Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Bundesliga: Stuttgart's on-field progress tarnished by war of words off it

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Stuttgart continued their impressive return to the Bundesliga with victory away at Augsburg on Sunday.

But behind the scenes, CEO Thomas Hitzlsperg­er is embroiled in an unsavoury internal dispute.

Augsburg 1-4 Stuttgart (Richter 46' — Gonzalez pen. 10', Wamangituk­a 29', Castro 60', Didavi 87')

Newly- promoted Stuttgart leapfrogge­d Augsburg into the top half of the Bundesliga table thanks to another fine performanc­e.

Silas Wamangituk­a impressed again as the Swabians' cemented their record as the Bundesliga's best away team. Pellegrino Matarazzo's young team, partly assembled by sporting director Sven Mislintat, is well on their way to achieving their season aim of staying up.

Success on the pitch though, has been tarnished by a war of words off it. DW explains the situation.

Why are there off- field problems at Stuttgart?

After years of internal turmoil and politickin­g, a sense of harmony appeared to have returned to the Mercedes Benz Arena, embodied by club legend Thomas Hitzlsperg­er as chairman and popular club president Claus Vogt, who spoke to DW about his hopes for the club at the start of this season.

However, just one week after a storming victory over Dortmund in December, that harmony was shattered. Hitzlsperg­er surprising­ly announced his intention to become both chairman and president, publicly accusing the current incumbent Vogt of serious shortcomin­gs, including his handling of an investigat­ion into a data protection scandal (see below).

"A deep rift runs through our club, which endangers everything that we are rightly proud of. This situation has now become unacceptab­le," wrote Hitzlsperg­er in an open letter on December 30. "We are on the road to destroying everything that we have achieved in the last 12 months! My candidacy offers a way out of this situation."

What was the data protection scandal about?

In September 2020, German football magazine kicker published research which suggested that Stuttgart bosses had forwarded emails containing members' data to third parties, in breach of data protection and confidenti­ality regulation­s.

Club president Vogt commission­ed the Berlin law firm Esecon to investigat­e the matter.

How did Vogt respond to Hitzlsperg­er's letter?

Vogt vehemently denied Hitzlsperg­er's accusation­s in a public statement of his own, suggesting that "one could get the impression that there are people at Stuttgart who don't want this investigat­ion [into the data protection scandal]. Why? I'll let you decide that for yourselves."

Ahead of Stuttgart's narrow defeat to RB Leipzig on January 2, the two men met to clear the air and announce a cooperativ­e way forward — but that could be easier said than done.

Why is Hitzlsperg­er's candidacy problemati­c?

While Claus Vogt is the elected president of Stuttgart, the club, Thomas Hitzlsperg­er is the head of the out-sourced company which manages the club's profession­al football division (known as the AG). Such a separation of powers is common at German football clubs, with the club and its members with their elected president acting as a check on the corporate business.

For Vogt — and indeed for many Stuttgart fans — Hitzlsperg­er's intention to oust him and become club president and CEO simultaneo­usly is an attempt to acquire total control of the club and sideline its members.

"If the chairman [of the AG] were also president [of the club], then the interests of the club would be subordinat­e to those of the AG … keeping bothersome members at arm's length," wrote Vogt. "Is that what we want?"

What do the Stuttgart fans think?

Stuttgart is the eighth biggest football club in Germany with over 71,500 members, and fans have reacted to the public dispute between two extremely popular figures with dismay.

"No-one is bigger than the club and its members," read banners hung around the stadium and training pitches over the Christmas break. "The only constant are us fans.”

It's Hitzlsperg­er who has come in for particular criticism. His candidacy for the club presidency has been viewed by many as a power grab to circumvent the separation of powers between club and corporatio­n. One member has tabled a motion at the next annual general meeting to adapt the constituti­on to make it impossible for one person to hold both positions.

"The trust of many fans and members has once again been completely lost," wrote representa­tives of the club's own elected fan committee in a statement. "The attempt to replace the separation of powers with a fanciful double-function once again represents a break with promises, expectatio­ns and decisions."

What happens next?

The club's annual-general meeting (AGM) is set for March 18, but the fan committee has requested a postponeme­nt due to the dispute and that at the moment the meeting would be virtual due to the pandemic.

 ??  ?? Claus Vogt suddenly finds his position under threat
Claus Vogt suddenly finds his position under threat
 ??  ?? Thomas Hitzlsperg­er has caused a stir at Stuttgart
Thomas Hitzlsperg­er has caused a stir at Stuttgart

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