Business Day

‘Der Kaiser’: an icon of German success

• Beckenbaue­r won every major honour but his image was later tarnished

- Karolos Grohmann

Franz Beckenbaue­r, who has died at the age of 78, helped modernise football and came to personify Germany’s postwar sporting success, captaining his country to the 1974 World Cup title on home soil, an achievemen­t that anchored his legacy.

“Der Kaiser”, as he was nicknamed for his imperious playing style and command of the game, was for decades synonymous with Germany’s success on the pitch, as player and then coach.

He amassed every major honour in his glittering playing career and continued his extraordin­ary record of success after switching to the manager’s bench.

Beckenbaue­r won 103 caps and captained the then West Germany to World Cup success in 1974, two years after lifting the European title.

At club level he steered Bayern Munich to three successive European Cup victories from 1974 to 1976 and won the World Club Cup, the European Cup Winners’ Cup and eight domestic trophies — four league titles and four cup triumphs.

He was West Germany’s footballer of the year a record four times and twice European footballer of the year.

Widely regarded as one of the greatest football players of all time, and by many as the best European, as a player he invented and defined the modern libero role.

Always calm under pressure and a skilful marshal of his defence, Beckenbaue­r could read the game so astutely he knew exactly the right moment to surge upfield.

The unhurried sweeper never seemed to break sweat as he sprayed perfect long raking passes to his strikers.

He enjoyed success as a coach while leading the Germans to the 1990 World Cup title in Italy, one of only three men to have won world titles as both player and coach.

But despite heading the 2006 World Cup on home soil as organising chief, his reputation was tarnished in recent years after an investigat­ion into a potential slush fund for that tournament and a €6.7m payment to world football’s governing body Fifa in 2005.

Beckenbaue­r, who had been battling several health issues in recent years, denied any wrongdoing and largely withdrew from the public eye.

Born in Munich on September 11 1945, Beckenbaue­r, a postal official’s son who once trained to be an insurance salesman, joined Bayern’s youth teams in 1959.

He progressed to the first team and, with Beckenbaue­r orchestrat­ing from midfield, Bayern rocketed to internatio­nal prominence from the obscurity of West German regional league soccer to establish the most powerful brand in German football.

Shortly after his 20th birthday Beckenbaue­r was capped for the first time in a World Cup qualifier against Sweden and became a fixture in the national team, a stattus that lasted for more than a decade.

Beckenbaue­r produced notable performanc­es in three World Cups before moving across the Atlantic to New York Cosmos in a multimilli­on-dollar deal in 1977.

He stayed in the US for three lucrative years before returning to West Germany in a shock move that took him to Bayern’s northern rivals Hamburg SV.

Beckenbaue­r retired to a comfortabl­e life at his home in the Austrian ski resort of Kitzbuehel, spending much of his time on the local golf course.

But he kept in the public eye with a regular column in West Germany’s mass-circulatio­n Bild newspaper and eventually took over as Germany coach despite his lack of managerial experience.

Beckenbaue­r brought discipline to the squad and commanded instant respect.

Less than two years after taking over, he guided West Germany to the 1986 World Cup final in Mexico where they lost 3-2 to Diego Maradona’s Argentina.

However, they won the title four years later in a rematch against the Argentinia­ns to give Beckenbaue­r a rare World Cup double as player and then coach and enhance his legacy.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Legacy: Franz Beckenbaue­r after being inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2019, a permanent exhibition at the German Football Museum in Dortmund honouring German soccer legends.
/Reuters Legacy: Franz Beckenbaue­r after being inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2019, a permanent exhibition at the German Football Museum in Dortmund honouring German soccer legends.

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