Football

Xabi Alonso’s Leverkusen Makes History, Wins Their First Bundesliga Title

 

Former Bayer Leverkusen sporting director Reiner Calmund once said that in the cruel and unforgiving world of football, “You are worth nothing without a title.” And his club didn’t have one. They just had a nickname: ‘Vizekusen’, which literally translated as ‘Secondkusen’. In English, though, Bayer were better known as ‘Neverkusen’, the German game’s eternal bridesmaids, a seemingly cursed club incapable of escaping its painful past.

In the space of six seasons around the turn of the century, Leverkusen finished as runners-up four times. In 2000, they threw away the title despite only needing a draw in their final game, against SpVgg Unterhaching, a club best known for its bobsleigh team. Bayer buckled under the pressure again two years later, losing two of their final three games to hand the league to Borussia Dortmund.

Leverkusen really outdid themselves in 2001-02, though. A week after their Bundesliga blow, they suffered a demoralising 4-2 defeat to Schalke in the DFB-Pokal final. Four days later, Bayer were beaten by Real Madrid in the final of the Champions League, victims of a Zinedine Zidane wonder-goal.

Manager Klaus Toppmoller had called for celebratory wine and cigarettes after the shock semi-final win over Manchester United but, in Glasgow, he was almost reaching for the painkillers after a terrific team containing great players like Lucio, Michael Ballack and Ze Roberto ended a sensational season empty-handed.

“I am proud of what we have achieved this season, but we have played so hard and it hurts us to end with nothing,” he told reporters. “The disappointment is huge – you don’t always get the rewards you deserve in football, and no-one knows that better than us after what we have been through. What has happened to us is difficult to take and makes us feel bitter.”

Leverkusen would finish second again in 2010-11, for the fifth time in the club’s history, although at least on that occasion there was no devastating collapse. Nonetheless, the ‘Neverkusen’ nickname endured. It became part of the club’s culture.

Bayer continued to produce world-class players. but success remained just as elusive. “The quality has always been there in Leverkusen,” Ballack lamented in an interview with 11Freunde, “but something has always been missing.” That something, it turns out, was Xabi Alonso, who has just led Leverkusen to their first ever Bundesliga title with five games to spare.

On the day that Xabi Alonso brought the curtain down on his illustrious playing career, Pep Guardiola, his former boss at Bayern Munich, lamented the loss of “one of the best midfielders” he’d ever seen – but immediately reassured the world of football: “He will come back soon as a manager and, wherever he goes, I bet that he will be good.”

Alonso hasn’t just lived up to Guardiola’s expectations, though; he’s surpassed them. Indeed, when asked about the job his former charge was doing at Leverkusen, the Manchester City manager simply smiled, paused for a second and then just said, “Wow!”

Jurgen Klopp, meanwhile, has called Alonso “the standout” among the next generation of game-changing tacticians, which is why Liverpool tried to hire him as the German’s successor, while Bayern wanted him to clean up the mess Thomas Tuchel is going to leave behind at the Allianz Arena this summer. Given he’s now decided to stay at the BayArena for another season, Real Madrid will likely try to bring Alonso back to Santiago Bernabeu next summer. Quite simply, there really is no more coveted coach in world football at the moment.

It’s funny, then, to think that while Leverkusen’s appointment of Alonso in October 2022 was considered quite the coup for the struggling German club, it was also met with some “scepticism”.

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