Bundesliga’s managerial carousel ready to spin before dramatic penultimate day | Andy Brassell

1 day ago 6

Not the end, perhaps, but certainly the denouement. After the penultimate weekend of the Bundesliga season some big issues remain open; the confirmation of the fourth team to qualify for the Champions League, the two teams to drop to the second tier and which side will get a two-leg opportunity to reprieve themselves.

Yet the German game is nothing if not reliably businesslike in having some of next season’s key parameters set before the current exercise is done. There was no need for official announcements, though, with the results doing the explaining for us. Or, in a few cases, the performances. There has been considerable doubt, for example, whether Kasper Hjulmand would continue as Bayer Leverkusen coach next season. Now, there is none.

His team bought themselves what looked like a reprieve with last week’s win over RB Leipzig and when Aleix García gave Leverkusen the lead 34 seconds into Saturday’s visit to Stuttgart, it felt as if they were grabbing the moment with both hands. Instead, it was the last time Leverkusen’s heads were above water.

Ermedin Demirovic equalised before there were five minutes on the clock and from there it was a monsoon. Maximilian Mittelstädt’s penalty (the result of some confused defending) and Deniz Undav’s second-half goal led to a 3-1 win, which was flattering to Leverkusen. It could have been a rout and there was not a smidgeon of doubt that Stuttgart deserved to take Die Werkself’s place in the top four.

This was not a setback or even a body blow. For Leverkusen it was a full stop and an acknowledgment that even if a miracle should transpire on the final day – they could still make the top four, but would need to beat Hamburg and have Stuttgart and Hoffenheim lose at Eintracht Frankfurt and Borussia Mönchengladbach respectively – the torpor of 2026 means a new direction is required.

Hjulmand deserves some sympathy, having initially done well to salvage a season from the mess left to him after three competitive games by Erik ten Hag, but in 2026 results have been inconsistent and performances often frighteningly poor. Stuttgart grasping their opportunity means the right team is likely to capture fourth spot. They have again been excellent under Sebastian Hoeness and if Leverkusen’s display was their sorry second half of the season in microcosm, Stuttgart’s was their wit, strength and enterprise distilled into a single afternoon.

Stuttgart have to go to Frankfurt and get a result, but you would heavily back them to do just that, with the two dugouts harnessing perhaps the most bulletproof coach in the Bundesliga in Hoeness and the one under the greatest threat of swift removal. Albert Riera, like Hjulmand, inherited a far from ideal situation with the season already under way and has also been trying to extract the bare minimum from it which, now, is seventh and a European place.

Albert Riera
Albert Riera joined Eintracht Frankfurt as head coach in January, but is in danger of losing his job. Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP

Like Hjulmand and Leverkusen, it will be out of Frankfurt’s hands on the final day; they have to win and hope for a slip-up from Freiburg, who will be trying to secure a route to Europe for next season against Leipzig regardless of the result in their Europa League final against Aston Villa.

Frankfurt have already benefited from some Freiburg’s faltering. After Thursday’s joyous celebrations at Europa-Park thanks to their semi-final win over Braga, Freiburg could have sealed seventh by winning at Hamburg on Sunday, but went down 3-2. Whether Frankfurt will be able to take advantage of any door opened to them is debatable. They led in the first half of Friday’s game at Borussia Dortmund, but also ended up on the wrong end of a 3-2 scoreline. Even if Jonathan Burkhardt’s late goal for the visitors was a consolation it underlined exactly where Eintracht are.

After his near-post finish Burkhardt retrieved the ball from the net and, running back to the halfway line, appeared to put his index finger briefly to his lips and then point towards the touchline, where Riera stood looking unimpressed. Last week, the coach had ripped into the collected media with six minutes of an uninterrupted tirade based on what he judged a misreporting of words he and his Germany striker had exchanged. Burkhardt’s finger hinted at the player’s view of it.

The German media’s view is clear. “If Eintracht still manages to finish in seventh place, nobody will care,” wrote Kicker’s Moritz Kreilinger. “Riera will certainly try to claim it as his own achievement. And if it doesn’t work out? Then, in typical Riera fashion, he’ll probably tell everyone one last time how great his work is, how fantastic the team atmosphere is, and at least indirectly blame Frankfurt’s failure on his predecessors.”

Riera has burned every bridge with his audience in a way few do and his ambitious and progressive club are well aware of this. Markus Krösche, Eintracht’s sporting director, gave a terse “yes” when questioned by ZDF on whether Riera would be in place for the finale next week. He didn’t speak with the demeanour of a man who had other options.

At Augsburg, though, things are more positive. After their win over Gladbach – whose coach, Eugen Polanski, despite having a contract valid for next season, is likely to be on his way given their crawl to safety – they are level on points with Eintracht and one behind Freiburg, perfectly placed to snatch an astonishing European qualification should those two stumble.

Manuel Baum, back at Augsburg for a second (interim) spell in charge, took over from Sandro Wagner in December with the team bottom on 13 points. Now Baum, enjoying huge support in the dressing room, surely has to stay on. “It’s absolutely incredible what we’ve managed in recent weeks,” said the sporting director, Benjamin Weber.

There is plenty of drama left in the season, but the direction of travel for 2026-27 is largely set.

Quick Guide

Bundesliga results

Show

Borussia Dortmund 3-2 Eintracht Frankfurt, VfB Stuttgart 3-1 Bayer Leverkusen, Hoffenheim 1-0 Werder, Augsburg 3-1 Borussia Mönchengladbach, RB Leipzig 2-1 St. Pauli, Wolfsburg 0-1 Bayern Munich, Hamburg 3-2 Freiburg, Köln 1-3 Heidenheim, Mainz 1-3 Union Berlin

Talking points

  • Despite their season being effectively over after their agonising Champions League exit to Paris Saint-Germain, Bayern played their part in setting up this edge-of-the-seat final day, winning 1-0 at Wolfsburg despite Harry Kane missing a first Bundesliga penalty (in no small part due to Jeanuël Belocian sneakily damaging the spot, undetected). Michael Olisescored a stunning winner after Jonas Urbig performed excellently to keep the strugglers at bay.

  • Die Wölfe may eventually be grateful for keeping the score down; after resurgent Heidenheim’s 3-1 win at now-safe Köln. That means the bottom three of Wolfsburg, Heidenheim and St Pauli (who lost at Leipzig, with the Saxony club sealing third place) are all on 26 points and three apart on goal difference. Wolfsburg travel to St Pauli while Heidenheim host Mainz, with two automatic relegation spots and a place in the playoff to be decided.

  • Dortmund’s Friday night was full of farewells, to Julian Brandt (with his potential successor, Samuele Inacio scoring a debut goal), the retiring Niklas Süle and ex-sporting director Sebastian Kehl all saying goodbye. Marie-Louise Eta will get the chance to do the same to the Union Berlin first team next week at home to Augsburg with a first win under her belt, sealed in the closing minutes at Mainz.

Read Entire Article
IDX | INEWS | SINDO | Okezone |