DFB team: Hansi Flick remains national coach after an early World Cup exit

Outcome of the crisis meeting

Hansi Flick remains national coach. The 57-year-old is supposed to lead the German national team to the home EM 2024 despite the preliminary round at the World Cup in Qatar. The German Football Association announced this on Wednesday after a crisis meeting near Frankfurt/Main. Flick’s contract runs until after the next tournament. National team director Oliver Bierhoff, on the other hand, had previously left sporting management after 18 years with the DFB. Bierhoff’s successor has not yet been regulated by the association.

“My coaching team and I are optimistic about the European Championships in our own country. We as a team can do a lot more than we showed in Qatar. We missed a great opportunity there,” said Flick. “We will learn our lessons from this.”

On Wednesday, Flick sat at the approximately two-hour crisis summit with DFB President Bernd Neuendorf and DFL Supervisory Board Chairman Hans-Joachim Watzke in a hotel in Neu-Isenburg. The trio was able to agree on further cooperation after the next failure of the DFB selection in the World Cup group phase four years after the historic end under Joachim Löw in Russia.

National coach Flick: In 2024, “all of Germany” should gather behind the DFB team

“I have confidence in the common path agreed today with Bernd Neuendorf and Aki Watzke. We all want the whole of Germany to rally behind the national team again at the 2024 European Championships,” said the national coach. On Tuesday, Flick extremely regretted the farewell to Bierhoff, his closest confidante.

“We are all convinced that the 2024 European Championship in our own country represents a great opportunity for football in Germany. Our goal is to make this tournament a sporting success,” said Neuendorf. “We have full confidence in Hansi Flick that he will master this challenge together with his team. With regard to Oliver Bierhoff’s successor, we have agreed that we will first discuss the future structure of this area of ​​responsibility within the DFB in order to then make a personnel decision.”

Flick took over from Löw after the German team left the round of 16 at the European Championships in the summer of 2021. After seven titles with FC Bayern Munich, Bierhoff’s dream solution was to lead Germany “back to the top of the world”, as he said in his presentation.

Only two better than Löw: All national coaches sorted by point average

11 Erich Ribbeck – 1.50 points per game

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50 internationals (10/10/1998 to 06/20/2000)

10 Rudi Völler – 1.85 points per game

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53 international matches (July 2nd, 2000 to June 24th, 2004)

9 Sepp Herberger – 1.86 points per game

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169 international matches (01/01/1936 to 06/07/1964

8 Franz Beckenbauer – 1.89 points per game

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66 international matches (09/12/1984 to 07/08/1990)

7 Otto Nerz – 1.91 points per game

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68 international matches (07/01/1926 to 08/08/1936)

6 Hansi Flick – 2.05 points per game

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19 international matches since taking office on August 1st, 2021 – as of December 7th, 2022

5 Jürgen Klinsmann – 2.06 points per game

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34 international matches (07/26/2004 to 07/11/2006)

3 Helmut Schön – 2.09 points per game

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139 international matches (04/11/1964 to 21/06/1978)

3 Joachim Löw – 2.09 points per game

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198 international matches (07/12/2006 to 06/29/2021)

2 Jupp Derwall – 2.18 points per game

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66 international matches (07/01/1978 to 06/20/1984)

1 Berti Vogts – 2.20 points per game

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102 internationals (08/09/1990 to 09/07/1998)

Until the European Championships in a year and a half, the national team that automatically qualifies for the finals as hosts will only have friendlies to play. The next international matches will take place in March 2023 after a long winter break. With a record of eight wins, Flick was more successful than any national coach before him. In the following eleven games there are only three wins. At the World Cup, the DFB team was eliminated as third in the group after a 1-2 draw against Japan, a 1-1 draw against Spain and a 4-2 draw against Costa Rica.

DFB boss Neuendorf: No quick successor to Oliver Bierhoff

Meanwhile, DFB President Neuendorf is not aiming for a quick successor for Bierhoff as managing director of the national team. “With regard to Oliver Bierhoff’s successor, we have agreed that we will first discuss the future structure of this area of ​​responsibility within the DFB and then make a personnel decision,” he said.

Bierhoff’s contract, which was dated until the 2024 home European Championship, was terminated on Monday just four days after the early World Cup knockout in Qatar. The 1996 European champion had been in charge of the fortunes of the DFB team since 2004, first as team manager and then as DFB director. After the personnel decision, numerous candidates were traded as successors, including Matthias Sammer and Fredi Bobic.

World champion 2014: The German squad according to market values ​​at the time

23 Miroslav Klose | Club at the time & market value: Lazio – €1m

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Today: end of career

22 Roman Weidenfeller | Club at the time & market value: BVB – €5m

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Today: end of career

21 Eric Durm | Club at the time & market value: BVB – €6m

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Today: 1. FC K’lautern

20 Shkodran Mustafi | Club at the time & market value: Sampdoria – €7m

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Today: UD Levante

19 Christoph Kramer | Club at the time & market value: M’gladbach – €8m

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Today: M’gladbach

18 Ron Robert Zieler | Former club & market value: Hannover 96 – €9.5m

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Today: Hanover 96

17 Kevin Grosskreutz | Club at the time & market value: BVB – €10m

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Today: Boevinghausen

16 Matthias Ginter | Club at the time & market value: SC Freiburg – €12m

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Today: Fribourg

15 Benedikt Höwedes | Former club & market value: Schalke – €16m

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Today: end of career

14 Per Mertesacker | Club at the time & market value: Arsenal FC – €18m

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Today: end of career

13 André Schurrle | Club at the time & market value: Chelsea FC – €20m

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Today: end of career

12 Sami Khedira | Club at the time & market value: Real Madrid – €22m

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Today: end of career

11 Lukas Podolski | Club at the time & market value: Arsenal FC – €23m

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Today: Gornik Zabrze

10 Jerome Boateng | Former club & market value: FC Bayern – €28m

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Today: Lyons

8 Philip Lahm | Club at the time & market value: Bayern Munich – €30m

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Today: end of career

8 Julian Draxler | Former club & market value: Schalke – €30m

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Today: Benfica

6 Mats Hummels | Former club & market value: BVB – €35m

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Today: BVB

6 Bastian Schweinsteiger | Former club & market value: FC Bayern – €35m

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Today: end of career

5 Manuel Neuer | Club at the time & market value: Bayern Munich – €40m

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Today: FC Bayern

4 Toni Kroos | Club at the time & market value: Bayern Munich – €42m

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Today: Real Madrid

3 Mario Götze | Former club & market value: Bayern Munich – €48m

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Today: Eintracht Frankfurt

1 Thomas Mueller | Club at the time & market value: FC Bayern – €50m

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Today: FC Bayern

1 Mesut Özil | Club at the time & market value: Arsenal FC – €50m

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Today: Basaksehir

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