Gulf News

GERMANY AND BAYERN MIDFIELDER SAYS PAST COUNTS FOR NOTHING

- By Gernmany skipper

Growing up in southern Germany, Bastian Schweinste­iger’s favorite players were Lothar Matthaus and Flemming Povlsen. The successful Matthaus because he won a World Cup for Germany and seven Bundesliga titles for Bayern Munich. And Povlsen? Well, Schweinste­iger and his brother Tobias thought the Borussia Dortmund striker “was really cool”.

Now, however, Schweinste­iger appears poised to eclipse both his idols. Last summer, he helped Germany win a first World Cup since Matthaus’ 1990 championsh­ip, while Saturday’s 6-0 rout of Paderborn moved Bayern a step closer to their eighth league title in Schweinste­iger’s 13 seasons there. And, four days before that, Schweinste­iger captained a 10-man Bayern to a scoreless Champions League draw with Shakhtar Donetsk that, while disappoint­ing, still has the Munich club on track to reach the quarter-finals of a tournament he has already won once.

Mix in a Club World Cup title, seven German Cups and a few other odd championsh­ips, and Schweinste­iger has hoisted 21 of world football’s most prestigiou­s trophies — or 20 more than Povlsen won. What could be cooler than that?

“Yes, I have to say you’re right. That’s true,” Schweinste­iger joked. “We have a very good generation. We have big players. And I know that.”

Demanding fans

There’s no chance they’ll be able to rest on those laurels though. Not in Germany, where last year his club clinched the league title quicker than any team in history, then won a second consecutiv­e Bundesliga-German Cup double — only to be roundly criticised by their demanding fans when they failed to reach the Champions League final for the first time in three seasons.

“There were a lot of people who thought that [season] was not a success,” said Schweinste­iger, a physically imposing yet tireless midfielder. “In Germany, you always have to look to the future and not back. You have to take it now and not in two or three years.”

That’s why he said Bayern’s only league loss this season, a 4-1 reverse against Wolfsburg last month, may have been the team’s most important result because it proved to the players that they aren’t invincible. After refocusing, Bayern won their last three league games by a combined score of 16-0.

“Sometimes it’s not bad when you lose one game,” he said. “Maybe it was a good example for us.”

Ironically, last spring’s lone failure for Schweinste­iger and Bayern Munich may also have had a positive impact because the loss to Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-finals gave Bayern’s seven national team players an extra week’s rest before the World Cup. It was a break that proved especially important for Schweinste­iger, who missed Bayern’s

Bastian Schweinste­iger final game with a knee injury.

But, while the World Cup was the unquestion­ed high point, it was by no means the only highlight of a career that has seen Schweinste­iger play for arguably the most dominant club team and the most successful national team of the last decade.

Record success

Since he joined the first team at the age of 18, Bayern Munich have won seven league titles and reached three of the last five Champions League finals.

No other German club has won more than five German championsh­ips in the Bundesliga era, which began in 1963. And no other team on the continent has played in more than one Champions League final since 2010.

At internatio­nal level, Germany — who Schweinste­iger

| also now captains — are the only side to reach the semifinals in each of the last three World Cups. And Germany are one of only two teams, alongside Spain, to reach the final four of the last two European Championsh­ips.

Schweinste­iger accomplish­ed all that before his 30th birthday. As a result, kids all over Germany are now looking up to him and that’s even more pressure. “There’s no time to relax,” he said. “I know I’ve had a lot of luck in my career to play with these great players and these great teams.”

The final chapter isn’t written though. Could a trip to the US and Major League Soccer be in his future? “The quality is going to be better and better. And I could see that,” he said of MLS. “We will see what happens in the future. But, to be honest, I like the States.”

In Germany, you always have to look to the future and not back. You have to take it now and not in two or three years.”

 ?? AFP ?? Leading the way Bayern Munich midfielder Bastian Schweinste­iger has won 21 titles in all competitio­ns.
AFP Leading the way Bayern Munich midfielder Bastian Schweinste­iger has won 21 titles in all competitio­ns.

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