@vieri As it turns out, Nagelsmann actually overachieved. They were still on track for a triple and absolutely flawless in the CL (including 2 straight wins against finalist Inter). What did Bayern expect Nagelsmann to do if they replaced Lewandowski with Choupo-Moting? The coach was not the problem.
@stuckonautomatic The coach was a big misunderstanding. His style of football didn't work in a long run and wasn't suited for possession type football. There was no ball control, no good build up, no creative play. Everything based purely on speed, pressing and high intensity.
So it is no surprise that ALL of Nagelsmann's teams ALWAYS collapsed in the second part of the season without exception.
@neumi17 This is a truckload of BS. No ball control and possession type football? Bayern had the highest percentage of possession in Europe. No good build up? Those frigging 90 goals in all competitions were scored by chance, I guess. No creative play? Hilarious! Would you care to show me Tuchel's "creative play"? Actually, Nagelsmann's Bayern created more scoring opportunities than Tuchel's Bayern. Nagelsmann's team "always" collapse in the second part of the season? Like last season when they won the Bundesliga on the 31st matchday against Dortmund and finished the season with one win, one loss and one draw? Well, I'd take that! Just look at the stats before spewing nonsense.
In the 73th minute. Szabolai had one shot om goal. It doesnt mention in your match commentatory and player stats..
2 losses in 8 games under Tuchel (4 if you count cup competitions) and they said Nagelsmann was the problem?
@vieri Obviously the team and it's chemistry was the problem. Nagelsmann lost 9 points to Dortmund in just a few weeks ...
@vieri As it turns out, Nagelsmann actually overachieved. They were still on track for a triple and absolutely flawless in the CL (including 2 straight wins against finalist Inter). What did Bayern expect Nagelsmann to do if they replaced Lewandowski with Choupo-Moting? The coach was not the problem.
@stuckonautomatic The coach was a big misunderstanding. His style of football didn't work in a long run and wasn't suited for possession type football. There was no ball control, no good build up, no creative play. Everything based purely on speed, pressing and high intensity. So it is no surprise that ALL of Nagelsmann's teams ALWAYS collapsed in the second part of the season without exception.
@neumi17 This is a truckload of BS. No ball control and possession type football? Bayern had the highest percentage of possession in Europe. No good build up? Those frigging 90 goals in all competitions were scored by chance, I guess. No creative play? Hilarious! Would you care to show me Tuchel's "creative play"? Actually, Nagelsmann's Bayern created more scoring opportunities than Tuchel's Bayern. Nagelsmann's team "always" collapse in the second part of the season? Like last season when they won the Bundesliga on the 31st matchday against Dortmund and finished the season with one win, one loss and one draw? Well, I'd take that! Just look at the stats before spewing nonsense.
Hopefully Borussia D. doesn't fck this up now....
@moo13 You'd have to go all the way to north London to find finer bottlejobs. They'll find a way
3-1
@neumi17 in reversed
@Jinsha_0982 Yes