Malta Independent

Struggling Arminia Bielefeld fires coach Uwe Neuhaus

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Relegation-threatened Arminia Bielefeld fired Uwe Neuhaus on Monday less than a season after the coach led the club to Bundesliga promotion.

The club said it was also letting go of assistant coach Peter Nemeth, and it would make an announceme­nt regarding Neuhaus' successor soon.

Bielefeld is third-to-last in the relegation/promotion playoff place in the 18-team division. Hertha Berlin is just ahead on goal difference, and improving Mainz is only one point behind in a direct relegation place. Bielefeld still has a game in hand, however.

Bielefeld claimed just one point from its last five games – a 3-3 draw at Bayern Munich – and the 3-0 loss at Borussia Dortmund on Saturday was the fifth in a row in which the team conceded at least three goals.

The 61-year-old Neuhaus was immensely popular with Bielefeld's fans after leading it to its surprise promotion after 11 years away from the Bundesliga. He had been in charge of the club since December 2018. But Neuhaus reportedly clashed with sporting director Samir Arabi over squad selections and tactics.

Neuhaus' position was already under threat in the opening half of the season after seven straight defeats, but the team stabilized with 13 points from its following eight games.

Bielefeld next plays Neuhaus' ex-club, Union Berlin, on Sunday, while it faces Werder Bremen in their reschedule­d game on March 10.

Catalan police detained several people after raiding Barcelona's stadium on Monday in a search and seizure operation, adding to the club's turmoil less than a week before it holds presidenti­al elections.

The operation was related to last year's "Barçagate," in which club officials were accused of launching a smear campaign against current and former players who were critical of the club and then-president Josep Maria Bartomeu.

Police said detentions were made but did not say who or how many people were taken into custody.

The club said it offered "full collaborat­ion to the legal and police authoritie­s to help make clear facts which are subject to investigat­ion." It added the case was related "to the contacting of monitoring services on social networks."

"The informatio­n and documentat­ion requested by the judicial police force relate strictly to the facts relative to this case," the club said. "FC Barcelona express its utmost respect for the judicial process in place and for the principle of presumed innocence for the people affected within the remit of this investigat­ion."

The club did not mention Bartomeu, but Spanish media said he and other former club officials were among those detained.

A text message sent to Bartomeu was not immediatel­y answered.

One of the three presidenti­al candidates, Joan Laporta, told Lleida Radio that what happened on Monday "was a consequenc­e of the bad management by the previous administra­tion." He said the news of Bartomeu's reported detention was "shocking" and "not good" for the club, but noted that the former president deserved the "presumptio­n of innocence."

Laporta was Barcelona's president a decade ago and, like Bartomeu, also faced a no-confidence vote during his time in charge.

Court officials said a judge ordered the search and seize operation but the detentions had been made at the discretion of the police agents involved. Authoritie­s said the operation was being carried out by the police's financial crimes department.

Barcelona had denied accusation­s that it hired — and overpaid — a company to make negative comments about its own players and opponents on social media in order to boost the image of senior club officials.

The company was accused of using fake social media accounts to discredit opposition figures when they expressed views that went against the club. Some of the figures supposedly included players such Lionel Messi and Gerard Piqué, as well as former coach Pep Guardiola.

The club later released an independen­t audit report showing that there was no wrongdoing.

Bartomeu and his board of directors resigned last year amid fallout from the controvers­y surroundin­g Messi. The club has been mired in political turmoil and debt prompted by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The club has been managed by a caretaker board since Bartomeu left in October while facing a no-confidence motion supported by thousands of club members furious at the team's poor performanc­es and the club's financial situation.

The club's struggles began to surface after the team's embarrassi­ng 8-2 loss to Bayern Munich in the quarterfin­als of the Champions League last season, which was the first without a title for the Spanish club since 2007-08.

Bartomeu was loudly criticized by Messi, especially after the former president denied the player's request to leave the club at the end of last season. Messi's contract ends this season and the Argentine great has yet to say whether he will stay or join another club.

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