103 R13
Gekauft?
103 R13
Gekauft?
Es wird darauf hinauslaufen , daß es in den Fanzonen Leichtbier gibt und in den Stadien erst ab 22 Uhr - evt. auch mit 2,5 %.
Gut, aber nach Spielende brauche ich tatsächlich kein Bier mehr am Oder im Stadion
Hatten die Spieler in Gruppe B und C auch eine lange Champions League Saison oder waren in ihren Teams auch wirklich Leistungsträger, die immer abliefern mussten?
Diese Saison hatten genau welche deutschen Spitzenteams eine lange CL Saison?
Ich war seit 2002 bei jeder WM dabei [/b].
Damit kommst du auf der Ü30 Party wegen fehlender Zentimeter leider nicht rein. Geh mal davon aus, das hier Leute aktiv sind, die das Geschäft seit mindestens 1990 betreiben und kennen. Damit aber nicht haussieren gehen.
Was ein ernüchternder Kick - ich sehe auch unter Flick nur das gleiche planlose Gekicke wie unter Löw bei der Euro. Da hat sich offensiv absolut nix gebessert und die guten Ergebnisse aus dem Herbst lagen wohl echt nur an den schwachen Gegnern.
Bei allem Respekt vor den Ungarn - das ist ein Mittelklasse-Team in Europa, welches zurecht nicht mal bei der WM dabei ist.
Ich bin mir nicht so sicher ob wir in Doha überhaupt am Start wären wenn wir auch nur einen Gruppengegner in der Quali gehabt hätten, der über gehobene Qualität verfügt…
Nationalteams, welche den Höhepunkt in einem Turnier am Jahresende haben, probieren halt aktuell viel und ziehen ihre Erkenntnisse daraus. Was meinst du daher mit ernüchternd? Oder wie einst Per Mertesacker schon im Interview meinte. Was wollt ihr denn? Sollen wir wieder schön spielen und dann ausscheiden? Ist mir jetzt völlig scheissegal, was die Öffentlichkeit denkt ![]()
Belfast war auf jeden Fall ausverkauft
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Fähringer Inseln auch
Hin- und Rückfahrt jeweils 400km durch die Wüste! Der Traum jedes Auswärtsfahrer …
Mein Tipp. Immer über 200 auf dem Dacho. Dann wird man nicht einmal gelasert ![]()
Dann darf also offenbar doch ein Ausweichstadion in einem anderen Bundesland gewählt werden.
wird so sein. Da fällt mir ein. Kickers Würzburg Ausweichstadion müsste seinerzeit Bornheimer Hang gewesen sein
Alles anzeigenDa gibt's diesen meist exzellenten Fussball-E-mail Newsletter für Abonnenten der New York Times. Diese Woche eine sehr interessante Ansicht zu der Lewa-Geschichte. Nicht unbedingt neue Fakten, nur eine sehr gute Analyse eines Aussenstehenden.
Was ich daraus mitnehme: Bayern hat es bisher geschafft, mit vernünftigem Wirtschaften gegen die Petro-Clubs (City, PSG, Chelsea) zu bestehen, vor allem durch ihre Taktik, sich vor allem (im europäischen Vergleich) günstig in der Bundesliga zu bedienen (siehe Lewa-Einkauf). Bei Haaland funktionierte das nicht, was einerseits zum Bruch mit Lewa geführt hat, andererseits zeigt, dass Bayern in Zukunft nur noch international mithalten kann, wenn sie die irrsinnigen Gehälter mitgehen.
Spoiler anzeigen
The Breakup
Friedemann Vogel/EPA, via Shutterstock By Rory Smith
Robert Lewandowski does not, in his own words, like to make “too much show.” He is, and always has been, a touch more impassive than the average superstar. He does not greet his goals, the ones that have come for so long in such improbable quantities, with a roar, or a leap, or a scream. Instead, he grins. For the really good ones, he might go so far as a beam. He is the same off the field. Lewandowski is warm, smart, immediately likable, but his charisma is more subtle, more steady than that possessed by his peers, the finest players of his generation. He does not have the bombastic streak of Zlatan Ibrahimovic. He does not relish the spotlight quite like Cristiano Ronaldo.
His Instagram account encapsulates it. There are, of course, occasional glimpses of yachts and supercars and picture-postcard tropical vacations — he is still a millionaire soccer player, and it is still Instagram — but they are interspersed with images of Robert Lewandowski, the purest striker of the modern era, pushing a child’s stroller at Legoland, and Robert Lewandowski, serial German champion, tickling a small dog. The impression he has cultivated, over the years, is of a player who regards all of the attention, all of the glamour, all of the noise not as an unavoidable consequence of his work, or even as an unwelcome distraction. Instead, he has always treated it as an active hindrance. Lewandowski’s job is to score goals. He is good at it, and he is good at it because he takes it extremely seriously.
All of which has made the last two weeks something of an outlier. For perhaps the first time in his career, at the age of 34, Lewandowski has suddenly gone rogue. It started last month, not long after the ticker-tape that accompanied Bayern Munich’s 10th straight Bundesliga had been cleared away, when he declared — publicly — that he wanted to leave the club where he has spent eight seasons, the peak of his glittering career, immediately. “What is certain at the moment is that my career at Bayern is over,” he said.
Lewandowski saluted Bayern's fans after the final game of the season. He expects it to be his last at the club; team officials disagree.Ronny Hartmann/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images That was unexpected enough, the silent, reluctant superstar suddenly leveraging all of his renown, all of his influence, all of his clout to make as much noise as possible. But it did not end there. Instead, Lewandowski has doubled down, again and again. He has insisted that he does not want to “force” his way out of Bayern. As ever with Lewandowski, his actions speak for themselves.
In a series of interviews — at almost any given opportunity — he has chastised Bayern for its lack of “respect” and “loyalty,” its apparent refusal to find a “mutually agreeable solution,” its failure to “listen to me until the very end.” He said that “something inside of me died, and it is impossible to get over that.” Perhaps most seriously, he intimated that his treatment might make other players reluctant to join the club. “What kind of player will want to go to Bayern knowing that something like this could happen to them?” he asked. Of all the sideswipes, all the jabs, that felt the most damaging, the most irretrievable. “I want to leave Bayern,” he has said, in various formats, over and over. “That is clear.”
From the outside, it is not immediately apparent why that should be, why Lewandowski — with a year left on his Bayern contract — would have taken such a provocative path in order to secure his release. After all he has achieved in Germany — eight league championships in a row at Bayern, to go with two he won at Borussia Dortmund, a Champions League title, sundry domestic cups, and more than 40 goals across all competitions in each of the last seven seasons — he would be forgiven for wanting a change of scenery, a different challenge, to end his career at Barcelona, say. His approach, though, suggests something deeper is at play.
As is traditional, soccer has tried to answer that question by imbuing trivial details with tremendous narrative power. A few weeks ago, a report in the German outlet TZ revealed, Lewandowski had exchanged angry words with Julian Nagelsmann, Bayern’s young coach, when it was suggested that the latter might like to change his striker’s positioning when competing to win headers.
Lewandowski, not unreasonably, pointed out that his career statistics rather suggested that he knew what he was doing. Yet when the inevitable meta-analysis of the incident was conducted, it was concluded that not only did Lewandowski not respect Nagelsmann — whose playing career extended no further than his teens — most likely the rest of the Bayern squad did not, either. It is not with Nagelsmann, though, that Lewandowski’s relationship has collapsed. Such encounters are not exactly rare. Nagelsmann is, by all accounts, broadly popular with Bayern’s players, who admire his verve and his ideas, even if they remain slightly skeptical about his effectiveness after his first season.
Instead, the problem has its roots elsewhere in Bayern’s hierarchy. Amid the blizzard of words produced first by and then about Lewandowski, the most incisive came from his agent, the not-exactly-wildly-popular Pini Zahavi. “He hasn’t felt respected by the people in charge for months,” Zahavi told the German outlet Bild. “Bayern didn’t lose the player Lewandowski. They lost the person, Robert.” The source of that tension can be found in Bayern’s ill-concealed, and ultimately futile, pursuit of Erling Haaland. Hasan Salihamidzic, a decorated player in Munich at the turn of the century now installed as the club’s sporting director, had earmarked Haaland as Lewandowski’s eventual replacement. When it became clear to Lewandowski that the club was contemplating his demise even as he closed in yet another record-breaking season, he felt an unspoken covenant had been broken.
It may not soothe Lewandowski’s ego, but it would be remiss of Bayern not to be considering who will, at some point, step into his shoes; no matter what order you eat your meals in, at some point time comes for us all. Where Salihamidzic erred was in allowing his vision to become public; or, more accurately, in allowing it to become public and then not succeeding in signing Haaland. All of a sudden, Bayern had a disaffected superstar and no replacement.
That may have ramifications beyond Lewandowski’s immediate future: As he has made abundantly clear, barring an unlikely change of heart, that will now lie elsewhere. “Breakups are part of football,” he said. For Bayern, though, that may only be the first issue. For a club that has spent the last decade collecting trophies so serenely that it has become possible to imagine a world in which it wins the Bundesliga in perpetuity, this is a delicate time. Not in terms of its domestic primacy — that, sadly, is now hard-wired into the system — but most certainly in its attempts to compete in Europe.
Bayern has been able to ride out the rise of the petro-clubs, Manchester City and Paris St.-Germain, better than the likes of Juventus, Barcelona and to some extent Real Madrid not only because of its commercial potency, its operational expertise and its corporate appeal, but because it functions essentially as a Bundesliga Select XI. Every year, Bayern has cherry-picked the best talent from the rest of Germany — often using the lure of guaranteed trophies and an inevitable place in the latter stages of the Champions League as leverage to pay a lower price — to fill out its roster. This has a twin benefit: It weakens domestic competition, and enables Bayern to match, and occasionally to overcome, the arriviste elite elsewhere.
Lewandowski, plucked on a free transfer from Dortmund, stood as a symbol of that approach when he arrived; at the moment of his departure, he may well signal the need for its abandonment. The Bundesliga’s clubs, after all, have never wanted to sell to Bayern, and now, given that Germany is the cash-soaked Premier League’s bazaar of choice, they do not have to. English teams pay more, and they do not insist on beating you twice a season afterward.
Bayern will, instead, have to plot another course. It may have to start to offer more lucrative salaries — its approach for Liverpool’s Sadio Mané suggests that realization has arrived — and it may even need to identify other markets, other demographics, from which to source its recruits. It will have to do that at a time when its institutional knowledge is in the hands of Oliver Kahn, an intelligent, imposing figure but still relatively inexperienced in his role, and Salihamidzic, whose record in the transfer market was mixed even before his part in the impending loss of Lewandowski.
Bayern has weathered the changes in soccer’s ecosystem by sticking, unabashedly, to an approach that produced results, and by entrusting its fate to a grizzled, respected set of executives. For a decade, it has worked. Without much fuss, without too much show, Bayern Munich has constructed the most successful period in its history. The public, toxic departure of Lewandowski is the first hint of rust at the heart of the big red machine.
Irrsinnige Gehälter zahlen sie doch längst auch schon. Ist ja nicht so, das die Spieler der Bayern für ne warme Mahlzeit die Stiefel schnüren ![]()
Bei Abpfiff 0 Grad.
Ich schrub ja, leicht frisch ![]()
ok.Rookie-mistake.
Gerade nachgeschaut: unsere Sommerferien fangen 2026 am 20.07. an. Wahrscheinlich einen Tag NACH dem WM-Finale.
Geh mal davon aus, das das Finale am 12.7.26 stattfindet ![]()
Wieso? WM in Kapstadt bei Regen und Wind und das Finale in Johannesburg bei winterlichen Temperaturen hatte doch auch etwas reizvolles.
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Den Tag als Solches habe ich wettertechnisch sehr positiv in Erinnerung. Als die Sonne weg war, wurde es halt leicht frisch
Warum?
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Weil diese sicher in Südamerika stattfindet, 100%
Europa ist 30 aus meiner Sicht noch nicht bereit ![]()
Die WM 1930 findet in Europa statt , 100 %
Da halte ich dagegen
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https://www.bfv.de/news/regionall…eroffnungsspiel
Bayern startet am Donnerstag, den 14. Juli und Spielplan soll Ende Juni kommen. Wie sieht es mit den Spielplänen der anderen 4 Regionalligen aus? Wann sollen die rauskommen?
Klares Abseitstor gerade gegen die Eidgenossen gegeben. Wie man das nicht sehen kann, das der Huf von Sarabia viel näher zum Tor ist(ohne Zeitlupe) kann man nicht verstehen. Sitzt VAR heut in Köln?
Wenn ich gerade sehe, was Wales und die Kaaswuzzler performen, ist Deutschland um Längen weiter. Durchschnitt ist noch geschmeichelt
Reus mit Muskelfaserriss
Geht auf Turnier zu ![]()
Vielleicht klappt`s ja dann bei der WM mit einem Sieg! Diese "Freundschaftsspiele" enden oft unentschieden.
Wie?!? DIe Tommies sind doch gar nicht bei uns in der Gruppe ![]()
Flutlicht und Rasenheizung fehlen.
Flutlicht soll kurzfristig mittels mobiler Anlage behoben werden. Geht dann vermutlich (hoffentlich) nur um die Spiele im Winter bei Frost o.ä.Wenigstens scheinen die Argumente hier sinnig - und es hapert nicht wie z. B. bei Verl an der zu geringen Kapazität.
https://www.liga3-online.de/vfb-oldenburg-…tadion-benannt/
Im Artikel steht aber leider auch nicht woran es bei Lotte hapert (evtl. wg. anderem Bundesland
).
Die Türken wollten doch auch nach NRW und durften nicht. ![]()