Tag Archives: Tuchel

Kane is “so impressive”. Tuchel and his No 9 are beaming after first Bayern goal – The Athletic

  1. Kane is “so impressive”. Tuchel and his No 9 are beaming after first Bayern goal The Athletic
  2. Kane Debut Goal – Sané Brace! | SV Werder Bremen – Bayern München 0-4 | MD 1 – Bundesliga 23/24 Bundesliga
  3. Bayern Munich scorer Harry Kane explains difference between Premier League and Bundesliga dazn.com
  4. ‘Couldn’t have asked for better’: Harry Kane scores and assists on Bayern Munich debut Guardian Football
  5. Bayern Munich Teammate Heaps Praises on Kane After Striker’s Bundesliga Debut Sports Brief
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Sadio Mane has ‘full support’ after Leroy Sane altercation ‘mistake’ – Bayern Munich boss Thomas Tuchel – The Athletic

  1. Sadio Mane has ‘full support’ after Leroy Sane altercation ‘mistake’ – Bayern Munich boss Thomas Tuchel The Athletic
  2. ESPN FC reacts to Sadio Mane’s suspension for altercation with Leroy Mane ESPN FC
  3. Sadio Mane and Leroy Sane row ‘settled’ says Thomas Tuchel, talks of ‘positive atmosphere’ at Bayern Munich Eurosport COM
  4. Thomas Tuchel defends under fire Sadio Mane after Leroy Sane punch apology 90min UK
  5. ‘This is NOT on Tuchel!’ Gab and Juls break down Bayern Munich’s loss to Manchester City | ESPN FC ESPN UK
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Thomas Tuchel split Bayern Munich in half. The plan worked… eventually – The Athletic

  1. Thomas Tuchel split Bayern Munich in half. The plan worked… eventually The Athletic
  2. Bayern Munich vs. Borussia Dortmund | Bundesliga Highlights | ESPN FC ESPN FC
  3. Back to the 4-2-3-1: Thomas Tuchel, Thomas Müller, and Joshua Kimmich explain Bayern’s formation vs Borussia … Bavarian Football Works
  4. Chelsea fans in ‘pain’ at Thomas Tuchel ‘rubbing salt in wound’ after impressive reaction to Bayern’s win v… The US Sun
  5. Bayern Munich: Top three performers in Der Klassiker Bayern Strikes
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Thomas Tuchel ready to get to work at Bayern Munich – Bavarian Football Works

  1. Thomas Tuchel ready to get to work at Bayern Munich Bavarian Football Works
  2. Chelsea disappointed with Thomas Tuchel for publicly targeting Anthony Barry to join his Bayern Munich coaching staff Goal.com
  3. Bayern Munich’s Tuchel: Huge task to start vs. Dortmund, City ESPN
  4. A House Divided? Report says Bayern Munich squad was not on aligned on support of Julian Nagelsmann Bavarian Football Works
  5. Bayern Munich insist they ‘behaved fairly’ with Julian Nagelsmann sacking as club addresses Thomas Tuchel appointment leak Goal.com
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Thomas Tuchel: Bayern Munich squad among best in Europe and can challenge for every trophy – The Athletic

  1. Thomas Tuchel: Bayern Munich squad among best in Europe and can challenge for every trophy The Athletic
  2. HEATED DISCUSSION Steve Nicol & Gab Marcotti get INTO IT over the Tuchel hiring | ESPN FC ESPN UK
  3. Julian Nagelsmann’s girlfriend a ‘BIG problem’ at Bayern Munich & ‘didn’t go down well’ in dressing room as Markus Babbel makes controversial claim Goal.com
  4. SACKED Nagelsmann to go to SPURS? TUCHEL to manage Bayern Munich? Constantin Eckner discusses! talkSPORT
  5. Opinion: Chelsea will now inevitably be linked with sacked manager – Talk Chelsea Talk Chelsea
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SACKED Nagelsmann to go to SPURS? TUCHEL to manage Bayern Munich? Constantin Eckner discusses! – talkSPORT

  1. SACKED Nagelsmann to go to SPURS? TUCHEL to manage Bayern Munich? Constantin Eckner discusses! talkSPORT
  2. Opinion: Chelsea will now inevitably be linked with sacked manager – Talk Chelsea Talk Chelsea
  3. REPORTS: Bayern Munich SACK Julian Nagelsmann, set to hire Thomas Tuchel | ESPN FC ESPN FC
  4. ‘Get straight on the phone’: O’Hara urges Tottenham to appoint ‘genius’ 35-year-old as new manager HITC – Football, Gaming, Movies, TV, Music
  5. Bayern Munich hire Thomas Tuchel to replace fired manager Julian Nagelsmann; will face Dortmund in debut CBS Sports
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Bayern Munich sack Nagelsmann, to bring in Tuchel – sources – ESPN

  1. Bayern Munich sack Nagelsmann, to bring in Tuchel – sources ESPN
  2. Bayern Munich shakeup! This is a major blow to their management – Fjortoft | ESPN FC ESPN UK
  3. Breaking: Bayern Munich sack Julian Nagelsmann with immediate effect (Update #3: Nagelsmann found out through… Bavarian Football Works
  4. Thomas Tuchel will be Bayern Munich’s next manager and will look to repeat amazing Chelsea feat Goal.com
  5. Bayern Munich to hire Thomas Tuchel to replace fired manager Julian Nagelsmann; will face Dortmund in debut CBS Sports
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Thomas Tuchel — Where It Went Wrong

Thomas Tuchel is my favourite Chelsea manager of all time — more than Mourinho, more than Conte, more than Ancelotti, more than anyone else. I’ll always hold him close to my heart for his tactics, for his personality, for his conduct and for a long list of other things. But I love Chelsea more than any manager.

It is important to remain rational and not emotional. This sacking hurts everyone equally. We all wanted him to build a long-term plan with us but it did not happen.

I do not aim to belittle Tuchel or make him sound bad. He did a phenomenal job in every sense of the word and was perhaps the best ambassador we’ve ever had. It pains me to write this because I wanted him to be our Sir Alex. But he has not worked out and now it is time to analyze why this is the right time to part ways.


The biggest headline-grabber is our form in 2022. While there are mitigating factors, our league form since January has been poor. The transfer ban, injuries and all the other chaos around the club do not explain Chelsea possessing the underlying statistics of a mid-table team for 9 straight months. We should have been better. However, this is actually not the biggest reason behind Tuchel’s downfall.

More than our form, Tuchel’s downfall was primarily caused by the direction he was wanting to take. We kept talking about rebuilds only for us to buy extremely experienced and/or expensive players. When you do that, there is no rebuild. There is only immediate results. Tuchel’s words and actions kept referring to this too — he was in no mood to build a young team from the ground up. He wanted to win and he wanted to win now. That’s certainly a fair pursuit but we clearly haven’t been winning for a while. So what gives?

Do we want to keep giving him millions or do we want to recognize things aren’t working?

We could have digested Tuchel playing a bunch of 20-year-olds and losing. Losing with a young team means you are going through a crucial part of the learning curve. There is the promise of a brighter tomorrow. Losing with a bunch of 30-year-olds is not fun. There is nothing to look forward to. It just means things are not right — either tactically or with regards to personnel.

There is no “process” in a team with 37-year-old Silva, 33-year-old Aubameyang, 33-year-old Azpilicueta, 31-year-old Koulibaly and 31-year-old Jorginho. The squad had been gradually getting older throughout Tuchel’s tenure.

Tuchel was given the opportunity to retain and introduce younger players — either from the market or from the academy — but opted against it in order to have experienced players. He asked for a super experienced team so that he could win this very moment. He asked us to judge him based on this. And that’s all we are doing — judging him according to the conditions he created. There was no long-term progress and there were no short-term results. That’s the sad truth.

Our new owners want to go in a direction of sustainable growth and young players — hence the investment in elite youngsters. Tuchel doesn’t want that. What message does it send to Carney Chukwuemeka that he’s one of the world’s best teenagers and the manager won’t give him a minute even when everyone else is out?

Signing elite youngsters like we have been recently — and will continue doing so most likely — and giving them to Tuchel would’ve been a repeat of 2013 and the José Mourinho situation. Young players can fulfill their potential only if the manager is prepared to give them a chance. Our owners were wise enough to recognize this well in advance. Tuchel wasn’t producing results, he wasn’t developing players either. So what was the point?

Photo by Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC via Getty Images

In terms of underlying numbers, we have been worse than the Lampard era for quite some time now, especially on offensive. Tuchel is an elite, elite, elite tactician — but he hasn’t shown that consistently in a long time. We can speak all we want about his Dortmund team but he couldn’t coach an attack here. Chelsea have created around 1.4 non-penalty xG under Tuchel in the league, compared to around 1.6 under Lampard, an inferior coach with an inferior team. Other advanced offensive metrics followed the same pattern.

Ironically, despite the gulf in quality and experience, Lampard and Tuchel got sacked for a similar footballing reason — they couldn’t balance defence and offence. Lampard overemphasized offence and got sacked when that stopped firing. Tuchel did that with defence.

Player development has been another major concern since 2021. How many players can we confidently say are better now than in 2021? Now compare that to the time and the money spent. Is it rational?

If one player is bad, you blame the player. But if the whole team is bad, you blame the system — tactics and utilization, i.e. the coach.

Photo by Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC via Getty Images

Tuchel’s ability to identify and fix issues in the squad had become a problem. He didn’t know what he required and that is a major red-flag for the long term. The entire striker saga summed it up. He spent months leaving Tammy Abraham out because of “tactical fit” only to sign Romelu Lukaku and then Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, an older player who does exactly what Tammy does but probably worse.

Frankly, Tuchel’s talent identification and squad-building skills are probably why he got into this bad situation in the first place. He did get his way — because of his results — but in the end, his bad decisions caught up to him and he could no longer justify them. Some examples:

  • The Saúl – Tchouaméni decision
  • The Lukaku saga
  • Sending away several talented academy grads to pursue inferior and more expensive players
  • Constant mis-profiling of players, making them do things they are not good at

Our pursuit of a midfielder this summer spoke volumes as well. Tuchel went on for months about not needing anyone and then made a sudden U-turn at the end of the window. As a sporting director, how do you handle that? More importantly, as a coach, how do you not recognize midfield as a major weakness until that late?

Photo by Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC via Getty Images

By the end of August, we had a manager who is not good at building a squad, one who hasn’t done a great job of developing players here and does not possess robust talent ID. His main selling point was his short-term results and those results dried up, with no prospects of coming back up. What option did we have?

We’ve been on a 2015-16-esque trajectory for a while but this time, we’ve avoided our biggest mistake back then: hanging on to our manager for too long based on past glories. Sacking Tuchel now ensures that he leaves not humiliated and with his head still high. It wouldn’t have gotten better from here — stats, performance of new signings, player development, general morale all pointed in that direction — and he leaves with his reputation and dignity intact.

A new manager isn’t going to make us Manchester City overnight but he gives us a better chance of catching them in the long-term. If it doesn’t work out, we have re-evaluate what went wrong and avoid making those mistakes in 12 months’ time. We don’t have a short-term project. We have a long-term one — one that will involve plenty of losses, growing pains and step-by-step development. Sadly, Tuchel showed through his actions that he did not want to be a part of that process.

Photo by ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP via Getty Images

Our first aim must be to take bad results on the chin and make the team younger and more attacking. 2019-20 is the template. It showed that we can make the squad younger, more offensive and still get top-4. Statistically, in terms of underlying numbers, it is still our best season since 2014-15. Follow that template but with an even better tactical mind at the helm: that should be our long-term goal.

Another goal, for both fans and the club, should be to avoid chasing instant results. It’s always toxic and always ends up badly. Tuchel got himself sacked because he chased instant results and gave up squad development. But going forward, such decisions should be allowed. No more of the “win today, worry tomorrow” mentality. We need to lay the groundwork today to ensure we win tomorrow — and beyond. If we focus on player development now, we will naturally become a much better team in the future.

It is easy to think we’ll catch City with just one more big-money signing. It is the same trap that leads to people losing their money in gambling — just one more try and they will make money! The City winning machine is too far ahead. It will take a process, a long drawn-out process, with plenty of defeats and pains along the way. City themselves went through that as well.

Photo by GLYN KIRK/AFP via Getty Images


All that said, I will really, really miss Tuchel. I’ll miss his masterclasses in big games, his personality in press conferences and I doubt any manager will carry himself with the same conduct as he did in difficult times. The sacking still has not fully sunk in yet and I still wish he were part of our journey. But his actions showed that this is the right moment to part ways, for everyone’s best interest.

We can all be incredibly grateful for everything he has done for us — and that would need an article three times as long, at minimum — and also recognize that the time had come for both of us to go our own ways.

In his first press conference, Tuchel said that “we set the bar very high — also for myself, what I demand of myself — to bring this team up to the top. Will I make it? I don’t know.”

Well, he indeed made it. We made it. He brought us to the top, and that was just the start. Viel Glück, Thomas, we will all miss you.

Photo by Alexander Hassenstein – UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images



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Chelsea sack Thomas Tuchel as manager after poor start to season

Chelsea’s new owners have sacked head coach Thomas Tuchel just three months after completing their takeover of the club.

Tuchel’s 100th and final game in charge of Chelsea was Tuesday’s 1-0 Champions League defeat at Dinamo Zagreb and sources have told ESPN that Tuchel, 49, was informed of the decision on Wednesday morning.

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A consortium led by L.A. Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital acquired the club from Roman Abramovich at the end of May and oversaw a record-spend in a single window for Chelsea of more than £250 million on nine players.

However, sources have told ESPN that relations between Boehly and Tuchel became strained over the club’s transfer strategy, while further concerns over the team’s substandard start to the season prompted the ownership to act.

Members of the club’s backroom staff will take interim charge, possibly also for Saturday’s Premier League trip to Fulham, as the search begins for Tuchel’s replacement.

A club statement read: “On behalf of everyone at Chelsea FC, the club would like to place on record its gratitude to Thomas and his staff for all their efforts during their time with the club. Thomas will rightly have a place in Chelsea’s history after winning the Champions League, the Super Cup and Club World Cup in his time here.

“As the new ownership group reaches 100 days since taking over the club, and as it continues its hard work to take the club forward, the new owners believe it is the right time to make this transition.

“Chelsea’s coaching staff will take charge of the team for training and the preparation of our upcoming matches as the club moves swiftly to appoint a new head coach.

“There will be no further comment until a new head coach appointment is made.”

Tuchel was appointed as Frank Lampard’s successor in January 2021 and guided Chelsea to their second Champions League crown in May that year.

In February, he led Chelsea to the only trophy previously to elude Abramovich during his 19-year tenure, the Club World Cup, with victory over Palmeiras in Abu Dhabi.

However, Tuchel then came under intense pressure as the public face of the club as Abramovich was effectively forced into selling Chelsea after the U.K. government imposed sanctions relating to his alleged ties to Russia president Vladimir Putin.

Tuchel steered the club through a difficult period on the pitch as the Boehly/Clearlake consortium negotiated their purchase of the club.

However, disagreements emerged over the club’s transfer strategy and sources have suggested Boehly became concerned that Tuchel’s messages were not getting through to the players, many of whom had become frustrated at his approach.

Tuesday’s defeat in Zagreb was their third consecutive away loss, the first time that had happened under Tuchel, while the club lie sixth in the Premier League having won three of their opening six matches.

Speaking after losing in Zagreb, Tuchel said: “Of course I’m frustrated; there’s too much to analyse, I’m a part of it, and we are clearly not where we need to be. At the moment everything is missing.”

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FA to investigate before deciding whether to further discipline Conte and Tuchel after Spurs-Chelsea clash

Well, it’s been a day since the 2-2 draw between Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur at Stamford Bridge, and it will not be the last we hear about this match or the fallout what took place during and afterwards. Managers Antonio Conte and Thomas Tuchel were both shown red cards for an angry confrontation triggered by the post-match handshake, and it appears that the FA is going to take their time to look at the match and post-match footage before deciding whether to issue any charges to either of them

The TL;DR for the above tweet is as follows:

  • The FA will look at the match officials’ report from Anthony Taylor and investigate footage before making any decision about fines or further suspensions.
  • The FA also is investigating Thomas Tuchel’s post-match comments to the press in which he vociferously criticized the officiating
  • Cuti Romero will NOT be subject to any further discipline for the hair pull on Marc Cucarella; VAR looked at the incident during the match, meaning that by the rules no further post-hoc disciplinary action can be taken. Hair pulling is not by law considered violent conduct (but it CAN be at the official’s discretion)
  • Richarlison’s potential interference was examined but the officials decided that his position had no impact on keeper Edouard Mendy’s ability to see the ball.

It also emerged out of Tottenham Hotspur’s camp that the club has not yet decided whether it intends to appeal the red card given to Conte or not. Should the red card stand, it’s not entirely clear what that means — a straight red for a player for violent conduct normally results in a three match ban, but the rules can vary for bench cards and the nature of the infraction. All we know is that, for now, Conte will not be on the sidelines for the home match vs. Wolves next Saturday.

Incidentally, Conte refused to criticize Anthony Taylor or the match officiating in his post-match press conference. Thomas Tuchel? Not so much. Here’s what Tuchel said afterwards to raise the ire of the FA:

“I can’t understand how the first goal is not offside, and I can’t understand when a player is pulled by their hair, the other player stays on the pitch. Pull someone else’s hair, stay on the pitch and attack the last corner.

“This is for me without any explanation, and I don’t want to accept it. Both goals should not stand, and it’s a fair result because we were brilliant, and deserved to win. This is my point of view.”

Tuchel went on to add fuel to the fan-stoked controversy that Anthony Taylor has a bias against Chelsea:

“Not only the fans. You know the players. They know what’s going on when they are on the pitch. They know it.”

We’ll learn more in due course. Until then, we’ll continue to enjoy the fact that Chelsea got football’d at our hands and we got an extremely hard-earned point at the Bridge.

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