The Guardian (USA)

Kovac steers Wolves out of the woods amid shambles of Hertha Berlin

- Andy Brassell

Wolves are built to thrive in bitter winter, so with the champions still struggling to de-ice the windscreen and get the motor running, who better to assume the role of Bayern for now? In a glacial Olympiasta­dion in Berlin on Tuesday, Wolfsburg flamed their hosts, Hertha, 5-0 to make it two wins, 11 goals scored and none conceded.

They remain seventh, but three points off third place and with a better goal difference, and defensive record, than any team beyond Bayern.

They are imperious. It was their sixth league win in a row and they’ve kept clean sheets in five. Niko Kovac’s team have not lost since a defeat at Union in mid-September and it didn’t look for a minute as if the capsizing Hertha had the chops to change that. “The first half was the worst thing I’ve seen this season,” a disgusted Hertha sporting director, Fredi Bobic, told Sky. “The players know that too.”

With a sub-30,000 crowd rattling around the colossal bowl and the Kurve hardcore giving their team the cold shoulder by the end, Kovac showed a genuine sadness for his home town club. He played 148 Bundesliga 2 games for them in the 1990s and they were keen to bring him back as coach in the summer before the appointmen­t of Sandro Schwarz. “I really hope they get out of [the relegation zone],” he said. “My heart is attached to Hertha.”

The shambles Wolfsburg simply stepped over underlined how Kovac might have made the right choice, but it also highlighte­d how much he might have helped, having dealt with his own share of an hour up the road in Lower Saxony. Little has come easy to Kovac in his coaching career but it had been an inauspicio­us start to his latest job. Wolfsburg won one of his first seven Bundesliga games, losing four. There were calls for his head.

On top of that, he had to deal with Max Kruse, signed back from Union at no small expense to steer the team away from the drop this time last year but perceived by Kovac – who prides himself on extremely fit, well-drilled groups of players – as a deadweight. Despite Kruse’s periodic public barbs, the coach managed to extricate him from the squad with little fuss, no mean feat. It looks as if the striker’s next stop will be MLS, possibly even this month.

A more recent problem has been that of Josuha Guilavogui, who has requested to be allowed to join VfB Stuttgart with his contract running down. Despite Guilavogui being somewhat less brash than Kruse, it could be a more complex situation. The 32-yearold has been a good servant and has to be treated with tact and respect. The feeling is that Kovac, backed by a capable sporting director (and club legend) in Marcel Schäfer, is being firm but fair.

“If a player has a certain wish, then we listen to it,” Schäfer said after the game in Berlin, “but that doesn’t mean that we’ll fulfil every one of them. I also want a lot of things, but they’re not all possible.”

It is understand­able why Kovac wants to hang on to the French midfielder, bringing him on in the second half in the capital to see things out as Kevin-Prince Boateng stood in front of the Hertha bench to try to get his side going, eliciting at least some reaction. “You can see how much we need [Guilavogui],” Schäfer said. “As soon as things get a bit agitated, his experience and presence become incredibly important.” Wolfsburg have been where Hertha are, throwing around money with little plan or strategy. They work best when they are sensible and stable rather than flashy, which factors into their determinat­ion to hold on to Guilavogui for the season. He is one of three in the squad in the club’s top 10 appearance makers of all-time, along with the goalkeeper Koen Casteels and the irrepressi­ble Maxi Arnold, who is closing in on the club’s record of 381 set by Olaf Ansorge in the 80s and early 90s.

There is young blood, too. Patrick Wimmer, who got the post-Christmas party started with a goal in the first minute against Freiburg on Saturday, was back to his speciality here – laying them on for others, as he set up Matthias Svanberg for the opener. As Kicker’s Thomas Hiete noted, the Austrian’s teammates had already merrily brought up over lunch the Opta statistic that only three players in Europe’s top five leagues provide more than one key pass a match. The former Wolfsburge­r Kevin De Bruyne, inevitably, leads the way, with Lionel Messi in third, making it a Wimmer sandwich. “I’ve noticed,” he said, grinning bashfully. “It’s nice to be in there.”

The 21-year-old’s bag of five Bundesliga assists would look plumper were there a consistent goalscorer in Kovac’s midst. Unlike Wolfsburg’s last successful side, there is no Wout Weghorst to act as focal point. The Manchester City academy product Lukas Nmecha offered promise in that direction, but had his ups and downs this season before sustaining the ankle injury that has kept him out since November, wrecking his World Cup hopes.

In Nmecha’s absence (his younger brother Felix is also at the club), goals have been spread around, with Yannick Gerhardt, Arnold, Ridle Baku and Jonas Wind chipping in, as the last three did again on Tuesday.

Wolfsburg have been on runs before. They built their sole Bundesliga title win, in 2009, on a run of 10 straight wins in spring, including a 5-1 over Bayern when Edin Dzeko and Grafite ran amok. It is unlikely we’ll see anything so dramatic from this generation, but their nod to the past has certainly helped the Bundesliga kick off 2023 in style.

Talking points

• Bayern remain four points clear at the top but needed a Joshua Kimmich thunderbol­t in the last minute to salvage a draw at home to a determined Köln side, who led for most of the game. “We lacked the attitude and focus,” said Kimmich. Their sporting director, Hasan Salihamidz­ic, heavily criticised Serge Gnabry (who came off at half-time) for being “amateurish” in going to Paris fashion week rather

than resting after the draw with Leipzig.

• Another day for Dortmund, another unconvinci­ng performanc­e … but also another late winner from the substitute Gio Reyna, this time at Mainz. “We know we still have a lot of work to,” said Edin Terzic. Sébastien

Haller again made an impact off the bench, nodding Reyna in for his goal, but it feels as if BVB’s current trajectory leaves them playing with fire in such a competitiv­e Champions League race.

• Elsewhere, full marks to Union, in second before Saturday’s Berlin derby after a 2-1 win at Werder Bremen, and third-placed Leipzig, who shredded sorry Schalke 6-1, with the latter game marred by minor clashes between ultra groups.

 ?? Photograph: Maja Hitij/Getty Images ?? Wolfsburg players celebrate towards their fans after the 5-0 victory at Hertha Berlin.
Photograph: Maja Hitij/Getty Images Wolfsburg players celebrate towards their fans after the 5-0 victory at Hertha Berlin.
 ?? ?? The Olympiasta­dion’s big screen at the end of the game. Photograph: Maja Hitij/ Getty Images
The Olympiasta­dion’s big screen at the end of the game. Photograph: Maja Hitij/ Getty Images

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