The New Gaffer: Introducing Labbadia at Bayer Leverkusen

by Mark on August 7, 2008 · 2 comments

Bruno LabbadiaA look at Bayer Leverkusen’s Bruno Lab­ba­dia con­cludes our The New Gaffer: Intro­duc­ing… series this week. So far we’ve exam­ined, in order: the jour­ney­man, the com­pany man, the stranger and, er, Mar­tin Jol. Lab­ba­dia is a mix between a poor man’s Jür­gen Klins­mann and a poor man’s Chris­t­ian Bale (take a look!). In other words, Lab­ba­dia was over­shad­owed as a player by Klins­mann, yet, like Bale, he has more coach­ing expe­ri­ence than Bayern’s new gaffer.

In his near 20-year long play­ing career he trav­eled the breadth of Ger­many from Kaiser­slautern to Cologne (Köln) to Karl­sruhe (and some cities not begin­ning with K, too). From 1991 to 1994 he played for Bay­ern München, mak­ing him the third man­ager pro­filed (along­side Klins­mann and Jol) to have played for the Bavar­ian giants. Inter­est­ingly enough he is the only player to have scored at least 100 goals in both the 1. (104) and 2. (101) Bun­desliga.  That’s quite an achieve­ment for one’s resume, so imme­di­ately after hang­ing up his boots in 2003 he was hired as a manager.

He made his debut on the side­lines of SV Darm­stadt 98, in the same sta­dium where he made his pro­fes­sional debut in 1984. He per­formed well enough in his three sea­sons with die Lil­lien (the lilies) to be offered a posi­tion with die Klee­blät­ter (the clover­leaves) of SpVgg Greuther Fürth, a step up in both foot­balling and tax­o­nomic class. In his one year at Fürth Lab­ba­dia did lit­tle to upset the del­i­cate equi­lib­rium in place, keep­ing the club in its vex­ing “almost, but not quite pro­moted” table posi­tion (plac­ing 6th last year and 5th the pre­vi­ous three). Not pre­pared to take part in the Germany’s most-played rivalry (the Frank­enderby) with the rel­e­ga­tion of 1. FC Nürn­berg last sea­son, Lab­ba­dia instead became Bayer Leverkusen’s 24th man­ager. He enters a fairly sta­ble envi­ron­ment at the BayArena, although ques­tions about the team’s strik­ers must be addressed before the team can seri­ously con­sider its first Bun­desliga championship.

Dim­i­tar Berba­tov was the team’s last out and out striker, scor­ing 57 goals his last three years at the club. His move to Tot­ten­ham for 16 mil­lion Euros in 2006 left a void that has yet to be ade­quately filled. No Lev­erkusen striker remain­ing inspires much con­fi­dence. Patrick Helmes and Richard Sukuta-Pasu are still inex­pe­ri­enced, although Helmes did well in the 2. Bun­desliga with Cologne and Sukuta-Pasu had an excel­lent UEFA U-19 tour­na­ment. The rest: The­o­fa­nis Gekas, Ste­fan Kiessling, Dmitri Bulykin are all older, but also rel­a­tive new­com­ers to the club. None has stepped for­ward to take over Berbatov’s man­tle. That is rather impor­tant because…

Lev­erkusen are con­sis­tent Euro­pean com­peti­tors, except for the occa­sional unex­pected blip caused by a marked decline in offen­sive out­put. If the trend holds (though there’s no rea­son to actu­ally call it a trend) Leverkusen’s due for a fall soon. Each of the pre­vi­ous dis­mal sea­sons (1995/96 and 2002/03) were marked by lack­lus­ter offen­sive show­ings of 37 and 47 goals respec­tively. In all other sea­sons going back to 1990/91 Lev­erkusen have scored at least 50 goals and have placed no worse than 7th. The pre­vi­ous two sea­sons they’ve man­aged to scrape by with low top­scor­ers, but that can’t last. Bernd Schnei­der can’t con­tinue to pro­vide goals and inspi­ra­tion from the mid­field at his age (he turns 35 this Novem­ber). Lab­ba­dia must either find a true preda­tor on the trans­fer mar­ket or hope that he is able to mold one of his cur­rent play­ers into one, oth­er­wise things look grim.

While this brings an end to the series itself there is one bonus tid­bit as promised last week: a brief look at man­age­r­ial changes in the Bun­desliga over the years. Every 2008/09 Bun­desliga club is listed except for Cot­tbus and Hof­fen­heim. Cot­tbus, as a for­mer GDR side, and Hof­fen­heim, with their mete­oric rise, would skew the num­bers (also, it was impos­si­ble to find the infor­ma­tion for either cov­er­ing the 45-year time period).

Bundesliga-era num­ber of coaches (teams with new train­ers in bold)*:

Biele­feld: 42
Bay­ern: 20
Bochum: 18
Bre­men: 25
Cologne: 37
Dort­mund: 40
Frank­furt: 36
Ham­burg: 26
Han­nover: 45
Hertha: 33
Karl­sruhe: 27
Lev­erkusen: 24
Mönchenglad­bach: 21
Schalke: 38
Stuttgart: 35
Wolfs­burg: 24

Bayern’s long-term dom­i­nance skews the sta­tis­tics, but a pat­tern is dis­cernible. My ini­tial, uno­rig­i­nal, thought that the num­ber of train­ers is inversely related to the degree of a club’s suc­cess is mostly true. Bay­ern, Mönchenglad­bach, Bre­men and Ham­burg are four of the five most suc­cess­ful Bun­desliga sides and each have had 26 or fewer gaffers. Only Stuttgart with three titles and 35 man­agers is the exception.

* Not all clubs may have listed caretakers

GD Star Rat­ing
load­ing…

2 comments… read them below or add one

1 bryan SFO August 8, 2008 at 6:10 pm

Ha ha, he does look like Christian Bale.

It's interesting to see how Leverkusen hasn't made the most of the talent they've had. Berbatov, Voronin, and Rudi Voeller have all performed better elsewhere.

Reply

2 bryan SFO August 9, 2008 at 12:10 am

Ha ha, he does look like Christian Bale.

It’s interesting to see how Leverkusen hasn’t made the most of the talent they’ve had. Berbatov, Voronin, and Rudi Voeller have all performed better elsewhere.

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: