Yearly Archives: 2015

Is German football really superior to the Premier League?

Over recent years, German football has been held up by the British media for everything that the Premier League is not.

  • It cares about its fans, from ticket prices to standing
  • Clubs own 50% of all clubs
  • Its top sides succeed in Europe
  • The league provides top International players for the German national team

On paper, the Bundesliga is nearly perfect. That is until you actually dig down below the surface

  • It has become uncompetitive
  • It is riddled with corruption

Inequalities

For a long time, people mocked La Liga with being ‘The Sunny SPL’. As 2 sides dominated the league – Barcelona & Real Madrid – in the same way the Rangers & Celtic dominate Scotland.

It is rather ironic that as Rangers dropped out of the SPL, leaving just one team to dominate, over in Germany, a similar situation has risen, with Bayern Munich now dominating to such an extent that it would not be a surprise if they go on to win 10 league titles in a row. Which is currently Celtic’s target.

What should we nickname the Bundesliga? ‘The German SPL’ does not quiet have the ring to it as The Sunny SPL.

In the last three years, Bayern have won the league by 25, 19 & 10 points respectively. During that time, they have only lost 3 league games when the title was still to play for. Losing an additional 5 after the title was won.

This season, the lead by 5 points, with 10 wins and a draw from their opening 11 games. Scoring 33, conceding just 4.

They have also begun picking off the best players from their opponents.

In recent years they have signed Claudio Pizarro, Tom Starke, Mario Mandzukic & Dante from fellow Bundesliga clubs. On top of this, they snatched Robert Lewandowski and Mario Gotze from Dortmund, their nearest competitors.

Whilst this happens in all leagues, in none of the 4 major leagues in Europe (Spain, England, Italy & Germany) has there been one way traffic to a single club.

You rarely get players moving from Real to Barca, or Atletico to Real. Or Man City to Man Utd or United to Liverpool. Regional rivalries limits players ending up at a single club.

Bayern Munich do not really have any regional rival. This creates a situation where for most kids growing up in Germany, they do not have a hatred for Munich (in the same way a Scouser would have United), and it would actually be considered the pinnacle of their career to join them.

Add in the money factor, that Munich are the only side in Germany with real cash, they can blow any other German side out of the water when it comes to a contract offer.

In 2014, Bayern Munich’s wage bill was €215 million. Dortmund was nearly half that at €108 million.

To put that into relative terms, imagine the Premier League, where Manchester City are doing what they do now, and their nearest competitors were Tottenham.

At least in the Premier League, you have 4 or 5 teams capable of sweeping up the best players. The same in Italy. A couple less in Spain.

There is a chance that Bayern Munich are going to become to detached from the rest. And this will make the Bundesliga weaker as a whole.

There are two ways other Bundesliga sides have a chance of competing with Bayern Munich:

  1. Increasing their own revenue enabling them to compete for the better players. The easiest way for this will be to raise ticket prices.
  2. Allow more clubs to be owned by a single person (or company), who can then pump millions (or billions) into the club creating a German Man City / Chelsea / PSG. This would then move away from the fan owned model

Both of these solutions would be at the detriment to the fans.

In my opinion, the reason the Bundesliga appears to be better for the fans is because it is behind the Premier League.

To break up Manchester United’s dominance, ticket prices rocketed (Arsenal) and we saw Sugar Daddies introduced. Whilst these were both at the detriment of fans, it made the league a lot more competitive.

It might not happen quickly, but sooner rather than later, Bundesliga clubs and owners will become fed up of the dominance by Bayern Munich, and seek to increase their own competiveness.

German fans, enjoy the Bundesliga whilst you can. It will change soon.

And this commentary does not even take into account the state funded stadiums…

Corruption

In recent years, the German has been riddled with corruption (and this is just what I remember):

  • The 2005 match fixing scandal involving referees
  • Bayern Munich (ex) President Uli Hoeness being jailed for tax evasion
  • Bayern Munich (ex) President Franz Beckenbauer being banned from football activities for allegedly refusing to cooperate with an inquiry into corruption dealing with the allocation of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar
  • Reports continually being leaked that Germany secured the 2006 through a series of cash deals

And even as recent as a couple of days ago, tax authorities launched raids on the German football federation (DFB) and private residences, following the disclosure that the DFB made a secret payment of 6.7million euro (£4.6million) to FIFA in 2005.

It seems the Bundesliga is riddled with corruption.

As we saw with Italy, once the ball starts to unravel, it does not stop. How far with the allegations of corruption and financial irregularities go?

It is all well and good President’s talking about how great they are that they are keeping ticket prices low, when on the other hand, they are doing everything they can to cheat the taxman out of money.

 

The Bundesliga is being held up as a good example to the rest of football, and mainly the Premier League. But this will not last. Clubs will start changing attitudes as success becomes more unlikely, and the current corruption scandal involving FIFA and the DFB could unveil more skeletons in the closet.

Once the commercial side of the game gets a bigger hold of German football, with clubs realising they must generate more money to compete with Bayern Munich, German football will change. Forever.

Keenos

Mesut Ozil – The World Class Superstar

Who would have thought it, by playing a World Class player in his favoured position, granting him the freedom to get around the pitch that he desires, results in World Class performances.

This is now Mesut Ozil’s 3rd season at the club. It has been a love hate relationship. People’s comments on his ability have tended to side on whether you back Wenger or despise him.

Back him, and you would have pointed to obscure statistics showing that he has the highest pass percentage in the Premier League using his little toe on his right foot.

Believe he is useless and you would have questioned his work rate, desire and toughness.

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What has happened this season though is he has come into his own. This season, he has been Arsenal’s stand out performer.

Before now, he was a scapegoat. He had not performed to his previous high ability at Real Madrid. Plenty of myths as to why he had no performed. Mainly surrounding where he had been played. People tended to ignore the fact that he played every (or almost every,  I do not have the energy to look it up) minute in Germany’s World Cup winning side. And that he had previously played on the wings countless times for club and country.

It was easy to blame the positioning and therefore the management, for his struggles. Or perceived struggles.

What a lot of the criticism came down to was a lack of understanding about Mesut Ozil the player. He was not a Messi. A Neymar. A Hazard. A player who would pick up the ball, take it past 4 players and bend one in the corner. He is just simply not that type of player.

Now people are starting to appreciate his set of skills, a very particular set of skills, skills he has acquired over a very long career.

Whilst I have slightly contradicted myself talking about positions, it is the freedom that he has been given playing in the middle that has now seen him flourish.

Ozil follows the ball. When you watch him closely, he is always there, always available, within a 10 yard pass of the ball. He loves to be involved. Playing in the middle means he can follow the ball, left and right, without it destroying the sides structure.

He drifts into pockets of space, where he is hard to pick up, dragging players out of position, creating space for other players to move into.

His movement, his ability, everything about his game at the moment is exceptional.

He is the king of assists. But we already knew that didn’t we?

With 9 assists this season, he has 3 more than the next highest on the list, David Silva, with 6.

In fact, he has more assists this season than Juan Mata, Cesc Fabregas, Eden Hazard and Coutinho. Combined. Between them they have just the 8.

Of course, there will still be those who will always be on Ozil’s back, unable to ever accept him as the talent he is. However, these people are idiots. what they are doing is using Ozil as a pawn to bash Wenger. An example of how Wenger ruins players (untrue). An example of how Wenger can not spend big money (whilst also demanding that Wenger need’s to spend big money).

It is mad to think that Mesut Ozil has only just turned 27. It seems like a decade ago that he ran past the heavy legged Gareth Barry for Germany. He is entering his peak. And will continue to get better.

With the way Ozil plays, he does not rely on blistering pace. Realistically, he has another 6/7 years in him at the top level. Pulling the strings at Arsenal.

In 1995, Arsenal signed a 26 year old Dutchman named Dennis Bergkamp. 11 seasons and 423 appearances later, he became an Arsenal legend.

If Ozil wants to, he can also become an Arsenal legend.

He is that good.

Keenos

Arsenal show tremendous bouncebackability

“But it ain’t about how hard you hit. It’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward” ~Rocky Balboa, 2006

In football, you will lose games. It is part of the game. Even during Arsenal’s unbeaten season of 2004, we lost games. We lost both legs of the League Cup semi final to Middlesbrough. And in April, we were knocked out of the FA Cup and Champions League in the space of just 3 days.

It is not about losing games, it is how you bounce back from losing games and keep moving forward.

In 2004, we did not let that double cup disappointment damage us. We got up and continued fighting, and ended the season with a gold Premier League trophy.

This season we have had some horrendous results.

  • An opening day loss to West Ham
  • Double Champions League disappointment to Dinamo Zagreb and Olympiacos
  • Cheated at Chelsea
  • Smashed at Sheffield Wednesday

But after each defeat, Arsenal have bounced back.

The West Ham loss saw us go to Crystal Palace and win – how long ago does signing “we are staying up” feel?

After the Chelsea fiasco, it was a mid week destruction of Spurs. Our greatest night so far this season. And after Olympiakos, We went on a run which saw us beat Manchester United and Bayern Munich.

It is only the Zagreb game where we failed to win again straight after – the defeat against Chelsea.

Iain Dowie first coined the word bouncebackability in around 2004. It was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in the same year as greats such as ASBO and Chav.UntitledOver 10 years on from Dowie creating this word, it could become out buzzword for the season. For after every great defeat, Arsenal have a great victory.

And we showed it once more this weekend.

After our lowest point of not just the season, but a few years (probably since Bradford), we bounced back with a tremendous victory against Swansea.

OK, we rode our luck, Gomis bottling a one on one, and under other circumstances the 2nd goal would have been disallowed for a foul on a goal keeper, but 3-0 certainly did not flatter us.

It seems to be our new away tactic. It worked against Watford, and it worked again Saturday against Swansea. Defend. Let the opponents exhaust themselves, then hit them.

Whilst the pre-mentioned luck did play a part, it was world class goal keeping by Cech, and Bellerin running from London to Swansea quicker than it took my train to get home yesterday to get in to tackle Gomis as he rounded the goal keeper was not luck. Brilliant by both players.

Hector Bellerin could become Arsenal’s greatest ever right back.

And up next is away to Bayern Munich.

Arsenal can go to Munich without fear. Despite having been knocked out of the Champions League in both 2013 & 2014 against the German giants, they failed to beat us at the Allianz Arena on both occasions. An Arsenal victory and a draw the respective results.

The fans heading out there can expect a great week. Many of whom would have done an over nighter at Swansea, which in itself followed up a 3am return from Sheffield. These are the hard miles. And hopefully they are rewarded with a good performance on Wednesday.

And hopefully the fog does not delay their flights today too much!

Even if we go down the negative route, and end up getting spanked at Munich, we know this side has the mental strength to bounce back.

At Spurs in the League Cup, the discussion was “I would take the defeat against Chelsea to win tonight.” And it could be the same again. Would I take a defeat against Bayern Munich to guarantee a victory against Spurs? Of course I would. But let’s be positive.

Level on points with Manchester City
4 points ahead of Manchester United
8 points ahead of Spurs & Liverpool
14 Points ahead of Chelsea

We will lose more games this season. As will Manchester City. But remember, it is not how you lose, it is how you lose and move forward.

Keenos