Flick's unprecedented sacking a symbol of German football in crisis
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - International Friendly - Germany v Colombia - Veltins-Arena, Gelsenkirchen, Germany - June 20, 2023 Germany coach Hansi Flick before the match REUTERS/Thilo Schmuelgen/File Photo
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Nine months
before hosting Euro 2024, Germany have sacked manager Hansi Flick, the latest
in a series of setbacks for the once-proud football nation.
Flick
received his marching orders on Sunday, becoming the first head coach in German
history to get the sack.
The
termination came after a 4-1 defeat by Japan in Wolfsburg, the team's fourth
loss in six matches since their embarrassing group stage exit at the Qatar
World Cup.
Flick refused
to step down after Saturday's humiliation, saying: "I find that we're
doing well and I'm the right manager."
On Sunday,
the 58-year-old told fans "I'll keep fighting" while signing
autographs at a training session.
Hugely
successful with Bayern Munich, the firing is an ignominious end for a manager
viewed as the architect of Germany's 2014 World Cup triumph while employed as
head coach Joachim Loew's right-hand man.
That Flick's
refusal brought a first-ever sacking from the German FA (DFB) is symbolic of
the four-time world champions' enduring woes ahead of next year's tournament.
Germany to
Bayern and back
A defensive
midfielder, Flick won four titles with Bayern before injuries forced his
retirement at 28.
Flick had
successful spells coaching lower-league clubs, yet it was as Loew's assistant
from 2006 to 2014 that he gained prominence, helping Germany to five successive
semi-final appearances at major tournaments.
He played a
crucial role in the 2014 World Cup triumph, both as a tactician and a
communicator.
A popular
figure in the dressing room, he was also praised for his sportsmanship, telling
the players to rein in their celebrations after Germany's 7-1 historic
thrashing of hosts Brazil in the semi-finals.
Having
stepped down as assistant coach after the 2014 World Cup, Flick spent three
years as the DFB's sporting director before leaving the association in 2017.
After a
brief stint as Hoffenheim sporting director, Flick joined Bayern as an
assistant to manager Niko Kovac in 2019.
When Kovac
was sacked just four months later, Flick took over Bayern on an interim basis,
where he engineered one of the most remarkable turnarounds in club football
history.
Under Flick,
Bayern won the treble for the second time in the club's proud history, becoming
the first side to win the Champions League undefeated.
His
familiarity with senior Germany players helped him coax the likes of Thomas
Mueller and Jerome Boateng back to their best form.
"Hansi
played a hugely important role, especially with regard to my role in the
team," veteran forward Mueller told the Bundesliga website at the time.
Later
victories in the German Super Cup, European Super Cup and Club World Cup made
Flick the first Bayern coach to win all six possible trophies in a single year
-- and only the second manager after Pep Guardiola with Barcelona to achieve
the feat.
One win in
six
Despite
another title in his second season with Bayern, Flick fell out with then
sporting director Hasan Salihamidzic before deciding to take over Loew's role.
Now in
charge of Germany, Flick appeared to pick up where he left off for Bayern. The
coach won his first eight matches in charge while playing the high-risk
attacking football which had been so successful at club level.
Cracks
however began to appear after a run of four straight draws and a first loss, a
1-0 defeat to Hungary in Leipzig, in the lead up to Qatar.
Eliminated
at the group stage in Qatar, Flick held onto his job, the DFB hierarchy saying
he was the right man to lead the side at Euro 2024, the first time Germany will
host the tournament as a unified nation.
Flick's
Germany have played six times since the embarrassing exit, five at home, but
have won just once, while losing to Belgium, Poland, Columbia and now Japan.
While
Flick's successor will be charged with rebuilding the team's shattered
confidence, the sacking is the latest body blow in an unprecedented crisis for
German football.


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