of that
You get the sense that Hasenhuttl wanted to evolve
I thought the two were peas in a pod at first
but Hasenhuttl was developing something,” explains Rhind-Tutt
Hasenhuttl would ask Rangnick to terminate his Leipzig contract in the spring of 2018 upon learning of the sporting director’s desire to bring in Julian Nagelsmann as a new manager
Hasenhuttl would go on to develop that “something” during a six-month break from the game
“We monitored his progress primarily through Leipzig, but we were aware of him through Ingolstadt, until the 2016 season,” says Wilson, who is now director of football operations at Rangers
“His work at Leipzig was excellent with the young players and when he left Leipzig we were interested in what he might want to do next and then we met him in December.”
December 2018 was a down period for Southampton, with the club some years removed from their former mid-2010s glories. A trio of underwhelming managerial appointments had caused the club to lose their way, and after a 2-2 draw with Manchester United (in which they initially led 2-0)
Mark Hughes was relieved of his duties and Wilson was given the job of finding a replacement
“When he left RB Leipzig we knew he wanted to take a break
which was the summer before he came,” says Wilson
“But when the decision was made to change the coach we went to speak to him
probably in the knowledge that in that moment in time he maybe wasn’t ready to come back and work again
But when we sat down with him we were really convinced quickly that he was such a great match for Southampton
We had a great chat — we had a chat all day and into the evening and got on really well
“Ralph had this strange thing at the start where he could speak perfectly good English but he thought he couldn’t speak it at all
And it’s quite hard to speak to someone who is telling you they can’t speak English
So we had this conversation where he would think he wasn’t speaking English but he absolutely was
“We went on all day and all night and when we left it wasn’t the situation where he had taken on the job — he wanted to think about things
we wanted to think about things — but we were absolutely clear he was the man and absolutely clear he was a fantastic match for Southampton
because we knew at the time he would improve the results and the group
“He really really embraced the history and philosophy of Southampton right away and right at the start so we knew that would put that on a solid footing.”
Hasenhuttl next got in contact with Rohl: they were getting the band back together and headed to the south coast of England
he made me aware he wanted me to be by his side as his assistant coach again
until finally Southampton expressed interest,” Rohl tells The Athletic
“We created a detailed analysis of the squad, club and structure, looked at everything on site, and came to the conclusion that the club would fit very well. So, there we were in the Premier League
in a new league and a ‘new’ language with the sole aim in the first year of staying in the league
“You could feel the mutual trust in our daily work
Ralph delegated more and more responsibility to me
and I tried to support and advise him as best as possible in all areas
2018 Hasenhuttl was confirmed as Southampton manager at the age of 51
Again he was taking charge of a club battling relegation
and again he sought to employ an energetic style of football to get his team to new heights
“They can expect a very passionate kind of football with 11 characters on the field,” said the Austrian about what Southampton fans could expect
Hasenhuttl would go on to promise his Southampton would work hard and give everything for the fans
“If you want to have guarantees you have to buy a washing machine,” he said
“In football there are no guarantees anymore.”
but work needed to be done over the summer
Including working closely with Wilson to identify new players for the club
There’s two things clear in Ralph’s mind (when he’s looking for a player),” says Wilson
He doesn’t get excited by looking at older players — that doesn’t mean he might not in his life sign an older player
“He wants to see what they’re like with the ball and see what they’re like against the ball
he wants them to be able to press and to be able to run
Those are the key things he’s looking at.”
He has also worked to improve the club beyond the first team
including writing a playbook for the academy
opening his door to Radhi Jaidi during his time as under-23 manager and going to watch Southampton Women’s games
Wilson paints the picture of a coach who is obsessive but also relaxed
Who is considerate but relentless in the pursuit of his perfections
“We’d have a very very fluid relationship actually,” explains Wilson
‘Right we’re going to sit down and meet at 9.45’
we’d just find out moments throughout the day
“He is absolutely consumed by the training
and now I know he’s got a really good relationship with (chief executive) Martin Semmens
(managing director) Toby Steele and they’re strong communicators as well.”
like a certain German Premier League coach
“He’s got a really good sense of humour and I’ll always pick him up on all his wrong English,” adds Wilson
“We were having a bit of banter the other night on text about my favourite one: when he uses ‘too less’ when he means ‘not enough’
I was texting him the other night about something being ‘too less’ and he liked that
He’s got a really good sense of humour and I like him a lot.”
“There was always a positive atmosphere with lots of laughter and stuff like going out to eat,” adds Rohl
“Ralph loves all aspects of sport — especially in terms of adventure and competition
He is also very interested in art and music.”
It is almost a year since Rohl departed Southampton
ending his successful partnership with Hasenhuttl and joining Bayern
it was a short but very emotional time in Southampton
and I have many positive memories for the future,” he says
“I would say he is a very honest and upright person
He always remained down to Earth despite the successes during his career so far,” says Galm
“Huge congratulations (to Southampton fans)
It seems like he is enjoying himself there
and spend a long and successful time together
Us at Unterhaching are very proud to have been a part of his beginnings as a manager.”
When Ralph Hasenhuttl first arrived in England
“(Klopp and I) did our coaching badges together and we know each other very well,” said the Austrian of his shared past with the Liverpool manager
“I think we appreciate a similar philosophy on football — we want to play a high-tempo game
press well and these are elements which make the game livelier and varied and get people excited.”
While they appreciate similar styles of football
it would be a disservice to call Hasenhuttl another version of Klopp because he wears a baseball cap and gesticulates wildly after his team scores a goal
He is the overachieving firefighter who finds lower-level clubs and turbocharges them up the footballing pyramid
mountain biking and skiing just as much as he loves high-pressing football
He is a sometimes superstitious manager who once decided to ditch wearing a suit after a Champions League loss
and promised Southampton players he wouldn’t shave his beard while they remained unbeaten in the 2020 new year
Southampton manager and long may it continue
Carl Anka is a journalist covering Manchester United for The Athletic. Follow Carl on Twitter @Ankaman616
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Match reaction after the game in Unterhaching
FC Augsburg have been knocked out in the first round of the DFB-Pokal
Ermedin Demirović: “Today is a catastrophic day
To go out in this manner even after a good pre-season is unacceptable
even though we worked well in pre-season and prepared a lot for the game
It’s inexplicable – it’s up to us to work on this
even when it goes badly we have to look forwards
stay positive and put a line through this game very quickly.”
Finn Dahmen: “It’s difficult for me to put everything into words because we imagined this game going completely differently
It’s entirely understandable that the fans are angry
The Pokal is such a cool competition and we wanted to go a long way
We now have to manage to put this behind us quickly so we’re ready for the league.”
Niklas Dorsch: “This a huge wake-up call
We wanted to perform completely differently
but we didn’t bring that onto the pitch
Why it didn’t work is something we’ll look at
We are a tightly knit group and we’ll take a long
which is the next step in our development.”
Enrico Maaßen (FC Augsburg head coach): “We are bitterly disappointed and sad about this game
We had a good pre-season but we haven’t shown that at all
We didn’t create enough goal-scoring opportunities
we will take a look at it closely in the week
We have a home game against Gladbach ahead of us and we’ve got to make up for some of this there.”
Wagner knows Nagelsmann quite well and he would like to follow in his footsteps and coach in the German top flight
Quite a lot happened in a relatively short period of time for Sandro Wagner after he left Bayern Munich in 2019 for Chinese Super League side Tianjin TEDA
He terminated his contract with them in the summer of 2020 and announced his official retirement from playing shortly thereafter
He started managing SpVgg Unterhaching’s U-19s back in March of this year and was quickly promoted to first team manager of the senior squad this summer
In a recent interview with Sport1 (via Abendzeitung)
Wagner said he has bold ambitions of one day coaching in the Bundesliga
“I want to be an absolute top coach and get to the top
I want to train there someday,” the former Bundesliga striker said
Wagner said it’s a learning curve with his new role as manager for Unterhaching’s senior team
He made a rather quick transition after retiring from his playing career to take on a managerial role
but he said he’s committed and “wants to get the most out of this job
have to gain a lot of experience and also need a few more years for my coaching certificates.” He still has to pursue getting his official coaching licenses and certificates to be able to manage in the top flight
but he said he “still has a lot of time” to do so
The champions of each Regionalliga division are eligible for promotion to the 3.Liga
and this season the Regionalliga Bayern gets a direct promotion place and won’t have to go through a playoff
Unterhaching is currently fifth in the Regionalliga Bayern standings
5 points adrift from league leaders Bayern Munich II
so he would have to get past Bayern reserves to earn Unterhaching promotion to the 3
While that might not be the club’s realistic goal at the moment
Wagner would like “to see maximum development in the next 24 months” at the club
Having spent the 2016/2017 season at TSG Hoffenheim
Wagner has a solid relationship with Julian Naglesmann
“There is a modern culture of communication between us,” Wagner said
and he also described Bayern’s new manager as “a sensational coach
a talent of the century” and “just the right man for FC Bayern.” While he doesn’t yet have the managerial pedigree of Nagelsmann
there’s a lot Wagner can learn from his previous boss to apply to his role at Unterhaching
Perhaps one day we will see both Wagner and Nagelsmann managing in the Bundesliga
The American owner, which is represented in Germany by Everest Management GmbH, was advised in the transaction process by the hotel experts from Christie & Co.
“We are delighted to have completed another exciting project with the transaction in Unterhaching and can now look back on very eventful months in the hotel investment market in Germany,” commented Robin Barth, Senior Consultant Investment & Letting at Christie & Co, who was in lead in the successful brokerage of the Holiday Inn Unterhaching.
Press contact Sara Sailer Marketing & PR T +49 (0) 172 651 50 48 E presse@christie.com
Keep up-to-date with our latest listings and more…
© Christie & Co 2024 | A member of Christie Group
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SA-Players-Abroad
joined the Liga 3 side two years ago after impressing at the DFI Bad Aibling boarding school he joined after leaving SuperSport United's youth academy
who's also comfortable as a number 10 has made rapid progression within their academy system leading him to regular call-ups to first-team training over the past 12 months
And on Wednesday evening he was rewarded for his consistency with a first-team debut as a half-time substitute in the third-tier of German football under head coach Arie van Lent
Whilst he was on the end of 2-0 defeat against Dynamo Dresden
Mashigo impressed with silky touches and direct running which is likely to do his reputation no harm at the Munich-based outfit
"BP is definitely one of our top talents," the club's sporting director Claus Schromm said
"He has an incredible understanding of the game
His promising debut underscores the Hachinger way."
Scroll through the gallery to see the youngsters based in Europe eligible for Bafana Bafana
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wenn die besonderen Voraussetzungen der Art
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17:22 Uhr.css-rhp0z0{color:var(--sz-basic-border-color-secondary
#c0c1c6);display:inline-block;margin:0 12px;}|.css-13l0r79{display:inline-block;}Lesezeit: 2 Min
.css-y4bre2{display:block;height:auto;width:100%;}.js .css-y4bre2{cursor:pointer;}.css-1hdpxq{-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;background-color:rgb(255
#fff);display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;height:inherit;-webkit-box-pack:center;-ms-flex-pack:center;-webkit-justify-content:center;justify-content:center;-webkit-transform:translateY(100%);-moz-transform:translateY(100%);-ms-transform:translateY(100%);transform:translateY(100%);-webkit-transition:-webkit-transform 600ms cubic-bezier(0.23
1);transition:transform 600ms cubic-bezier(0.23
#fff);padding:8px 12px 0;color:var(--sz-basic-text-color-primary
#29293a);font-family:'SZSansDigital','Neue Helvetica','Helvetica',sans-serif;font-size:0.875rem;line-height:1.5;}.css-1vyk908 p{display:inline;}.css-1vyk908 small{color:var(--sz-basic-text-color-secondary
#71737f);}.css-1vyk908 small{display:block;}.css-1vyk908 a{border-bottom:1px solid var(--sz-basic-text-color-primary
#29293a);color:var(--sz-basic-text-color-primary
#29293a);content:'';height:10px;left:0;position:absolute;top:10px;width:5px;}@media print{.css-1p5uxsp::before{content:none;}}Christian Ziege tritt als Trainer des Fußball-Drittligisten mitten im Abstiegskampf zurück.Seine Gründe sind vage formuliert
Er nennt unter anderem die "veränderten Rahmenbedingungen".Der Verein ist finanziell schwer gebeutelt..css-1xo7oe1{font:italic 500 1.1875rem/1.5 'SZ Text','Georgia','Times',serif;letter-spacing:0.015em;margin-top:32px;}@media screen and (min-width: 768px){.css-1xo7oe1{font:italic 500 1.3125rem/1.5 'SZ Text','Georgia','Times',serif;letter-spacing:0.015em;}}.css-1xo7oe1 a{border-bottom:1px solid var(--sz-basic-text-color-primary
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Es ist genau ein Jahr her, dass Christian Ziege zur SpVgg Unter- haching kam mit dem Versprechen, dem Verein die Freude am Fußball zurückbringen zu wollen
Die damals vom Abstieg bedrohte Mannschaft sicherte sich dann auch tatsächlich recht schnell den Klassenverbleib
dass Christian Ziege sagte: "Es macht mir noch mehr Spaß als vor einem Jahr
Am Mittwoch gab Christian Ziege seinen Rücktritt bekannt
"Veränderte Rahmenbedingungen im Verein nehmen mir die Möglichkeit
die von uns gesteckten Ziele zu gewährleisten"
gab der 43-Jährige in seiner schriftlichen Begründung an
Dabei hatte sich an den von ihm geschilderten Voraussetzungen - niedrigster Etat der dritten Liga
seit Jahren keine Aussicht auf einen finanzkräftigen Hauptsponsor
permanenter Verkauf der besten Spieler - zuletzt nichts geändert
Zwar veröffentlichte der Sport-Informations-Dienst (sid) fast gleichzeitig mit der Pressemitteilung zu Zieges Rücktritt eine Meldung
wonach der Mannschaft in der laufenden Saison noch zwei Punkte abgezogen werden - der Verein soll gegen Auflagen im Lizenzierungsverfahren verstoßen haben
Doch das ist auch nur die Bestätigung dessen
was seit Wochen als Gerücht durch den Unterhachinger Sportpark ging
Und es ist auch nicht von der Hand zu weisen
dass die Mannschaft zuletzt immer schlechter spielte
Nach der Winterpause hat Zieges Team in acht Spielen nur fünf Punkte geholt; es steht nur noch zwei Zähler vor den Abstiegsrängen
der Europameister von 1996 und ehemalige Spieler des FC Bayern
war fast schon ein Teil der Unter- hachinger Familie
Nach kurzen Stationen in Mönchengladbach und bei Arminia Bielefeld hatte Ziege drei Jahre als Juniorentrainer beim DFB gearbeitet
um den Drittligisten Unterhaching vor dem Abstieg zu bewahren
In dem der Präsident Manfred Schwabl ganz schnell eine "gemeinsame Wellenlänge" mit Ziege ausgemacht hatte
der mit einer von Zieges Töchtern liiert ist
Ziege kommentiert zwar für Sport1 Zweitliga-Spiele
doch er kommt im Grunde komplett ohne Rampenlicht aus
Gleich zu Beginn seiner Unterhachinger Amtszeit ließ er durchscheinen
dass er wenig bis gar kein Geld für diesen Job bekommt
Und dass die SpVgg seit Jahren um den Verbleib im Profifußball kämpft und sich von diesem Ziel immer weiter entfernt
Deshalb dürfte sein plötzlicher Rücktritt auch nicht nur mit den "veränderten Rahmenbedingungen" zu tun haben
dass es innerhalb des Klubs unterschiedliche Meinungen zum Vorgehen im Abstiegskampf gegeben hat
Taktisch wird sich erst einmal nicht viel ändern: Zieges bisheriger Assistent Francisco Copado übernimmt vorübergehend das Training
In anspruchsvollen Berufsfeldern im Stellenmarkt der SZ.
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Von: Hans-Jürgen Ziegler
Liga 1860 Rosenheim SpVgg Unterhaching Kooperation Mensah Anspack Ehlich","text":"Jetzt ist der Deal und damit der Transfercoup dieses Winters perfekt: Der Fußball-Drittligist SpVgg Unterhaching verleiht Stephan Mensah (19)
Christoph Ehlich (20) und Alexander Kaltner (20) an den Kooperationspartner TSV 1860 Rosenheim.","url":"https://www.ovb-online.de/sport/regionalsport/liga-1860-rosenheim-spvgg-unterhaching-kooperation-mensah-anspack-ehlich-13513778.html"};c&&a.navigator.canShare(d)&&(c.style.display="",c.addEventListener("click",b=>{b.preventDefault(),a.setTimeout(function(){a.navigator.share(d)},0)}))}})(window,document);
Jetzt ist der Deal und damit der Transfercoup dieses Winters perfekt: Der Fußball-Drittligist SpVgg Unterhaching verleiht Stephan Mensah (19)
Christoph Ehlich (20) und Alexander Kaltner (20) an den Kooperationspartner TSV 1860 Rosenheim
Christoph Ehlich (20) und Alexander Kaltner (20) spielen ab sofort für den Regionalligisten.
Die Leihe läuft jeweils bis zum Saisonende
wie eng die Kooperation zwischen Haching und Rosenheim ist“
sagt Unterhachings Präsident Manfred Schwabl
dass die Leihe sowohl die Spieler als auch Rosenheim sportlich weiterbringt
Der gemeinsam eingeschlagene Weg wird dadurch voll untermauert.“
Auch Rosenheims Sportlicher Leiter Hans Kroneck freut sich über die Transfers
dass die Spieler charakterlich super zu uns passen und uns sportlich enorm weiterhelfen“
„Der Austausch zwischen uns und Haching ist sehr eng und vertrauensvoll
Rosenheim und Unterhaching – das passt perfekt.“
was dessen Gesundheitszustand nach dem unglücklichen Zusammenprall im Training betrifft
„Die Gesichts-Operationen sind gut verlaufen und bei einer Untersuchung im Klinikum Großhadern bei einem Spezialisten hat sich herausgestellt dass keine weitere Operation mehr notwendig ist“
erklärte Hans Kroneck gegenüber den OVB-Heimatzeitungen
kam aber in dieser Saison in noch keinem Bundesligaspiel zum Einsatz
gingen die Unterlagen laut Hans Kroneck beim Bayerischen Fußball-Verband ein
Leiter des Nachwuchsleistungszentrums beim FC Bayern München für die schnelle und unkomplizierte Abwicklung der Transfermodalitäten“
als alles unter Dach und Fach war und der neue Torhüter der Mannschaft vorgestellt wurde
Dieser Inhalt"+t(a)+"kann aufgrund Ihrer Datenschutz-Einstellungen nicht geladen werden
The Magpies are yet to play in front of a crowd this summer
with their only outing to date coming behind closed doors against SpVgg Unterhaching
Eddie Howe's side ran out 3-1 victors in Germany thanks to goals from Harvey Barnes
Following their clash with Championship outfit Hull at the MKM Stadium
Newcastle will jet off to Asia for friendlies against Urawa Red Diamonds and Yokohama F
Hull have been battered in two of their three friendlies to date
Their first defeat came at the hands of Turkish giants Fenerbahce
That was followed by a 4-0 trouncing against Doncaster Rovers
but they have earned a respectable 1-1 draw with Kasimpasa
Here is 90min's guide to Hull vs Newcastle
Newcastle 3-1 SpVgg Unterhaching - 20/07/24
A-League All Stars 8-0 Newcastle - 24/05/24
Newcastle 1-1 Tottenham (5-4 on pens) - 22/05/24
Drameh has joined Hull / Cameron Smith/GettyImagesTim Walter now has former Leeds defender Cody Drameh at his disposal and he may earn some minutes against Newcastle
Ryan Giles is another full-back to have made the move to the MKM Stadium after finalising a deal from Luton Town
the Hull coach will have to do without Jaden Philogene from now on following his return to Aston Villa
The same is true of Jacob Greaves who has signed for Ipswich Town
while Fabio Carvalho and Tyler Morton have returned to Liverpool following loan spells last season
Hull predicted lineup vs Newcastle (4-3-3): Pandur; Coyle
Kelly could make his debut / George Wood/GettyImagesNewcastle are without a number of players for the trip to Hull
Anthony Gordon and Bruno Guimaraes still unavailable following international football this summer
Sven Botman and Jamaal Lascelles are injured and won't be back until the end of the calendar year
Lloyd Kelly could make his debut following his free transfer from Bournemouth and John Ruddy could also be in line for his first minutes
Odysseas Vlachodimos featured in the recent 3-1 friendly victory in Germany following his move from Nottingham Forest
Newcastle predicted lineup vs Hull (4-3-3): Pope; Livramento
Hull have been dismantled in several pre-season outings so far
albeit they fielded a youthful team against Doncaster Rovers
their misery may be compiled by a Newcastle squad that boasts real quality up top
Isak and Barnes whet their appetites against Unterhaching last time out and will be eager to keep the momentum flowing in Yorkshire
With a number of first-team stars involved
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In an unexpected move that signifies a promising future for German football, Bayern Munich has secured the talents of Gibson Nana Adu, a young prodigy of German and Ghanaian descent
was disclosed through an ad hoc announcement by Unterhaching
The eagerly awaited announcement came on Thursday evening
marking a significant milestone in Adu’s career
Adu will not immediately don the iconic FCB jersey
he will return to SpVgg Unterhaching on loan
a strategic maneuver aimed at fostering his development and providing him with valuable match experience in the upcoming season
This decision not only ensures Adu’s continued progression but also serves to bolster Unterhaching’s roster
Adu’s ascent to prominence has been nothing short of remarkable
Emerging from the youth ranks of FSV Mainz 05
he made a pivotal move to Unterhaching in the summer of 2022
he etched his name in history by becoming the youngest goalscorer in third division history
achieving this feat at the tender age of 16 years
he holds the distinction of being the youngest player ever to grace the third division
having represented Unterhaching in ten matches
the esteemed director of youth development at FC Bayern
expressed immense confidence in Adu’s potential
“Maurice Krattenmacher and Gibson Nana Adu are two players with great sporting prospects,” he remarked
“Both epitomize the exceptional youth development ethos at SpVgg Unterhaching
We have full faith in their ability to thrive in the professional football arena.”
The transfer agreement also encompasses bonus clauses
which could be activated by various events
underscoring the magnitude of Adu’s potential impact on the footballing landscape
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