German goalkeeper has yet to agree new deal at Bundesliga champions and
finds his place under threat for club and country
In the quiet of an empty stadium, you can
learn a little more about leaders. Who shouts the loudest in moments of
urgency? Who, when he raises his voice, gets listened to the most?
Among
the intriguing aspects of the return of elite European football this weekend,
with a full Bundesliga schedule of matches all played behind closed doors
because of the coronavirus threat, is how audible the players will be for
television viewers.
The
most conspicuous leader in German football, the one who wears the armband for
champions Bayern Munich and for the national team, has lately been choosing
carefully when and how he makes himself heard.
The months of shutdown have been personally
challenging to Manuel Neuer, beyond having to take a responsible, spokesman’s
role for the national sport through the unprecedented public health crisis.
He
has reached a junction in his career, with contract renewal talks with Bayern
starting and then stalling.
His
private life has also been prominent on German front pages, his marriage having
ended and a younger partner having come into Neuer’s life.
At
34, he remains the standard-bearer of German football’s so-called ‘golden
generation’.
Of
the players who won the 2014 World Cup final in Rio de Janeiro and are
currently playing in the Bundesliga, Neuer alone is still first choice for the
national team.
To
Bayern – some of whose veterans, such as Thomas Muller and Jerome Boateng, are
no longer a presence in the national team – he is still regarded as the “much
the best goalkeeper in the world”.
Or
so said the club’s manager, Hansi Flick, in March, as Bayern and Neuer found
themselves moving apart in talks over extending a contract that expires in June
2021.
The
player is understood to want to commit to Bayern, but with a place at the very
top of their salary scale.
There
is some hesitancy from Bayern over the salary demands, and over how many more
years he can maintain his excellence.
In
January, Bayern agreed a deal with Alexander Nubel, the highly-rated,
23-year-old Schalke keeper, for Nubel to join them for the beginning of next
season, by which time his contract at Schalke will have come to an end.
The
swoop, a free transfer, made business sense. But it creates a potential logjam.
Nubel
is too ambitious to look at the role of understudy to Neuer as anything other
than a short-term arrangement.
Besides,
Bayern already have a trusted and respected back-up goalkeeper to Neuer in Sven
Ulreich.
There
is no strong suggestion Neuer is inclined to move, nor Bayern to try to fetch a
large transfer fee for him, especially in the uncertain market caused by the
Covid-19 shutdown and the likely recession to follow.
But
the imminent arrival of Nubel – whose career trajectory, from Schalke to
Bayern, echoes Neuer’s own path to the top – puts the senior gloveman under
some extra pressure.
Or
at least it will have him looking more vigilantly over his shoulder, as Neuer
has had to over the last 12 months with the national team, where Barcelona’s
Marc-Andre ter Stegen does little to disguise his ambitions for Germany’s No 1
jersey.
In Neuer’s favour is his form so far this
season. He appears fully recovered from a difficult 2018, when a broken bone in
his foot caused him to miss several months of action.
Neuer
had barely recovered in time to captain Germany at the World Cup in Russia, a
disastrous expedition, the Germans eliminated in the group phase.
Their
exit was agonisingly confirmed when they conceded a late goal to South Korea
with Neuer stranded in the opposition half, desperately supplementing midfield,
losing possession and then watching in vain as Son Heung-Min stroked the ball
into an unmanned net.
It
was an undignified moment for a player who, in redefining the role of the
sweeper-keeper, has left a lasting imprint on how modern football is played.
Neuer’s
confidence with the ball at his feet, his boldness at seizing and using the
ball well outside his penalty area has been fundamental for Germany’s rise
through most of the last decade, and for Bayern’s record-breaking run of
Bundesliga titles.
On
Sunday, at Union Berlin, they will resume the chase for an eighth successive
title. Before the March shutdown, Bayern had the wind in their sails, lifted
from seventh in the table to top, via a run of 31 points from a possible 33. Regain
that momentum in the surreal, crowdless weeks ahead, and captain Neuer can
anticipate lifting yet another trophy.


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