Shanghai Daily

Labbadia living up to ‘fireman’ fame at Hertha

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BRUNO Labbadia might have been seen as a rather desperate appointmen­t by Hertha Berlin but his reputation as a coaching “fireman” has been consolidat­ed by a flying start to his job.

Labbadia became Hertha’s fourth coach of the season when the German capital club hired him in April, amid the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, turning to a man whose trips on the Bundesliga carousel have taken him to a record 10 different clubs as player and coach.

Hertha was six points above the relegation zone when the 54-year-old Labbadia took over and his task was to stop it from slipping into further danger.

“With Bruno we get someone who has known the Bundesliga in detail for many years as a player and coach and has shown that he can stabilize teams,” Hertha technical director Michael Preetz said.

Labbadia’s impact has been a lot more than that, however, turning Hertha into one of the few form sides since the resumption of action in mid-May.

It has jumped up the standings with 10 points from four games under his command and can now ponder the possibilit­y of qualifying for European competitio­n next season.

It is only four points off sixth place in the table which offers a berth in the Europa League, although has five tough remaining fixtures, starting with Borussia Dortmund away on Saturday.

“After 35 years in the Bundesliga as a player and coach, I am still hungry — especially if we continue the way we are playing now,” said Labbadia after Saturday’s 2-0 home win over FC Augsburg.

“But we still have a lot of work ahead of us. We must remain humble and try to improve further together! We defend together, we attack together.”

Left back Maximilian Mittelstad­t said the turnaround was due to improved team spirit. “We are all fighting for one another. Our best attribute at the moment is that we are covering up for each other’s mistakes,” he said.

“We have taken on Bruno Labbadia’s ideas and are working well as a team, something that had been missing previously. We want to continue this good run in the final few weeks.”

Elsewhere on Saturday, Robert Lewandowsk­i scored twice as Bayern Munich took a confident step closer to an eighth straight German title with a 5-0 demolition of Fortuna Duesseldor­f in an empty stadium.

With five games remaining, Bayern moved into a 10-point lead over Dortmund, which was at Paderborn yesterday.

Only Bayern’s players and staff were there to cheer the kind of dominant win which would normally put Bayern fans in a party mood. Bayern has won 14 of its last 15 league games as it cruises toward the title, including a potential title-deciding 1-0 win over Dortmund last Tuesday.

(Agencies)

 ??  ?? FC Augsburg midfielder Rani Khedira (right) and Hertha Berlin midfielder Marko Grujic vie for the ball during their Bundesliga match in Berlin on Saturday. — AFP
FC Augsburg midfielder Rani Khedira (right) and Hertha Berlin midfielder Marko Grujic vie for the ball during their Bundesliga match in Berlin on Saturday. — AFP

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