Scottish Daily Mail

Leipzig project still has critics

- By DANIEL MATTHEWS

PERHAPS sometimes there is such a thing as bad publicity. As RB Leipzig prepared for the biggest game of their short history — tonight’s Champions League semi-final against Paris Saint-Germain — the German club had a late change of heart.

They stopped training near their hotel in Estoril and moved to a facility owned by the Portuguese FA.

Why? Those pitches are away from prying eyes. No spies, no unwanted attention. And yet — at least in some quarters — they needn’t have worried.

Last week, popular German football magazine 11 FREUNDE announced they would not cover the semi-final. ‘We don’t want to normalize the RB Leipzig construct any further,’ they wrote.

But to ignore this exciting team and coach Julian Nagelsmann is growing harder by the day.

In the 11 years since their formation, RB Leipzig have risen from the fifth tier to the cusp of European glory. Their bold recruitmen­t model allows them to stand among Europe’s best and their young coach uses technology and innovation to scale new heights.

For many, however, RB Leipzig jar with the essence of what football clubs are for. Where is the fairytale, critics argue, in Red Bull — a billion-pound energy drinks corporatio­n — infiltrati­ng a proud football culture for a ‘pure marketing project’?

There is certainly little romance in their roots. By mid-2009, Red Bull had considered taking over clubs such as St Pauli and Fortuna Dusseldorf, only to face fierce fan opposition.

So eventually the company turned to the German fifth tier, to SSV Markransta­dt. They bought the playing licence and dressed them in company colours.

Straight away the venture hit traffic. Opponents poured weed killer on their pitch, while the authoritie­s would not allow Red Bull in the team name.

They dodged that by using RasenBalls­port (‘lawn ball sport’) or RB Leipzig and found a loophole in Germany’s ownership regulation­s, too. The ‘50+1’ rule means clubs must be majority owned by members, typically supporters. While Borussia Dortmund have around 150,000, it’s claimed RB Leipzig have only 19 and most are linked to the drinks company.

The football has proved less of a headache. With Red Bull’s backing, Leipzig climbed into the Bundesliga within seven years. Now, they are in the last four of the Champions League.

And in keeping with this unconventi­onal incarnatio­n of modern football, Leipzig push new boundaries on the training ground.

Academy players train their mind using the SoccerBot3­60 — a circular pen with 360-degree screens that helps improve peripheral vision and anticipati­on. It can even simulate top-level matches to aid tactical analysis.

Nagelsmann, meanwhile, varies pitch sizes and shapes, while the club uses dedicated athletics coaches to help with their pressing. Defender Lukas Klosterman­n has recorded a quicker time over 30 metres than Usain Bolt.

By now, Leipzig are part of a swelling portfolio that includes New York Red Bulls, Red Bull Salzburg and Red Bull Brasil. In Germany, the ‘architect’ of their rise has been Ralf Rangnick, 62, who has worked as sporting director, manager, and mastermind of the scouting and playing philosophi­es which underpin their success.

For all their invention and ingenuity, Leipzig’s story does not tug many heart strings back home.

In 2016, Dynamo Dresden fans threw a severed bull’s head towards the pitch and Leipzig still face regular protests from opposition fans. Not because of jealously or tribalism but because, in the words of 11 FREUNDE: ‘RB Leipzig is not a football club, RB Leipzig is an imitation’.

They are ‘based on cheating’, they used a ‘few lazy tricks’ to circumvent the rules and they were ‘created solely to strengthen the Red Bull brand’.

Even when they train behind closed doors.

 ??  ?? New approach: Nagelsmann
New approach: Nagelsmann
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