Shanghai Daily

Schalke coach on brink

- SOCCER

IT was supposed to be a marriage made in heaven when David Wagner took over at success-starved Schalke 04 at the start of the season but if the club’s recent slump continues they could soon be heading for a messy divorce.

Wagner, a former Borussia Dortmund youth coach during Juergen Klopp’s time there, was hailed as one of the game’s brightest talents after guiding Huddersfie­ld Town to the English Premier League in 2017 and keeping it there the following season.

Arriving at Schalke, which is without a German championsh­ip title since 1958, the 48-year-old was tasked with stabilizin­g the side after years of roller-coaster campaigns. He had a bright start, guiding the team to fourth place and ahead of Bayern Munich after the first 15 matches and letting the fans dream of a UEFA Champions League place.

But the honeymoon period was short. When the league resumed in January, Schalke had lost its ability to score, notching five goals and just one win in 12 matches. A two-month break due to the COVID-19 pandemic has done nothing to reverse its fortunes, with Schalke losing all four games and scoring just once since the May 16 restart.

The loss of Germany internatio­nal Suat Serdar for the remainder of the season due to injury was a further blow.

Its free fall since the winter break has seen the club tumble to 10th place, all but eliminatin­g any chance of European competitio­n next season.

Just 10 days ago, club bosses were moved to guarantee Wagner, whose contract runs out in 2022, would still be in charge next season but last week’s 0-1 home loss to relegation-threatened Werder Bremen has ratcheted up the pressure.

“We have to start delivering other kinds of performanc­es and we have to start immediatel­y,” Schalke sports director Jochen Schneider said this week. “We have to stop presenting ourselves in this victim role.”

Wagner will be hoping the turnaround starts at Union Berlin on Sunday.

(Reuters)

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