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Champions League finalist 'fled from Tuchel' after England boss didn't want him
Champions League finalist 'fled from Tuchel' after England boss didn't want him

Daily Mirror

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Mirror

Champions League finalist 'fled from Tuchel' after England boss didn't want him

Yann Sommer will be in goal as Inter Milan bid to beat Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League on Saturday, two years after his move to Bayern Munich turned sour Eyebrows were raised when Yann Sommer decided to leave Bayern Munich but two years on, the Swiss goalkeeper has given himself a shot at Champions League glory with Inter Milan. Sommer, 36, has been among Europe's most consistent shot-stoppers over the last decade, whether he's been staring for Borussia Monchengladbach, Switzerland or Inter. But his brief spell at Bayern, despite lifting the Bundesliga title, wasn't a particularly fond chapter of his storied career. Sommer had entered the final sixth months of his contract in January 2023 when the Bavarians came calling. ‌ Bayern needed a replacement for Manuel Neuer, who'd broken his leg while on a skiing holiday during the winter break. Agreeing to pay Monchengladbach £8.3million, Sommer was signed by then-manager Julian Nagelsmann. ‌ Within his first two months at the club, Nagelsmann got the sack and was replaced by Tuchel, fresh off his Chelsea exit. The Switzerland international helped Bayern reach the Champions League quarter-finals before losing to Manchester City, and they pipped Borussia Dortmund to win the Bundesliga on a dramatic final day. Prior to the start of the new season, however, Sommer jetted off to Milan after Inter had sold Andre Onana to Manchester United for £47m. The 36-year-old has arguably been an upgrade on Onana, with his incredible performance in this season's Champions League semi-final against Barcelona helping Simone Inzaghi's side book their ticket to Munich, where they'll face Paris Saint-Germain. The reason behind Sommer wanting to leave Bayern? Tuchel, according to ex-Bayern and Inter star Karl-Heinz Rummenigge. "He lived above us in Munich, and we saw each other often," Rummenigge revealed in an interview with Kicker ahead of Saturday's final. ‌ "He somewhat fled from our coach back then - which makes it all the more remarkable how strong and consistent he is now performing at Inter Milan. That shows his quality, especially at an advanced age." Who'll win the Champions League final - PSG or Inter Milan? Give us your score prediction in the comments section. ‌ Within a month of Tuchel replacing Nagelsmann, it was reported by Kicker that he'd already decided on bringing back Neuer as Bayern's first-choice goalkeeper in the 2023-24 season. That opened the door for Sommer to leave and all Inter that had to do was pay a mere £5m in what could go down as one of the best bargain transfers in recent history. Just two months after joining the Nerazzurri, Sommer publicly criticised the way he was treated by the German giants. "I learned how things work at Bayern," he explained. "You pick one or two players and then the media shoots. And then you choose two new ones. And then it was my turn. But I didn't feel like defending myself publicly." He went on to say: "We had an extremely wild situation at Bayern. Layoffs, changes, a lot of unrest and various topics besides sport. Of course it was unpleasant at times and it doesn't leave you unscathed. The most important thing was that I tried to perform and help the team be successful. Luckily, that worked out in the end."

Alexander Nübel lives out a nightmare in his latest Bayern Munich audition
Alexander Nübel lives out a nightmare in his latest Bayern Munich audition

The Guardian

time03-03-2025

  • Sport
  • The Guardian

Alexander Nübel lives out a nightmare in his latest Bayern Munich audition

Last Thursday FC Bayern celebrated 125 years of existence. When the team travelled to Stuttgart for the opening game of the Bundesliga the following night their travelling fans unfurled a glittering red tifo, composed of '27. Februar 1900' – the club's birthdate – and the original club badge. Despite the sense of ceremony, which will continue with a series of commemorative events in the weeks to come, and the plethora of connections they share with Stuttgart, Bayern could not have expected quite the number of presents that came their way from the hosts. Stuttgart had been 'clearly the better team in the first half-hour,' as Vincent Kompany put it. It was their best performance in weeks and yet it counted for nothing as they took a pistol to their collective foot in the second half. Less than a month ago, Sebastian Hoeness – just to remind, nephew of Uli and son of Dieter - and his side were just a solitary point from fourth place and six ahead of Borussia Dortmund after winning at Signal Iduna Park. Today, they are five adrift of the Champions League places and just a point ahead of Dortmund, everybody's favourite Bundesliga crisis club. Hoeness junior must be tearing his hair out. He sent his side out as he always does no matter the opposition, to dictate and to dominate. They took a deserved lead from an artful finish by (ex-Bayern) Angelo Stiller, earlier this week linked with a return to his hometown club to replace (ex-Stuttgart youth teamer) Joshua Kimmich, after Bayern withdrew their latest contract renewal offer to the latter. Even after Michael Olise equalised on the stroke of half-time, played through a home defence positioned in a cavalier line bearing in mind the time and state of the game by a Leroy Sané pass, Stuttgart were still in it. At least the very least, they were going to make Bayern work for it – until midway through the second half, when goalkeeper Alexander Nübel played the ball into Stiller on the edge of the Stuttgart penalty area, the pressing Leon Goretzka robbed his midfield counterpart and then rifled in to put the leaders in front. The goal that clinched it was another self-inflicted wound, with Josha Vagnoman stumbling on the ball on halfway, allowing Kingsley Coman to take it from him, round Nübel and stroke home. At the centre of it all was Nübel, in an unusual situation even for a player taking the field against his parent club. This summer will mark five years since the 28-year-old signed for Bayern. In that time he has played one Bundesliga game for the club (the penultimate game of 2020/21 with the title long since in the bag), spent two years on loan at Monaco and is now in his second campaign of a long-term temporary assignment to Stuttgart. Nübel initially signed for one season with them, but after last season's wildly successful campaign in which they finished runners-up – ahead of Bayern – all parties agreed to extend the loan to 2026, with the goalkeeper renewing his contract with Bayern to 2029. It has been a case study in kicking the can down the road. When Nübel joined Bayern from Schalke in 2020 (signing a pre-contract six months before to the displeasure of a vociferous section of the latter's fans, in echoes had been through two years before) it was with an eventual Manuel Neuer succession in mind, with 'eventual' being the key word here. Ostensibly he has ticked off all the suitable stops on the road there since; as a starter for a title-chasing team in Ligue 1, becoming first-choice for a Bundesliga team, competing in the Champions League and even making his full Germany debut last autumn. There has always been a suspicion, though, that maybe he's not quite the one. Neuer – who of course made his own contested switch from Gelsenkirchen to Munich – is a formidable pair of gloves to supplant but his form and fitness has had its fluctuations in recent years, and when he badly broke his leg in a skiing accident after Germany's World Cup exit in 2022, his future looked far from clear. He has come back well since but he will be 39 at the end of the month. There have been moments when Bayern could have placed their faith in Nübel but they just haven't. Last summer's contract extension felt more about protecting an investment than locking down Neuer's heir. And Friday night suggested why. Stiller shouldn't be carrying the can for Goretzka's goal; he was facing Nübel, who could see the Bayern number eight coming but still passed the ball to his retreating colleague, inexplicably. 'In that situation, it makes more sense if I hit the ball long,' he admitted afterwards. Then later Vagnoman's mishap was developed from dangerous fatal by Nübel's rush from his goal, making up Coman's mind to round him and shoot. It didn't decide the game, of course, but it was still the sort of mistake that would require days of inquest were it made in a Bayern shirt. Even celebrity fan Boris Becker felt moved to comment on how 'unsecure' Nübel seemed when commenting on X (the goalkeeper amiably said he would 'still like a photo with him'). It was ultimately costly for Stuttgart, who have every chance of making the Champions League despite a vastly increased workload and some key personnel losses. This difference is that slips like Nübel's are an irritant in Swabia when they would be considered a catastrophe in Bavaria. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Augsburg 0-0 Freiburg, Bochum 0-1 Hoffenheim, Eintracht Frankfurt 1-4 Bayer Leverkusen, Heidenheim 0-3 Borussia Mönchengladbach, RB Leipzig 1-2 Mainz, St Pauli 0-2 Borussia Dortmund, Stuttgart 1-3 Bayern Munich, Union Berlin 0-1 Holsten Kiel, Werder Bremen 1-2 Wolfsburg Elsewhere Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has stirred the pot ahead of Bayern's Champions League meeting with Leverkusen, reiterating in an interview with Abendzeitung that Florian Wirtz 'is the best player in Germany, and I make no secret of the fact that our clear goal must be to sign (him),' much to the annoyance of the champions' sporting director Simon Rolfes. On the pitch Leverkusen responded in perfect fashion, though, keeping their sang froid to win 4-1 at Eintracht Frankfurt after what Xabi Alonso described as 'maybe our best first half of the season.' Yet Eintracht remain third because those behind them continue to slip and slide. Leipzig took the lead after 58 seconds against Mainz via Xavi Simons but the visitors now sit in the final Champions League spot after a quite exceptional second half in which Nadiem Amiri and Jonathan Burkhardt both scored to turn the game around. They also both hit the woodwork. With Marco Rose's team, Borussia Dortmund and the usual suspects all floundering, Mainz and their brilliant coach Bo Henriksen have a unique opportunity. In such an open Champions League race Dortmund, improbably, remain in contention, only six points behind fourth after a second straight win, 2-0 at St Pauli. It was also a third consecutive clean sheet under Niko Kovač, even if their defending wasn't always convincing against largely impotent opponents. Nobody at BVB wants to talk about turned corners after a season full of false dawns. The two-legged tie against Lille, however, once again offers a Champions League chance. Finally Holstein Kiel are off the bottom after a first-ever top-flight away win at Union Berlin. A rewards for their bravery, perhaps; despite their struggles.

Nicolas Kühn equals 11-year feat against Bayern Munich 👻
Nicolas Kühn equals 11-year feat against Bayern Munich 👻

Yahoo

time18-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Nicolas Kühn equals 11-year feat against Bayern Munich 👻

Celtic are dreaming of a place in the Champions League's last 16 after drawing level in Tuesday's play-off tie with Bayern Kühn handed Brendan Rodgers' side a much-needed goal by opening the scoring at the Allianz Arena and emulated a 11-year feat in the process. The winger's angled strike against his one-time employers was the first time that they have conceded to a German player in the knockout stages since 2014. The last one to do it? Another ex-Bayern man in Lukas Podolski. Fortunately for Vincent Kompany's side, it did not come back to haunt them thanks to Alphonso Davies' stoppage-time winner to tip the balance in their favour. 📸 ALEXANDRA BEIER - AFP or licensors

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