Womanising – first Formula 1, now the Bundesliga

There’s one thing my coach never tired of saying to me: “Hau den Ball ins Tor hinein!” – best translated with: “Just slam it into the back of the net!” Or maybe women say to you: “Hmm, I just loooove football players…”? Maybe she does – or maybe she just likes their money. Whatever the case, football players don’t seem to have any trouble attracting women.


Tastes have changed. Before, it was your Formula 1 racing-drivers that got the girls; it was all fast cars, fast guys and even faster babes. You had drivers like Jackie Stewart, Nelson Piquet, Jody Scheckter, and Mario Andretti – proper playboys for the tabloid press. Nowadays, though, your average Formula 1 racer is nothing more than a boy without the play, the kind of clean-shaven goody-two-shoes you could introduce to your maiden aunt: just look at Sebastian Vettel, Nico Rosberg, Michael Schumacher or Lewis Hamilton. Not one of them has even a whiff of scandal on them – boring!

The situation for the tabloids got so desperate that they had to get their scandals from golf –I mean, honestly, GOLF! And to be quite frank, these scandals are not A-grade material either: Tiger Woods’ public confessions are more of a Mills & Boon paperback romance than a hot and sordid sex inferno. “Thank God”, cry the tabloid editors, “for football!” After all, you can’t go wrong with women and football – the readers love both in equal measure. And the readers’ wives love the footballers. If you don’t believe me, just wait until the World Cup this summer: your wife or girlfriend will sit there glued to the television, like you – but unlike you, she’ll be checking out the hot Brazilian players and their six-packs. And that’s why football players never have any trouble getting the girls – and that’s why the tabloids never run short of stories. The media are everywhere and happy to print anything that brings the big, unreachable football idols down to the everyday mortal level.

So football players are the playboys now. John Terry was recently caught letting his testosterone do the thinking, while Ashley Cole, Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney have all had their moments in the gutter press. Entire national teams have been caught partying in the small hours with girls of questionable virtue. Then there was the whole Stefan Effenberg scandal: this already controversial figure became even more so after his adulterous dalliances with Claudia Strunz, the wife of his teammate Thomas, were revealed. And now German football has a new playboy in the form of the amorous Frenchman Franck Ribéry: and all of it went public as his team Bayern München was playing two Champions League semi-finals and trying to win the Bundesliga in its decisive phase. Now that’s what I call timing; and the fans are either loving it or hating it, but he’s got their attention whatever the case.

Without wishing to go too deep into group psychology, it’s quite possible that the whole Ribéry thing was weighing on Bayern this weekend – either that, or they were exhausted from the first leg of the Champions League clash with Lyon. Whatever the case, they lost their points lead at the top of the Bundesliga, only managing a 1:1 draw against Mönchengladbach. In fact, it’s now only goal difference that is keeping Bayern in first place.

Now, they may have a very good goal difference, but now all it will take is one slip-up in their last two matches and Schalke 04 will overtake them and win the league – the “Royal Blues”, as Schalke are known, got their points thanks to Heiko Westermann scoring in the final minutes of their match against Berlin, making it 1:0 and keeping the League Title open right until the last matches. Hertha, meanwhile, certainly didn’t play like a team that should get relegated, but they just didn’t have what it takes to really grab control of the match and close on a win: and that puts them dangerously close to the second league.

In fact, all of the teams facing relegation had problems on the 32nd day of play: Berlin lost and Hannover did too (0:3 in Leverkusen), as well as Bochum (0:2 against Stuttgart) and Nürnberg (2:3 to Dortmund). Their opponents were not in a generous mood, with all three playing to get into the international leagues. Nürnberg were beaten thanks to Dortmund’s Lucas Barrios whose attention, it would seem, is fully concentrated on nothing more than football; no women, no affairs, no scandal – and all three of Dortmund’s goals.

The only relegation candidate to win this weekend was Freiburg, who won 1:0 against VfL Wolfsburg and reignited hopes that they might stay in the top league.

Meanwhile, HSV’s ex-coach Bruno Labbadia would probably have been quite happy if his players had been too busy thinking about sex: but they were not. Instead, they were using all their mental energy to find a way of getting rid of him – and that must be why they downed tools and lost 1:5 in Hoffenheim. This means that they can write off this entire season, but they could do well on the second leg of the game against Fulham. Why? Because Labbadia went today and won’t be coaching them anymore. He’ll probably be consoling himself in the arms of a woman – perhaps even his wife.

(Stefan Reichart / Brian Melican)

Results Matchday 32

VfL Bochum   -  VfB Stuttgart  0:2
Borussia Mönchengladbach   -  Bayern München  1:1
1. FC Nürnberg   -  Borussia Dortmund  2:3
Hertha BSC Berlin  -  FC Schalke 04  0:1
Bayer Leverkusen   -  Hannover 96  3:0
1. FSV Mainz 05   -  Eintracht Frankfurt  3:3
Werder Bremen   -  1. FC Köln  1:0 
1899 Hoffenheim   -  Hamburger SV  5:1
SC Freiburg   -  VfL Wolfsburg  1:0 

Table

1   Bayern München      64 P
2   FC Schalke 04   64 P
3   Werder Bremen   57 P
4   Bayer Leverkusen    57 P
5   Borussia Dortmund      56 P
6   VfB Stuttgart     53 P
7   Hamburger SV     48 P
8   VfL Wolfsburg 46 P
9   Eintracht Frankfurt     46 P
10   1. FSV Mainz 05   45 P
11   1899 Hoffenheim    38 P
12   Borussia Mönchengladbach    38 P
13   1. FC Köln      37 P
14   SC Freiburg   31 P
15   1. FC Nürnberg    28 P
16   VfL Bochum    28 P
17   Hannover 96     27 P
18   Hertha BSC Berlin   23 P

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What if…? Dream comebacks in the Bundesliga

There’s one thing my coach never tired of saying to me: “Hau den Ball ins Tor hinein!” – best translated with: “Just slam it into the back of the net!” What did yours used to say to you? What about this one: “Can you please come back out of retirement? We need you on the team!” Well, if ever you stopped playing and your team got into trouble, it’s quite possible you’ve heard that one before.

Dream comebacks in the Bundesliga
Like Michael Schumacher, whose comeback was the event in German sport on the weekend: the seven-time champion is back on the track and raring to go – again. Yesterday was his first race for his new team, Mercedes GP, and he finished sixth in the Bahrain grand prix.
Of course, Michael Schumacher is under a tremendous amount of pressure. On the one hand, German fans and the Mercedes team are expecting nothing less than the world championship; on the other, his competitors Jenson Button, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso are all themselves world champions and are all licking their lips at the thought of beating Schumacher, who is the most successful driver in the history of motor racing. It probably doesn’t bother him, though; after all, true champions need this adrenalin kick like we mortals need air.
Football is another sport whose fans are always happy to watch true star-players do their thing: obviously, the sheer amount of running means that age takes its toll, but that doesn’t stop fans dreaming of seeing Pélé, Maradona and Zidane working their magic one last time – wouldn’t that be fantastic?
It’s not just the fans who want their stars back, of course; there are several Bundesliga teams who are longing for the return of their great players – and several of them could really use them. Bayern München, for example, would probably like nothing better than having Oliver Kahn back: “the Titan” is without question the best German goalkeeper of recent years and there is still no-one to fill his goalie gloves. Hans-Jörg Butt, for example, will never be in Kahn’s league, especially not after the mistakes he made in the Champions League game in Florence; and despite the 2:1 victory against Freiburg, van Buyten and Badstuber in defence are certainly no dream-team – you’d need Franz Beckenbauer back ordering them around to make the Bayern defence watertight.
There are some less famous teams who could do with a helping hand from the past, too, like Borussia Mönchengladbach, who need Günther Netzer back. This midfield strategist from Borussia’s glory days in the 70s would have been just the right person to straighten out their play against VfL Wolfsburg and make the “Wolves” start worrying about goals: instead, however, the Mönchengladbachers went down 0:4. And if Netzer were to stage a comeback, it wouldn’t just help Mönchengladbach out, but would remove him from our television screens. His childish antics with co-commentator Delling are becoming increasingly annoying and ruining international games on the ARD network.
Another team that could use an old star is VfL Bochum, currently sinking into Bundesliga obscurity. If they had their old goal-machine Stefan Kuntz back, though, they’d be on the right road. He may well have earned his reputation as a striker at Kaiserslautern and in Euro 96, but back at Bochum in 1986 he was already the highest-scoring player in the league. Without him, though, Bochum are forced to suffer humiliating defeats against Ruhr-neighbours Dortmund, who won the weekend duel with a convincing 1:4.
The return of a certain Karl-Heinz Körbel would be just the thing for Eintracht Frankfurt, who suffered a 1:2 defeat against Hannover. This steely defender played 602 times for Eintracht in the 70s and 80s, holds a Bundesliga record and would certainly have held their defence together. Without him, however, Hannover were able to actually win a match and glimpse a silver lining on the otherwise dark horizon of relegation.
If FC Schalke 04 had a wish, they’d use it to request a very special comeback: not of a particular player, but of the league championship itself, which they haven’t won for 52 years: and with their 2:1 win against Stuttgart, Schalke is well on course to achieve this, too.
And what would Hertha BSC wish for? A time machine! If they could just turn back the clock to the beginning of the season, they’d be a happier team. After all, with the 1:2 home defeat against Nuremberg, their hopes of staying in the top league are shrinking fast; even a turnout of 57,000 fans was not enough to help the Herthians win a match in their own stadium. It now looks as if the Hertha coach will soon be shouting at a team that’s playing in the second division. Nevertheless, no matter which league you’re playing in, the coach’s words are always the same: “Just slam it into the back of the net”.

(Stefan Reichart/Brian Melican)

Results Matchday 26:

FC Schalke 04 – VfB Stuttgart 2:1
Borussia Mönchengladbach – VfL Wolfsburg 0:4
VfL Bochum – Borussia Dortmund 1:4
1. FSV Mainz 05 – 1. FC Köln 1:0
Hannover 96 – Eintracht Frankfurt 2:1
Hertha BSC Berlin – 1. FC Nürnberg 1:2
Bayern München – SC Freiburg 2:1
1899 Hoffenheim – Werder Bremen 0:1
Bayer Leverkusen – Hamburger SV 4:2

Table

1 Bayern München 56 P
2 FC Schalke 04 54 P
3 Bayer Leverkusen 53 P
4 Borussia Dortmund 45 P
5 Hamburger SV 43 P
6 Werder Bremen 42 P
7 1. FSV Mainz 05 38 P
8 VfL Wolfsburg 37 P
9 VfB Stuttgart 35 P
10 Eintracht Frankfurt 35 P
11 1899 Hoffenheim 32 P
12 Borussia Mönchengladbach 30 P
13 1. FC Köln 27 P
14 VfL Bochum 27 P
15 1. FC Nürnberg 24 P
16 Hannover 96 23 P
17 SC Freiburg 20 P
18 Hertha BSC Berlin 15 P

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