Why Germany's Biggest Clubs Keep Getting Relegated

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @kyrkosekaterinaris1328
    @kyrkosekaterinaris1328 Год назад +1950

    Why does this happen? Because their football is healthy. If you don't have a good enough team, you will get relegated. It seems big clubs in most countries are not "allowed" to fail, their relegation is seen as a disaster and most of the time will be given a helping hand to stay up.
    Congratulations to Germany for still doing it right. Nobody deserves a "free pass".

    • @JesuisParte
      @JesuisParte Год назад +40

      true dat

    • @stefan5730
      @stefan5730 Год назад +255

      Yeah Spain is like that, Barcelona can be a billion euros in debt and still nothing happens.

    • @Nxxc.
      @Nxxc. Год назад

      And now their meritocracy has left them with a dictator so “healthy”

    • @Marex5341
      @Marex5341 Год назад +8

      But kyrko relegation from the premier league for example is one of the WORST things that can happen to a club☝

    • @Flinsenberger101
      @Flinsenberger101 Год назад +114

      Only partly true. It is also the case that there is an extremely lopsided payout structure in Germany. And everything is designed that the top clubs stay at the top. And that it is very hard for the lower clubs to rise in the ranks. Not that i have much pity with the fallen giants that all voted for these rules when they still were among the top clubs.
      e.g.:
      - A payout structure that gives Bayern 3 times as much money from the DFL as the lowest team. In England this is 1.3
      - seeding in the cup, lower class clubs (amateur & 3rd league) always play higher clubs
      - relegation matches for promotion (which are usually won by the higher league club, especially in the 2.league vs 1.league relegation). So there are basically only two guaranteed promotions. A playoff system as in England would be better

  • @puer4787
    @puer4787 Год назад +868

    As a big HSV fan this video was excellent.
    The part about the second Bundesliga being fun is no joke. HSV has a HIGHER attendance in the second division than we did in the first division. The fanbase is 100% behind the club qnd we're enjoying the season, our team and our games.

    • @MrSheduur
      @MrSheduur Год назад +4

      Yeah this is great, we hope you stay in second and keep enjoying yourselves while the proper clubs play in the real competition without your drama queen club for hopefully a bunch of seasons to come :)

    • @Kelxo-o7
      @Kelxo-o7 Год назад +62

      @@MrSheduur Nothing soothes my soul more than football "fans" frothing at the mouth at the mere sight of our club ♥
      have fun playing for scraps once again in the Bayernliga :)

    • @puer4787
      @puer4787 Год назад +12

      @@MrSheduur are you confusing Hamburg with herha?

    • @davinnicode
      @davinnicode Год назад +4

      @@Kelxo-o7 Delusion is strong with a lot of German football fans

    • @NotSoNarrowCast
      @NotSoNarrowCast Год назад

      HSV fans are idiots then -- I guess some dreamland about people power is more important than success, in a highly competitive sport.

  • @toph8298
    @toph8298 Год назад +333

    The mismanagement of some German clubs is really frustrating. Clubs like Hamburg and Schalke should be giants in the Bundesliga and even possibly a force in Europe. Seeing 1860 Munich struggling against Bayern’s B team sums up how polarised those two clubs have become.

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 Год назад +14

      How could they be giants of bundesliga if their star players kept getting signed by Bayern? 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @dinohermann1887
      @dinohermann1887 Год назад +10

      @@harukrentz435They are historical giants (Hamburg and Schalke both have won a lot of trophies, especially Hamburg with one Champions League trophy from 1983 and Kevin Keegan as two times Ballon d‘Or winner in 1978 and 1979, when he played for us between 1977 and 1980). We in particular have a lot of history to be proud of. Schalke meanwhile are a bit less impressive than us regarding trophies and awards, to be fair, but still managed to win quite a lot of trophies.

    • @StillAwesome21
      @StillAwesome21 Год назад +2

      ​@@harukrentz435 Open up a history book kiddo, this isn't as new or common as you think it is.

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames Год назад

      Well, you can bail out mismanagement with fresh money for only so long in the Bundesliga. And guess what, Club management is being voted in by the fans who have sometimes a knack for voting in the biggest mouths who promise the most to them. I do detest Bayern's dominance to the point that I even root against them in European matches but I really respect their quality of club management over the past thirty years. They did earn their place!

    • @samuelhakansson6680
      @samuelhakansson6680 8 месяцев назад +1

      how "should" they be that? No club should have the right to play anywhere. Its a good thing that the league system actually works and that there is some unpredictability on who relegates or promotes.

  • @Machinationstudio
    @Machinationstudio Год назад +1036

    You can crawl back from relegation, but you cannot crawl back from selling your club.

    • @geams
      @geams Год назад +32

      HSV did both, getting relegated and selliing the club to a foreign investor by taking a loan that they could never pay back.

    • @davinnicode
      @davinnicode Год назад +38

      That’s not true. Only German fans who are in denial think that investors are the root of all evil while their club is run unprofessionally and only hires former players for managing positions.

    • @philipmeisterl
      @philipmeisterl Год назад +7

      @@davinnicodeliterally all good teams right now leverkusen bvb rb wolfsburg bayern (with the exception of union berlin) are really not run as german football fans want klubs to be run they are basically either owned by one big investor or are more of a stock company than a real club
      But i honestly like when people who run companies run clubs they know what they do when former footballers run a club they dont seem to have any clue and make things worse than anything else most often

    • @Sascha1887
      @Sascha1887 Год назад +12

      Kühne is not a investor like in clubs like...
      Union Berlin
      Hertha Berlin
      Hoffenheim
      Hannover
      Etc.
      Ore company leaded club like..
      Wolfsburg
      Leipzig
      Leverkusen
      Etc.
      This clubs don't have to pay back the money.
      He is a "fan" who gives credits ore get transfer rights for players and (I think) owner of 25% of HSV...
      His money is never for free
      Like the clubs I ment before ore clubs like
      Dortmund (eon)
      Bayern (Audi)
      Etc.
      Which are playing that they are running traditionell.
      (Dortmund is the worst example for acting traditional without help)
      Unfortunately is kühne not so good in football like in logistics....
      He is 100% neo Kapitalist and that is our problem🤷🏻‍♂️
      But he is far away of an traditional investor.
      He is a bad actor and think he is a "fan"

    • @Sascha1887
      @Sascha1887 Год назад

      @@geams was für ein quatsch. Lies meinen ersten text und informiere dich etwas fundierter....

  • @nathanb286
    @nathanb286 Год назад +713

    Some of the relegations seem to be self inflicted, Schalke for example went from playing Man City to relegation fodder in a few season. Hamburg’s relegation had been coming for a long time, with them finishing in the top half once in their last 7 Bundesliga seasons

    • @TheKennyboy92
      @TheKennyboy92 Год назад +41

      Yeah Hamburg had relegation coming for a longggg time. I think they stayed with players for too long though.

    • @716_ハディくん
      @716_ハディくん Год назад +6

      most of this club can't adapt with modern standards

    • @jttro2658
      @jttro2658 Год назад +10

      ​@@TheKennyboy92it was not so much staying with the same players it was insanely bad economy which tbf they were very responsible themself. Many firings and not giving coaches and sport directors enough time aswell as hiring some absolute schoking ones. This have gotten better now although they too late

    • @TheKennyboy92
      @TheKennyboy92 Год назад

      Yeah very true there were knee jerk reactions with firings@@jttro2658

    • @daniel_361
      @daniel_361 Год назад +20

      Sure, some of the relegations are self inflicted, and no club was free from major errors on their way down. But the sheer amount of big clubs getting relegated within such a short timeframe points to a big systemic issue in German football as well.

  • @leafstorm3306
    @leafstorm3306 Год назад +457

    As a german im really thankful that you're bringing that topic to an international audience. Keep up the great work!

    • @oliverraven
      @oliverraven Год назад

      Do the pronunciations not make you cringe though? Not to mention the outright misreading of 'Niedersachsen' as 'Niedersacker' at one point. Nobody who knows anything about Germany beyond football would get that wrong. I think the term 'englische Woche' was misunderstood as well - as DrZaius3141 hints at, does it just not mean a midweek round of league fixtures?
      Of course these videos are always (mostly) well researched and structured clearly, and this one was very complimentary about the German model. That said, some input from either native speakers or Brits who speak the target language wouldn't go amiss.

    • @cryfier
      @cryfier Год назад +10

      Yea he could have taken the time to check the pronunciation. But still great that he goes out of himself to make a video on this topic.@@oliverraven

    • @jediknight5600
      @jediknight5600 Год назад

      Please explain to me why Germans would rather see Bayern Munich win the league for 100 years in a row than welcome investment?

    • @randyborstol2491
      @randyborstol2491 Год назад

      RIF.

    • @StillAwesome21
      @StillAwesome21 Год назад +3

      ​@@oliverraven Nitpicking at it's finest.

  • @_marz
    @_marz Год назад +86

    History and tradition, that's why I fell in love with German football. I'm from Mexico but I've never felt prouder to be a Schalke fan especially in these dark times. That passion at every game home and away is just something else. I'm aware it's not easy with the way modern football works but I hope to see all these giants in the top flight someday again. Massive respect to all of them.

    • @cheruvatoor
      @cheruvatoor 9 месяцев назад +1

      Can't wait for you guys to play with us again good luck and hope we meet again 🟡⚫☺️

  • @tommcdonald1873
    @tommcdonald1873 Год назад +189

    The parity in the German Football once you get beyond Bayern and Dortmund (and Maybe Liepzig) is extremely competitive all the way down to 3. Bundesliga. Even teams like Frankfurt have had to spend a year or two in the .2 bundesliga and even Bayern spent a year in the .2 back during 1860's Reign. I do think raising the number of teams in both Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga tgo 20 would be a good idea because German football is so competitive.

    • @SOak145
      @SOak145 Год назад +25

      It's competitive until it comes to actually winning the Bundesliga title lmao.

    • @kosmodome47
      @kosmodome47 Год назад +14

      @@SOak145 yeah but that's a different problem

    • @ninodino444
      @ninodino444 Год назад

      @@SOak145 ManC had won the last 6 PL if Liverpool had not one outstanding season and ManC had a blip..... so stfu

    • @SOak145
      @SOak145 Год назад +3

      @@kosmodome47 That particular issue literally falls under the rubric or category of 'German football is competitive'. What are you talking about.

    • @Ned-Ryerson
      @Ned-Ryerson Год назад

      It was stated right at the outset that FCB, BVB and RB are on a different plane of existence, so keep your socks on. @@SOak145

  • @christopherudeh2735
    @christopherudeh2735 Год назад +111

    Yes the number of former heavy hitters that are in or have been in the german lower leagues is astonishing, however i believe the Premier league would be having a similar tale if not for the 1992 rebranding. Afterall, clubs like Nottingham forest, wednesday, Leeds etc were all heavy hitters in the old english top division league.

    • @williamcross210
      @williamcross210 Год назад +4

      or West Brom and Huddersfield

    • @MrSmith1984
      @MrSmith1984 Год назад +7

      ​@@WyldStallion-bs9oo
      That would be a terrible decision. Especially when there are already not enough PL Places to go around.

    • @SOak145
      @SOak145 Год назад +2

      @@WyldStallion-bs9oo No. Terrible idea. It hurts Germany and will now hurt France too to have 18 as opposed to 20 teams.

    • @SOak145
      @SOak145 Год назад +1

      @@MrSmith1984 Well said.

  • @leometz7287
    @leometz7287 Год назад +160

    As a Kaiserslautern Fan, you didn't fully explain the insanity of our Stadium. It's capacity is almost 50.000, in a city with only 100.000 inhabitants. And even more insane, when you look at a map and see that the city is in the middle of a forest and no big city is anywhere nearby

    • @paulie-g
      @paulie-g Год назад +13

      Forest is a cheatcode, Union have demonstrated that. Apparently walking through one on the way to the stadium gets you CL football.

    • @leometz7287
      @leometz7287 Год назад

      @@paulie-g we had CL football in the late 90s

    • @gerdokurt
      @gerdokurt Год назад +14

      Last year, ~ 44.000 people went to the games in average..in 2nd division!
      I dont think your stadium is insane, people in kaiserslautern are (in a positive way) insane for football :D If they manage to move up again, you will need even more stadium :D

    • @paulie-g
      @paulie-g Год назад +1

      @@leometz7287 My point exactly. Forest = win. Except for Nottingham Forrest, they're awful.

    • @Ned-Ryerson
      @Ned-Ryerson Год назад +1

      Yeah, but they are in the middle of the city, right next to a river, with a much funnier Cricket stadium right next to it, and County just on the other side of the Trent. ;) @@paulie-g

  • @lisaruhm6681
    @lisaruhm6681 Год назад +78

    Funfact 5 of the 10 biggest German football stadiums are in the 2nd league, 4 in the 1st league and 1 isnt used for football currently.

    • @Joekuh
      @Joekuh Год назад +5

      Now im curious. What's the 5th stadium used for, if not football?

    • @lisaruhm6681
      @lisaruhm6681 Год назад +40

      @@Joekuh the Olympia Stadium in Munich, it is owned by the city and hosts a lot of different sporting events and concerts. With 69250 seats, it is too big for 1860 in the 3rd league and Türkgücü in the 4th league to completely use. And Bayern have their own stadium.

    • @TukkerEanske
      @TukkerEanske Год назад

      Well, when I was in Munich last year, I attended a football match in the Olympic stadium of Münich. Turkgucu Munchen is playing there.

  • @lwandomadikizela2213
    @lwandomadikizela2213 Год назад +28

    In summary: Why Germany's biggest clubs suffer the hardest bar Bayern Munich?
    1. No clubs in the Bundesliga can compete against Bayern Munich in terms of financial revenue and members.
    2. Hamburg and Schalke were in decline after years of poor management from top to bottom.
    3. 50+1 rule as positive impact on fan engagement and keeping the football tradition alive however it also brings a negative impact like limiting how much the club can spend on recruitment, club infrastructure and youth academies.
    4. The talent pool of young prospects are running dry like Schalke and 1860 Munich and brought in dross players along the way.
    I've always admire the Bundesliga in terms of fans being 100% to their clubs regardless how well or badly run it is. Fan apathy is almost non existent in German football and they always keep traditions alive. Sure the Bundesliga is stale since 2013 but I always have major respect for the fan base that would rather stick with the club through thick and thin than to have a similar outcome at Ligue 1 with PSG being ran by Qatar and win multiple silverware. That's why I will keep watching the Bundesliga because of the fans supporting their clubs and like I said, I admire and respect that.

  • @soundscape26
    @soundscape26 Год назад +24

    These kinds of deep dives are my favourite videos of yours Alfie. Well done.

  • @that70sjunkie
    @that70sjunkie Год назад +129

    The problem with the "exceptions" (RB, Leverkusen, Wolfsburg and Hoffenheim) is that their financial losses will always be cleared by their rich owners. If the 50+1 clubs have a bad transfer period, admittedly in the case of Schalke and especially Hamburg it was too many to have just been bad luck, that money is gone. Leipzig, despite the great transfer business, has a higher debt than any other club in germany. But it doesn't matter, cause that debt is with Red Bull. In 2020 Red Bull just turned 100 Million of debt into capital for the club. You pointed out how the new stadiums were crippling some clubs, well Red Bull just bought the previously city-owned stadium in Leipzig, it is neither owned by the club nor the city, but owned by the company. Hoffenheim had big losses in the past as well after quite a few bad transfer periods in the inital years after their promotion to the Bundesliga, but Hopp just came in and cleared the debt. It's the same with Wolfsburg and Leverkusen. It's just not a level playing field at all, and it's why these "clubs" shouldn't exist, and why I'd rather have Bayern (who have also had their fair share of shady deals, the Kirch affair for example which may be an interesting topic for a video, though I don't know if there are good english resources on it) win 60 in a row than have them win one.

    • @716_ハディくん
      @716_ハディくん Год назад +1

      no wonder bundesliga so backward, they have people like you

    • @genschyy
      @genschyy Год назад +7

      +1

    • @skottitohotti
      @skottitohotti Год назад +20

      This and the TV Money which is mainly gathered by Big Clubs like Schalke Cologne or Stuttgart is getting splashed out to Clubs like Leverkusen Leipzig or Wolfsburg even if nobody is watching their Games

    • @jazzrockr
      @jazzrockr Год назад +2

      I think there will be more about the last 40 years of economic "reforms" that have turned out to cause a lot of problems, including those leading to Bayern's dominance. And it isn't surprising.

    • @Flinsenberger101
      @Flinsenberger101 Год назад +8

      Hoffenheim doesn't have losses. They had 130 million transfer profits over the last 5 years.
      And Hopp already said that the club needs to support itself and that he will not finance any more losses.

  • @DrZaius3141
    @DrZaius3141 Год назад +183

    Actually, the "Englische Woche" (usually used in plural) refers to weeks with more than one game as something that is draining on a team's stamina (which is why the plural form is crucial - three weeks like that can set you back in your league campaign). This is used mostly in the context of European matches for teams that don't have the depth to rotate in those weeks.

    • @razerow3391
      @razerow3391 Год назад +2

      What? It mean ”English week” and refers to how many games English clubs tend to play in a week.

    • @scorniro8182
      @scorniro8182 Год назад +29

      ​@@razerow3391He is right though. Of course that is a reference to English football but we use the term "Englische Woche" to describe what the op said

    • @lisaruhm6681
      @lisaruhm6681 Год назад +6

      @@razerow3391 the specific term §Englische Woche/English week" is used to describe weeks, when clubs have 1 game during the week and 1 on the weekend, and thus play 2 matches in the same week.

    • @DrZaius3141
      @DrZaius3141 Год назад +8

      @@razerow3391 Alfie said it meant "playing on something other than Saturday" (as in "more media friendly"), when it actually means having additional matches apart from the one on Saturday/Sunday.

    • @1upperful
      @1upperful Год назад

      Simple solution: Get over it. Mix teams. You have (or should have) 23 players available, for Christ's sake.

  • @MrRonald2796
    @MrRonald2796 Год назад +73

    The Bundesliga is very similar to the Brasileirao, were you always have one or various big teams getting relegated every few seasons. Only Flamengo, Sao Paulo and Santos have never been relegated (so far), but all of them have had near misses in recent years. The most egregious example was Flamengo in 2013, were they only avoided relegation because Portuguesa got deducted 4 points for fielding a suspended player.

    • @IHSpark7325
      @IHSpark7325 Год назад +12

      Except the Brazilian League is much more competitive.

    • @gustavoschulzdalledone8191
      @gustavoschulzdalledone8191 Год назад

      that would be fluminense i think, but this club has some history with relegation

    • @pedrohenriquecarneiro3386
      @pedrohenriquecarneiro3386 Год назад +8

      And I believe Santos is very close to a risk to getting relegated to Brasileirão série B this season

    • @queenzoroark
      @queenzoroark Год назад

      ​@@gustavoschulzdalledone8191Flamengo were about to be relegated as well for fielding a irregular player as well

    • @justinwarthen
      @justinwarthen Год назад +8

      Santos have been relegated

  • @thiagoprofili4806
    @thiagoprofili4806 Год назад +39

    I went to 3 Kaiserslautern games during their 19/20 season (against preussen munster, zwickau and sv meppen). It was heartbreaking seeing a club of that size with perhaps, the most football crazy city in germany (95k population with a 50k stadium). Everytime they scored, it was as joyful as a title win and when they conceded, it was as hurtful as a relegation. The following season (20/21), Kaiserslautern almost fell down to the 4th tier and saved themselves with what can only be described as gods power and will. Even though i'm a Mainz fan (2nd biggest rivals of kaiserslautern behind Waldhof Mannheim), i like them and really hope they get back to where they belong, which is 1st division football. Kaiserslautern IMO has the most heartbreaking story in german football alongside 1860 Munich

  • @ChrisKinski-ur1gw
    @ChrisKinski-ur1gw Год назад +16

    Nice one! And a pretty good depiction of the mindset of german football supporters. There is indeed more to football than winning trophies!

  • @danidax1524
    @danidax1524 Год назад +74

    The grafik shown at 4:48 is not Kaiserslautern, its Köln😙
    Anyway thanks for the great video and greetings from Nürnberg❤️🖤
    Btw in 2019/20 Nürnberg was basically relegated to the 3rd Divison but managed to survive in the relegation playoffs when they scored a goal in the 96th Minute

    • @Supreme-vy3gu
      @Supreme-vy3gu Год назад

      Als ich noch a ganz kleiner Bub war...

    • @tf5493
      @tf5493 Год назад

      isn't there a Kaiserslautern logo in the background though?

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +1

      I think you mean 4:48. It's indeed Koln.

    • @jonasfrohwitter8553
      @jonasfrohwitter8553 Год назад

      Honest mistake for a foreign football fan, both are red and white and the abbreviation is FCK

    • @danidax1524
      @danidax1524 Год назад

      @@Supreme-vy3gu ...da nahm mich mein Vater mit zu Club...

  • @ozgerm
    @ozgerm Год назад +12

    Great Video. You are correct, the 2 Bundesliga doesn’t have the best player in Europe. However for value for money and match day experience, it truly is second to none.

  • @paulalexander8874
    @paulalexander8874 Год назад +11

    Fs Alfie. I was just going to bed after a night shift but looks like I’m up for another half an hour!
    The only YT channel worth staying up for 💪

  • @rally-quest
    @rally-quest Год назад

    Thanks for your obscure, interesting and meticulously researched videos. You're one of a kind.

    • @HITCSevens
      @HITCSevens  Год назад +1

      Thanks @rally-quest, very kind of you!

  • @Kawn1
    @Kawn1 Год назад +4

    Unexpectedly disheartened at not having seen a picture of Gael pop up as you said 'cliche' at 16:59. Cheers for yet another great watch Alfie

  • @chrisfraser5088
    @chrisfraser5088 Год назад +102

    As a Dortmund fan, thank you for this video, Alfie. I know not everyone agrees with the traditional “German model” of football, and fewer still seem to understand the appeal of our football culture at all. But this video has some GREAT explanations in it. Keep up the great work. Heja BVB 🖤💛

    • @IHSpark7325
      @IHSpark7325 Год назад +22

      If one team dominates every aspect in the country then that's a massive issue, especially a country like Germany.

    • @chrisfraser5088
      @chrisfraser5088 Год назад +13

      @@IHSpark7325 as I said in my op…”fewer still seem to understand the appeal of our football culture” … based on your comment, I’m assuming you fall into this category? 😏

    • @quonevi9250
      @quonevi9250 Год назад

      BVB hat damit nix zu tun lol, euer Verein existiert nur als Jugendakademie für Bayern und England, euren CEO's ist Erfolg egal, die wollen nur Profit durch transfers machen wie Portugiesische Klubs. Traurig.
      HHMM ⚫️⚪️🔵

    • @jameshall9654
      @jameshall9654 Год назад +25

      @@IHSpark7325Im not German, but Bayern only dominate two aspects of German football. Money and Titles. This video shows that in terms of fan engagement, atmosphere and selling out stadiums there are many teams that compete adequately.
      Nothing beats watching your team live, the rituals pre and post game, meeting people you know who sit nearby etc. In Germany this is still viable for fans of the biggest clubs but so difficult in England. Clubs are by definition member lead organisations where people of likeminded interests meet - that element of football has disappeared in England at the biggest teams and become a place for tourists and the rich

    • @IHSpark7325
      @IHSpark7325 Год назад +3

      ​@@jameshall9654 But ultimately this is the reason why Bundesliga will gain the attention it really deserves.
      No different here in Australia with Australian rules football or the AFL, where we have fallen giants come in massive numbers still, but seeing my team (Essendon) play for the last 20 years I'd like a takeover, but we have salary caps unlike eurofoot and the bottom line comes down to competence.
      But this is the world game we're talking here.

  • @Bliz_der_coole
    @Bliz_der_coole Год назад +31

    As a german myself (msv duisburg fan) i still really enjoyed this video. But I am kind of sad that duisburg was left out of the list for 3. Division clubs. We might have not really won any titles but we were second in the first bundesliga season and had some dfb pokal finals. Duisburg is one of the smaller cities and is surrounded by way bigger clubs wich makes it an even bigger achievement (in my opinion at least).

  • @ryand2413
    @ryand2413 11 месяцев назад +2

    Getting to your video late, but as an American in Germany, I've made it a mission to go to every Bundesliga stadium this season. So far 6/18, and not a single one disappointed. Each was an awesome experience, and I've gone back to several to see them again. And though I haven't been to their stadium yet, I keep getting games against Union Berlin, and their fans always show up and are awesome in any stadium!

  • @hekra6784
    @hekra6784 Год назад +67

    As a German I think you nailed it. 50+1 is the main reason that major clubs keep getting relegated. Other than in the PL the TV money is distributed very uneven between the champion and the teams promoted from 2nd league. Bayern earns a whopping 95 Mil. Euros while Darmstadt receives 31 Mil.

    • @neilbiggs1353
      @neilbiggs1353 Год назад +18

      I think he missed the point - it's the money from the Champion's League that is killing teams. They reach the tournament, try to use the money to take the next step forward, end up with a serious cash shortfall if they fail to qualify for it in a season, and have to shed players which leads them to plummet. The PL money being larger diminishes the CL team cash advantage somewhat, but as that money grows, I worry that the PL will fracture like most leagues around Europe, leading to a small set of challengers, and a whole slew of also rans. It might have the biggest set of 'challengers', but football needs for mid-table clubs to be able to take that step up. It scares me that Leicester weren't able to translate their success in to a platform for growth, their story feels a lot like Schalke's etc.

    • @samuelyee4017
      @samuelyee4017 Год назад +2

      @@neilbiggs1353 these teams fell into the financial trapdoor after they failed to qualify UCL when they spent a lot to recruit players

    • @neilbiggs1353
      @neilbiggs1353 Год назад +1

      @@samuelyee4017 Exactly. It's a very precarious source of income that teams feel forced to gamble with. They have to spend to have a squad big enough for extra matches, and they have to pay CL level wages, and those wages stay on the books even without the CL income. Tottenham are an interesting case, they appear to not include European TV money in their wage budget calculations which leads to some of their fans accusing the owners of not investing. Its really depressing that Spurs may end up being overtaken by Newcastle being cash-doped with blood money, as really they should be the model for mid-table clubs in how to grow.

  • @Paragleiber
    @Paragleiber Год назад +8

    Leverkusen has been in the highest league since 1979, so I don't think it's fair to call them a new-ish club. They were even one of the 46 clubs that applied to play in the first ever Bundesliga season in 1963, so they were already around back then. They may be a company club but they really aren't comparable to Hoffenheim or Leipzig at all. They are one of the traditional Bundesliga clubs themselves.
    On the other hand Augsburg and Mainz really are new-ish Bundesliga clubs that have taken spots away from established ones, so those two would have deserved a mention.
    Also Greuther Fürth, Holstein Kiel, Karlsruhe, Düsseldorf and Hannover may technically be former German champions but even I as someone who has followed the Bundesliga for 20 years now actually had no idea about that until reading the description of this video, since most of those clubs won their titles over 100 years ago. Those clubs are not really perceived as former champions by people other than their own fans.
    I am happy to see this video though. You recently mentioned that the second tier in England is by far the strongest second tier in the world and it made me wonder if you are aware of the second tier in Germany, lol.

  • @dominiklemke3726
    @dominiklemke3726 Год назад +3

    There just isn't any channel like this on RUclips, let alone an english one. Just love to watch and hope you keep them coming!!! 👏

  • @dronesclubhighjinks
    @dronesclubhighjinks Год назад +4

    Fantastic video! You must’ve spent a very long time researching all of this!
    Please allow me to compliment you on your really fantastic German pronunciation! You’re obviously making a lot of effort and it is much appreciated!
    The comparison to the premier league especially the prices of season tickets, single game tickets, and when matches are shown is jaw-dropping!
    Thank you for the video!

  • @Duval-In-The-Wall
    @Duval-In-The-Wall 9 месяцев назад +3

    Man I miss HSV and Schalke in the Bundesliga. Ditto for the likes of Nurnberg, Kaiserslautern, and 1860 Munich

  • @sarcastic_something
    @sarcastic_something Год назад +9

    It would be interesting to see the video on smaller clubs who managed to achieve league safety against all odds & their growth

  • @GenialHarryGrout
    @GenialHarryGrout Год назад +9

    I seem to recall that German fans protested and boycotted matches that had been scheduled for a Monday night for TV.

  • @Akumina98
    @Akumina98 Год назад +58

    First of all, I would like to thank you for the video, it is very well done.
    As a German, I would like to add a few things that I think are important and unfortunately came up a bit short in the video.
    Especially for Schalke and Hamburg, you can and must simply say that both clubs have repeatedly had small crises over the decades and have gone through financial problems, which has put them on shaky ground compared to other heavyweights of German soccer.
    But instead of first taking the success of the 2000s with them, they tried in the 2010s with expensive transfers and old stars and took high financial risks, which as you can see today have not paid off. Especially for these two clubs doubly tragic, since one has done very good youth work and had to sell the future stars "cheaply", whereby the teams were damaged in the long term.
    Quasi something that happened to many of the clubs from the video, in addition to the things mentioned such as stadium renovations which have devoured a lot of money, much of which was also co-financed by the countries (which was mentioned).
    The biggest problem for many of the clubs was simply the timing of the collapse, which was made more dramatic by high levels of funding for European Cup contenders and led to the "downfall" due to high expectations around the clubs.
    50+1 is and was then the nail in the coffin for these clubs compared to other leagues like the PL where they would just get another money injection from their owners.
    What doesn't quite fit, however, is the naming of teams like Wolfsburg or Leverkusen, since they were already in the Bundesliga in the 90s and are thus only partly to blame for the clubs' missteps in the last decade.
    If the "big" clubs manage to work well and calmly again without creating too much ecstasy in the environment, they will sooner or later also rise because especially through the name of the clubs and often the larger catchment areas more sponsorship revenue and thus more money can be collected, which can lead to a sporting advantage, if it is used properly. Should the leagues be expanded to 20 clubs, it should only be a matter of time before we see some fallen giants back in the Bundesliga.
    And to be fair, and this was also mentioned in the video, the soccer culture in Germany works really well, as for many fans it is simply more than just about winning, which is why most clubs will continue to remain well known regardless of whether they play in the Bundesliga or in the 2 / 3.Liga.
    This is something I can only say for my "local" club which is Köln but these guys would rather watch a game in the Regionalliga (4th tier) than getting owned by an investor to tie in with the golden times of the 60s-80s.
    We the fans already realised that we can't compete with the PL in terms of money and thus should simply focus on our own unique product which indeed lies in the strong bound between fans and teams that are still being majorly owned by us the fans who in the end generate passion and atmosphere that no money can buy.

    • @gulmen1919
      @gulmen1919 Год назад +4

      Ich als Kölnfan kann dir nur in allen Punkten zustimmen. Sehr schön geschrieben

    • @linearliquidize
      @linearliquidize Год назад

      @@gulmen1919 I second that. I really hope Köln can manage to get a stable revenue surplus over the next years with drama-free seasons and no fear of relegations :)

    • @funkstiu
      @funkstiu Год назад +4

      Great comment, also about Wolfsburg or Leverkusen: VW and Bayer are the biggest employers in the area and have been for a long time, which makes their investement in the local football-teams more of a service to their employees (fans of those clubs), than a purely economical calculation as is the case with RB.

    • @jediknight5600
      @jediknight5600 Год назад +1

      Please explain to me why Germans would rather serve Bayern Munich as you lord and master than welcome investment.

    • @Akumina98
      @Akumina98 Год назад

      This is explained quite simply.
      While in many other leagues and countries it is mostly about celebrating the one who wins, in Germany it is mainly the sport / game that is celebrated, winning is a nice bonus, but the main thing for most fans is that their team is passionate and gives everything.
      They give everything for the club and sacrifice themselves, something that works better and more honestly when there is less money in circulation and when the clubs also have to rely on their own young players from the region.
      The connection to your club is simply much closer than in the Premier League or other leagues in Europe, the prices are more attractive for families and the stadiums are not full of event fans who actually has no idea who is playing against whom, but have heard of the team.
      With investors, profit comes first and the often still "down-to-earth" attitude is pushed into the background, ticket prices rise, youth work is neglected and identification disappears.
      Especially since the Bayern point is overrated anyway, the times in which you buy exclusively in the Bundesliga are over.
      Finally, I would like to give you the tip to deal with the German fan culture, which explains quite well why we are against investors, even the fans of Bayern.

  • @babamukuru666
    @babamukuru666 Год назад +12

    Fun fact about you mentioning Wehen Wiesbaden: Wehen isn't a part of Wiesbaden, it's actually belonging to Taunusstein, a city in another county.
    Back when they got their promotion when the third tier was established, they needed a bigger venue and Taunusstein fumbled around. Wiesbaden stepped in and basically snatched the club in a sort of "franchise takeover" you see in American football.
    Oh, and the club isn't as poor as it may seem, they've got quite a bit of backing from Brita water filters as their company HQ is in Taunusstein-Wehen and the company CEOs (used tio be the father, now it's the son) have been club presidents for decades.

  • @dandaratramadol3007
    @dandaratramadol3007 Год назад +9

    Great video as always Alfie! You really seem to know to the context behind all of this very well. Kudos to you. If you could make more videos on German and Italian football, it would be appreciated.

    • @josiekaposie5783
      @josiekaposie5783 Год назад

      how many teams in Italy have not went bust , a sad reflection of boom and bust in Italian football

  • @adampark4238
    @adampark4238 Год назад +5

    Have to admit loved the video. Seen kaiserslautern and my old work weisbaden had the honour to work for v corps

  • @dvdv8197
    @dvdv8197 Год назад +13

    Damn Alfie, you are KILLING it lately!! 👍👏
    Thanks for all your work! ❤
    Shout-out to the German model. 👍👏

  • @CmdrUD87
    @CmdrUD87 Год назад +5

    18:00 you sort of glossed over that Hopp actually tried to buy into Kaiserslautern back when they were in real financial trouble, but the fans rejected the idea so harshly that it ended up not going through and he build up Hoffenheim instead

  • @quizzical2023
    @quizzical2023 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was about to write I’d never expected Alfie to talk about Rot-Weiß Essen, but then again actually this has become nothing unusual and that’s what’s awesome about your channel. Always expect the unexpected.

  • @DukeSkylocker
    @DukeSkylocker Год назад +12

    This really highlights why Bayern are so dominant. Too many of the other big clubs got killed by bad management (Schalke, Hamburg, Stuttgart, Hertha Berlin, etc) while the best run clubs are unfortunately much smaller clubs that really can't compete with Bayern financially (Freiburg, Augsburg, Union Berlin, etc). Meanwhile, for all the talk about how having clubs that didn't follow the 50+1 rule would at the very least make the title race competitive, for whatever reason the likes of Leipzig, Hoffenheim (at least until this year when their owner gave up control of the club), Leverkusen and Wolfsburg haven't really shown much title ambitions despite having the financial capabilities to do so. This really just leaves Dortmund as the only other well-run big club (Frankfurt I think is more upper-mid club) but they still seem haunted by their financial crisis in the early 2000s and sell their players far too often to build up a truly title-challenging team.

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames Год назад

      Frankfurt might have the chance to grow into a big club but this likely will take some more time. Our academy, for example, didn't promote any player into the Bundesliga team for years. Frankfurt has had a lucky hand with transfers over the past years though and they will have to continue to sell their best players out of contract if they can make a profit off them. Cashing in on transfers off very good players is only one part of the equation. The other part is that you would have to raise their salaries considerably if you wanted to extend their contracts which eventually would spoil the whole salary structure.

  • @DiaChris2004
    @DiaChris2004 Год назад +4

    I'm Glad you made this! My team Hamburg just keep failing Promotion every season against Smaller Clubs! Hamburg is a 100% best fanbase in German football! And Hamburg's first relegation in my case cause a curse on German's National Team! Knocked out of the Group stage in 2018 & 2022 World Cup, and Women's Germany Knocked out of the Group Stage in Women's World Cup 2023. This season, I hope Hamburg can finally be promoted! Keep it up!

  • @knutolavhalseth6761
    @knutolavhalseth6761 Год назад +5

    Very interesting! But you should look at Sweden and make a video why so many fairytale teams promotes to the top league there, Allsvenskan. In recent years Varnamo and Varberg have been labelled fairytale promotions, and the clear leaders of level 2, Superettan now are also labelled a fairytale team, Utsikten. In earlier years we've had teams like Ljungskile, Oddevold, Enkoping, Syrianska, Assyriska, AFC Eskilstuna, Dalkurd, Falkenberg and Mjallby, the latter having spent many seasons in the top flight. But when those fairytale teams fall, they fall hard, and so also some giants. I haven't seen a league in Europe with so many teams suffering back-to-back relegations from level 1 to 3 as in Sweden. The most extraordinary example is Brommapojkorna with this record: 2014: Level 1, 2015: 2, 2016: 3, 2017: 2, 2018: 1, 2019: 2, 2020: 3, 2021: 3, 2022: 2, 2023: 1. One of Swedens most traditional clubs, five times champions Helsingborg are now next-to-bottom at level 2 after relegating from the top flight last season. Giants IFK Gothenburg are now next-to-bottom in the Allsvenskan with fellow giants AIK in the play-off spot. It's quite different from my country Norway where teams relegated from the top flight usually bounce back at the first time of asking. So if you could dive into the madness of the Swedish league it would be highly appreciated!

  • @ThisIsWideAngle
    @ThisIsWideAngle Год назад +25

    Bayer 04 Leverkusen is in the Bundesliga for 44 consecutive years.
    In the eternal ranking of the Bundesliga, Leverkusen is on the 10th place with more Bundesliga matches than Kaiserslautern, Nürnberg, Hannover 96 and of course 1860 München.
    They were playing in the Oberliga West in 1962 against 1. FC Köln, Borussia Dortmund, FC Schalke 04 and Preußen Münster, but didn´t qualify for the newly founded Bundesliga.
    They are named after Bayer when it was founded by the workers of the company in 1904. Same year as FC Schalke 04 was founded and 15 years before the Hamburger SV was joined together by two clubs.
    So with the rise of more obscure and non-existent teams, were you talking about Leverkusen and the UEFA-Cup-Win of 1988 and DFB-Pokal-Win in 1993?
    There are also a couple of established but smaller Bundesliga-Clubs which earned their stability because of hard work, modesty and competent management.
    The mismanagement leading to the descent of HSV, Hertha, Kaiserslautern, FC Schalke, Nürnberg mostly because of becoming greedy after successful years and getting dependent on shady investors, or corporations like Gasprom, wasn´t the fault of clubs taking their place.

  • @maxsimonis3470
    @maxsimonis3470 Год назад +4

    A lot of those clubs mentioned in the beginning deserve a whole video about their demise, i would recommend you to take a look at schalke because their story especially with everything going on at the club outside of the pitch is really interesting!

    • @quonevi9250
      @quonevi9250 Год назад

      He already did a vid on schalke not long ago, search it up. He should do one to HSV

    • @maxsimonis3470
      @maxsimonis3470 Год назад

      *but amazing deep diving into what really matters about german football, speaking for all your german viewers we love you even more now!!🫶🫶

  • @nottherealChickenJoe
    @nottherealChickenJoe Год назад +1

    At 4:52 there is actually the first ever mistake I have ever found in your videos. The picture shows players of the 1. FC Köln while you are talking about the 1. FC Kaiserslautern. Impressive how you never make any mistakes and how that picture also still fit the narrative haha

    • @exn207
      @exn207 Год назад +1

      There's also a picture showing Terence Boyd one of our heros of season 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 (the return form 3rd to 2nd league) while talking about the relegations 2006/2012/2018 down to 3rd league.

  • @oberfrange
    @oberfrange Год назад +4

    I am a Nuremberg fan (unfortunately) and in my daily life an English teacher. Good summary! Now teams play in the Bundesliga that no one here is really interested in (Augsburg, Heidenheim, Wolfsburg, Hoffenheim)

    • @dinohermann1887
      @dinohermann1887 Год назад

      Was macht Augsburg eigentlich so uninteressant wie die anderen 3 genannten, das hat mich immer gewundert?

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames Год назад

      @@dinohermann1887 1. their atrocious style of play, 2. Augsburg. Sorry for No. 2 and Augsburg is a fine city but most people couldn't locate it on a map.

  • @shawngillogly6873
    @shawngillogly6873 Год назад +6

    19:00 German football hates Dietmar Hopp. But if we're all being honest, we do the same thing every time we play Football Manager with our home club.
    He's just doing it for real. And there's no argument about whether he's a real fan of the club or who else he should be attached to. Only that he was able to do it well. With the help of people like Ralf Rangnick and Julien Nagelsmann.

  • @thomashopper8616
    @thomashopper8616 Год назад +28

    ESPN+ is televising Schalke vs Holstein Kiel at 9:30 Pacific Time today and Hannover vs Hamburg tomorrow at 11:30 Pacific Time in the USA for anyone who’s interested. The Budesliga and 2 Bundesliga matches can be pretty wild and I recommend watching.

    • @3lakesroad
      @3lakesroad Год назад +7

      As a part time schalke fan (have watched them since the late 00's when I could), I find it more enjoyable to see them playing 2. Bundesliga because there is good chance they will put on a good shift compared to watching them flounder in the Bundesliga like they have been recently.

    • @12061988
      @12061988 Год назад +4

      @@3lakesroad LOST 0:2 to Holstein Kiel! HAHA!

    • @starboyhimself7538
      @starboyhimself7538 Год назад +2

      Watch Hertha this season we finally got a really team most are from Berlin and go out for dinner together they sing the fans lyrics along cause they understand them its awesome to watch 😊

    • @12061988
      @12061988 Год назад +1

      @@starboyhimself7538 Magdeburg 6:4 Hertha muhahaha

  • @WolfbitPlays
    @WolfbitPlays Год назад +8

    As a Hertha Fan, I wished you would of talked a bit about our downfall. We started crashing after getting money from an extremely shady investor. We spend rediculous sums of money and ran the club into the ground. We deserved to be relegated. I am happy that the investor left, even though we are left in ruins.
    Football is for the fans, not an investment vehicle or vantiy project. I will continue to support my club, despite everything I find wrong with it.

    • @kallekreuzberg7376
      @kallekreuzberg7376 Год назад

      Ha Ho He!

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames Год назад

      Yeah Hertha, the "Big City Club" became too ambitious. Stop chasing dreams and concentrate on good management and dreams might become true without chasing them.

  • @adampark4238
    @adampark4238 Год назад +60

    Kaiserslautern are hopefully on the way back to the bundisliga in the next couple seasons. Plus loved the 2010 kit.

    • @jennyferprus8024
      @jennyferprus8024 Год назад

      erst mal warten bis der RWE hochkommt damit wir euch weiter vor uns her jagen können (*und neeeeeeeein ich überschätze den verein üüüüüüüberhaupt nicht :-P )

    • @TheRealKingLeopoldII
      @TheRealKingLeopoldII 9 месяцев назад

      It's not looking good for them, currently they're in the relegation zone of the 2. Bundesliga

    • @adampark4238
      @adampark4238 9 месяцев назад

      @TheRealKingLeopoldII aye they are messing it up.

  • @Fiago
    @Fiago Год назад +7

    We will be back next year 💙

  • @Artax-jv8zt
    @Artax-jv8zt Год назад +4

    Hi Alfie, I love the type of videos from you. Would you do a best English 1st division best managers prior to the formation of the premier league please?

  • @janhofmann3499
    @janhofmann3499 Год назад +3

    Good video overall but i’m surprised you didn’t mention Frankfurt at all. A new stadium was built bevor the WC and Eintracht Frankfurt barely avoided relegation a few years ago but then won the Pokal and the EL in the coming years. Also, with more than 100k members it’s now one of the biggest clubs in germany. And all that with good management and recruiting and not benefitting from a "sugar daddy".

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames Год назад

      I am an Eintracht fan since 1971 when my dad took me to the Waldstadion. Eintracht indeed has the potential to become a force but their development path is still fragile. I notice fans to become more and more impatient these days and I hope that management does not give in to dreams and hold tight to their strategy. It might take some years to get to the top though.

  • @thomasjohnson2862
    @thomasjohnson2862 Год назад +5

    You mention the nouveau riche German clubs. Maybe we see that a little in the Premier League but probably more in the EFL, where nouveau riche upstarts like Forest Green, Fleetwood, Crawley replaced the more established traditional EFL clubs, relegating several of them to the National League

  • @AD-sc8fe
    @AD-sc8fe Год назад +3

    If the Premier League followed the German model Manchester United would have won nearly every season just like Bayern. The German league is not a competition it's as much of a competition as WWE.

  • @Lanky0702
    @Lanky0702 Год назад +15

    Love the way germans do football, the biggest clubs in England like Arsenal and Liverpool in the 2nd tier is absolutely unthinkable but clubs of similar size in Germany being in the 2nd tier is the norm it’s mental but would be fantastic to see in england

    • @josephyearwood1179
      @josephyearwood1179 Год назад +2

      Even with the likes of rugby League, rugby Union, Speedway, stockcar, and so forth, English football is muchbetter followed at the lower leagues (even though Deuschland is twice the population of England. Also, markworthy how many big city Germany football clubs get a smatch of topflight footy a and for longer unlike the bigger clubs in England. The English topflight is overflowning with smaller town football clubs. The French topflight is the opposite and crammed with as many big city clubs as possible.

    • @RetroProg
      @RetroProg Год назад +2

      Liverpool were a second division team 60 years ago, Man Utd less than 50 years ago, tottenham and Chelse 30 years ago. Man City, Forest, Leeds, Both Sheffield clubs have ben third division clubs in the last 20 ish years. 10 years ago Luton were non-league. English Football is the most vibrant Pyramid in World Football.

  • @ja1295
    @ja1295 Год назад +4

    As a Schalke fan our down spell is just tragic we are massive but like almost every big club in germany we've stalled and been mismanaged for ages,
    Youd think us Stuttgart Gladbach and hamburg would be in title races but no were all either in the lower teirs or just bouncing between Europa league and midtable in gladbachs case,
    Something needs to change as the leagues being deemed less than every year despite how much quality and unpredictability the league has (expect for the title race)

  • @kurkmo6616
    @kurkmo6616 Год назад +2

    Nothing better than alfie talking about HSV :) (although regarding the intro: Hamburg has already surpassed the 90.000 members mark)

    • @kurkmo6616
      @kurkmo6616 Год назад +3

      And all those 2. Liga-Shenanigans aside at least we have Champions League Football in Hamburg this season😁 (thanks to Donetsk)

  • @derbydave35
    @derbydave35 Год назад +5

    Great video , the German club I follow Dynamo Dresden , never seem to get it right , despite 30,000 passionate fans showing up every week . Shambolic mismanagement. Compare with Union Berlin , a club half the size of Dresden , who continue to enjoy great success in the Bundesliga

  • @donaldrussell9406
    @donaldrussell9406 Год назад +1

    Thank you for these essential videos , excellent filler to listen to when doing them mundane task around my house. 😌

  • @NoLuckJKMY807
    @NoLuckJKMY807 Год назад +3

    Tbh apart from Bayern's dominance, the Bundesliga is arguably the most unpredictable football league in Europe.
    I mean in recent years we saw big clubs like Werder Bremen, Stuttgart, Schalke and Hertha Berlin had suffered relegation to the second tier, but on the other hand we saw smaller Bundesliga clubs like Augsburg and Mainz (both played the top-flight for more than 10 years) survived longer than we thought and proven to be a punch above their weight in the Bundesliga.
    And then we have Bochum, who had survived the drop twice since their return to the top tier despite suffering many beatdowns by other clubs (Though it should be noted that Bochum is known for their resiliency despite they are always classified as a small Bundesliga club).
    And finally we have Union Berlin, who is a prime example of being a small Bundesliga club who had achieved success to this day despite only playing in the Bundesliga for the first time in 2019...

  • @ralfbodemann1542
    @ralfbodemann1542 Год назад

    Excellent analysis! You really nailed the main facts and additionally provided (at least to me) some new and alternative perspectives. Great job!

  • @enffootballlab2022
    @enffootballlab2022 Год назад +22

    Imagine one of the traditional top four in the Premier League get relegated

    • @llbuitre
      @llbuitre Год назад

      Maybe at some point. But most likely, not in our lifetime. 😅

    • @greenrico10
      @greenrico10 Год назад +20

      @@llbuitre why Everton used to be atop club and it is about to be relegated and that happened in like less then half of a lifetime

    • @RyoFuji-gq3gm
      @RyoFuji-gq3gm Год назад +2

      At this rate, Manchester United & Chelsea is the biggest candidate to relegated.

    • @enffootballlab2022
      @enffootballlab2022 Год назад +11

      @@llbuitre imagine Alfie junior making a video on one of the traditional top four being relegated

    • @lukashradecky5492
      @lukashradecky5492 Год назад +5

      See Aston Villa in 2015-16

  • @christopherwright8811
    @christopherwright8811 Год назад +7

    Newcastle have done the same several times, Leeds have been down to league one, Sunderland have done that twice, Blackburn were down in the doldrums too. Wolves went down to the fourth division. Of course it must be said that Nuremburg have endured their trials........Sad for HSV though as a double former resident.

  • @mikexstad1121
    @mikexstad1121 Год назад +31

    Im a fanatical Bundesliga fan from the U.S. I find the traditions of the Bundesliga, 50+1, matchday experience, and especially the ultras, to be especially refreshing coming from an American perspective. American pro sports are the antithesis of soulless exploitive corporate american professional sports. The premier league is very very American in my opinion. I watch Bundesliga and Serie A mostly, when i watch EPL i feel like im hurting the sport tbh (plus the football is kind of boring). Ive seen live bayern, Stuttgart twice (including the title celebration for thr 2.bl title), Frankfurt, and Napoli.
    I wouldn't trade the matchday experience of especially Frankfurt and Stuttgart, to sit in a soulless bowl in Arsenal for like 5x the price

    • @Ikhlashasib10
      @Ikhlashasib10 Год назад

      So now arsenal is soulless? Bo wonder German football is utter shit lol

    • @fgsaramago
      @fgsaramago Год назад +1

      in Portugal its not 50%, its 100%. Oh, and you clearly have no idea what the ultras are...

    • @mikexstad1121
      @mikexstad1121 Год назад +4

      @@fgsaramago I don't?

    • @fgsaramago
      @fgsaramago Год назад

      @@mikexstad1121 ultras deal drugs for their income and occasionally beat up and murder fans of rival clubs. Im sure thats not something you find refreshing...

    • @scurrrface9753
      @scurrrface9753 Год назад

      ​@@fgsaramago?

  • @bhobg
    @bhobg Год назад +1

    One of your best. Thanks!!

  • @JoeMercersWay
    @JoeMercersWay Год назад +16

    Since 2011, Bayern have spent €286m on 30 players signed from other Bundesliga clubs, at an average of €9.5m per player. That includes 10 free signings, 4 youth signings and they also poached Kovac and Nagelsmann in that time.
    The highest fee was Upamecano for €42.5m. There were 3 strategic decimations of rivals. Dortmund in 13/14 and 14/15, Hoffenheim in 17/18 and Leipzig in 21/22.
    Neuer, Mandzukic, Dante, Gotze, Lewandowski, Rode, Kimmich, Hummels, Sandro Wagner, Sule, Rudy, Gnabry, Goretzka, Pavard, Upamecano, Sabitzer and Sommer went for a combined €264.5m, or €16.5m.
    Sales to Bayern from other Bundesliga clubs are so undervalued that it dopes Bayern's position in the league. If Bayern had to buy that abroad, or a Premier League club had to buy it, it would be €600m or more.
    That's where the Bundesliga fails. Not taxing Bayern for commercial revenue doping and they hoover up the best talent from rivals, who have no money to compete in the open market and lose their best talent so no incentive to grow their academies to be poached, so the national team suffers.
    If Bundesliga wants to save itself.
    50% tax on commercial revenues over €150m, distributed equally to other Bundesliga clubs.
    50% signing on fee for a Bundesliga domestic transfer on a free is taxed on signing club and paid to buying club.
    When a Bundesliga club signs from another Bundesliga club, 50% of the player's annual wage is taxed on the buying club and given to selling club.
    So for example Goretzka.
    Schalke maybe got €3m from Bayern in compensation..
    With new rules:
    Bayern pay €112m to the Bundesliga in commercial revenue tax. Each Bundesliga club with commercial revenues under €150m gets an equal share, so €5-6m each.
    Say Goretzka's signing bonus was €10m, Bayern have to pay Schalke €5m.
    Say Goretzka is on €12m per year. Bayern have to pay Schalke €6m per year as a development fee over the length of his first contract.
    So instead of Bayern stealing Goretzka for free, Schalke get at least €35m for him even if his contract runs down.
    Bundesliga would then be truly fair and could point fingers at England. Now they can't.

    • @samuelyee4017
      @samuelyee4017 Год назад

      From the goretzka circumstances, bayern allowed schalke to stay afloat instead of going to liquidation

    • @JoeMercersWay
      @JoeMercersWay Год назад

      @@samuelyee4017 he went on a free. Demonstrate how my suggestion isn't better for Schalke than what they got.

    • @jediknight5600
      @jediknight5600 Год назад

      Proof that they all serve Bayern as their lord and master. Happy to be Bayern's bitches but hate Leipzig and Hoffenheim for daring to spend money and try to compete. Weak.

    • @dinglshingle
      @dinglshingle Год назад

      you deserve top comment

    • @Bornevalesh
      @Bornevalesh Год назад

      To tax the commercial revenue and give it to others clubs is a very bad idea. Missmanaged clubs would definately calculate with that revenue and still spend too much money. Whats worse: they will spend money that might fall away if the big clubs like Bayern or Dortmund would adjust their strategy. That would result in even more debts and problems for some clubs.
      A 50% fee for free transfers in the domestivc league might sound nice at first, but this would only lead to a talent bleed to other leagues. The biggest problem are the player agents. The only way to prevent this might be a general rule for all players under 23 for example, where the buying club has to pay 50% of signings bonus and salary for the first 1-3 years (for german or foreign clubs). But UEFA and FIFA will not allow something like that.

  • @Blacktempler89
    @Blacktempler89 8 месяцев назад

    as a person that has a season ticket for Franakfurt I love this video. you're on the point. i use to life in england and i was shocked by the prices for a ticket. my standing (so no seats) ticket is like 140 pounds per season

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames 5 месяцев назад

      This is abhorrent. Football should be the people’s game.

  • @scottwhitt9379
    @scottwhitt9379 Год назад +4

    Another great video. I think having a league where there can be so much fluidity between levels is ideal. Those pics of Newcastle fans were just so sad.

    • @ifldiscovery8500
      @ifldiscovery8500 Год назад

      what is sad about celebrating your takeover? PIF has done more for the city of newcastle than local government.

  • @Vromiaris778
    @Vromiaris778 Год назад +12

    As a lifelong Hamburg fan, I can agree with the statement that the 2.Bundesliga is far more entertaining, exciting and tense than the Bundesliga where the battle at the bottom is the only exciting part these days...

  • @audisuresgameplay5686
    @audisuresgameplay5686 Год назад +3

    The fact that declan rice is more expensive than all of the stadiums he mentioned in the beginning

  • @qprfcfromthewhitecity
    @qprfcfromthewhitecity Год назад +1

    Leverkusen have been in the top flight for over 50 years. They're hardly a new addition to the Bundesliga

  • @speedy3702
    @speedy3702 Год назад +16

    What I personally find the most surprising is not that German football fans have this extreme pro-tradition mentality, but that English fans apparently DON'T have the same mentality. This is specially puzzling because English people in general seem to be among the ones in Europe that care the most about tradition in other areas and who are always very protective of it.
    So why is it that when it comes to footbal, which was literally invented in England, they seem to be so comfortable with the concept of their almost 150 year old Clubs full of tradition being bought by foreign "Owners" (just the use of this word already sounds offensive), who literally play FM with those clubs and don't really care about them?

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Год назад +3

      ‘English people care about tradition’
      Not sure what you mean by this but I’m sure it sounds wrong

    • @speedy3702
      @speedy3702 Год назад +3

      @@HkFinn83 Sorry, I am not a natural English speaker. What I am meant to say is that people in England have the reputation of giving a lot of value to tradition and therefore being protective of it. Just to give you an example. Every year Jürgen Klopp and Pep Guardiola complain in the holiday season about the games that happen around that time, because they believe it would be resonable for the players to have some rest, like it happens in most other countries. But the response they then get in the media is to stop whining about it, because it's tradition to play on Boxing Day, etc.
      So my point is that I would expect English football fans to have the same protective mentality when it comes being against their clubs being bought by billionaires for vanity reaons, the same way as German fans do. But for some reason this doesn't appear to apply at all for English fans. So it's just fascinating how love of tradition manifests itself in different ways from country to country.

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Год назад +1

      @@speedy3702 how is being owned by a rich Arab or Russian any less ‘traditional’ than being owned by an old British industrialist or American venture capitalist? It makes no difference as a fan. The only damage the money has done to the Premier League that I can see is to make it much higher quality and more entertaining. People just like complaining about everything, especially when they get to a certain age. The reality is football is still generally a very cheap and accessible sport to go and watch in England. I’m more of a cricket fan than football, and a ticket to a Test match is five times more expensive than to a top premier league game. Look at tennis, F1, any other major sport is stupidly expensive. Imo complaining about the new owners is just a misguided nostalgia. And if they make the game uncompetitive with their spending, well that’s on the FA, UEFA, or the government. If their regulations aren’t fit for purpose it’s their fault.

    • @speedy3702
      @speedy3702 Год назад +3

      @@HkFinn83 Well, the point here is not about the "Owners" being Arab, Russian, British or Americans. But it's about the club not having "Owners" at all and instead being owned by the members who then elect the leadership democratically.

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Год назад +1

      @@speedy3702 that’s never been a thing in England, even before the premier league. So there’s no difference now other than the nationality of the owners

  • @yonh5350
    @yonh5350 Год назад +1

    football is more than just trophies...well said man! we all want to win but theres so much more to the game. greed and trophy culture is killing the love for the game, feels like nothing matters than who won at the end and how much your club spends every window

  • @asimplenoob6798
    @asimplenoob6798 Год назад +8

    Hamburg need to come back to the Bundesliga hopefully this season.

  • @davidpyott3710
    @davidpyott3710 10 месяцев назад

    Top vid Alfie. The only football channel that says it like it is.

  • @ezraezra2928
    @ezraezra2928 Год назад +3

    The fact he mentions about how English Football would be happened if big clubs played in the Championship makes us annoyed. With Premier League still reaching 3rd gameweek, clubs like Manchester United, Chelsea, and Everton are prone for relegation due to recent poor performances, with Chelsea being disappointed a lot, given their huge spendings. Meanwhile, untraditional clubs like Newcastle United, Brighton, and Aston Villa are having a good start. Even Tottenham Hotspurs, one of the big clubs that was classified as "serial bottlers", had a good form with new manager and didn't rely on Harry Kane.

    • @stefan5730
      @stefan5730 Год назад +3

      Aston Villa is everything but untratditional, they were Europan champions in 1982.

    • @ezraezra2928
      @ezraezra2928 Год назад +1

      @@stefan5730 Don't forget Nottingham Forest that won 2 European Cups in a row back in 1979-1980, Ipswich Town that won the Cup Winners Cup in 1981, and Everton that won the Cup Winners Cup in 1985.

  • @simonjohnstone6671
    @simonjohnstone6671 7 месяцев назад +2

    Stuttgart went from relegation strugglers to finishing second ahead of Bayern Munich but only behind the unbeaten Bayer Leverkusen just this last season

  • @Flinsenberger101
    @Flinsenberger101 Год назад +8

    Another reason for the dominance of Bayern is that it is very hard for the smaller clubs to handle the fixture congestion once they become successful. The need to go from somewhere around 38 - 40 league and cup matches to play in 44+ matches with european football is a lot to handle. This forces clubs to significantly increase squad depth, with no guarantee at all that there will be international football in the next season to finance the increased squad.
    Therefore many clubs have only passing success. Some, like Schalke, risked a lot in this step and were punished. Others, like Frankfurt, Gladbach or Hoffenheim, were not able to be successful in both the European Cups and the Bundesliga. Sometimes not even in one competition.
    Furthermore the money that is given to clubs by the league, the DFL, is significantly more lopsided than in the Premier League. Last season, Bayern got almost 3x times as much from the DFL compared to the smallest club. In the Premier League the factor is 1.3.

    • @fgsaramago
      @fgsaramago Год назад +1

      Portuguese clubs have no money to increase squad depth so they simply get relegated in the season they play European football or get pretty close to it

    • @neilbiggs1353
      @neilbiggs1353 Год назад

      I'd say you see something like this happen with the Europa League and PL teams. If one of the bigger clubs misses out on the CL and gets Europa League, you'll often see their matchday squads for the EL with shirt numbers that look more like a bingo card. A smaller club like West Ham will play something like a proper team, but end up struggling below mid-table because of the additional fatigue and possibly injuries to their already thinner squad.
      I'm wondering if we should try to adopt a system where European club football is closer to the US post-season play off model. We have the top leagues finish by say March/April, and then a short knockout tournament to decide to champions. The way UEFA is trying to push more and more European games in to the seasons feels to me like it is going to lead to a breaking point sooner rather than later. Maybe that's the plan, to create a crisis that makes a super league a necessity?...

  • @deanjacks270
    @deanjacks270 Год назад +1

    One point regarding "English weeks": There's no TV blackout in Germany, so there isn't the same pressure to move games from 3 p.m. on Saturdays.
    I don't know if it's universal, but round here (Ruhrgebiet), your match ticket includes public transport to and from the game, which might have cost you another €10-15 otherwise. It's cheaper than going to the cinema.

  • @aidygooner
    @aidygooner Год назад +4

    As sad as it was to see Hamburg relegated for the first time, it was the most deserved relegation coming due to their inability to change the annual trend of surviving on the last day or through the playoffs before the unthinkable eventually became reality 🙈

  • @roanfloermartinez1097
    @roanfloermartinez1097 Год назад +1

    At 15:50 bro lists three companies to sponsor teams but they’re all headquartered in Munich lol

  • @nummer3357
    @nummer3357 Год назад +5

    My club will most likely be relegated to the Swedish third tier this autumn. We have not played in the top tier since 2009 and our last national championship is 38 years old. But as a member of the club I own it. Not some local rich dude. Not a hedgefund. Not a foreign conglomerate. I own it. We own it. I pity every Englishman because you have never had the opportunity to be anything more than very loyal customers.

  • @whiteshoesmovies799
    @whiteshoesmovies799 Год назад +1

    very good video, I spotted some minor mistakes though:
    around 4:50 you used a picture of disappointed FC Cologne players when you were talking about Kaiserslautern.
    in 6:33 you said Kaiserslautern finished 6th in the Bundesliga when you actually meant Nuremberg
    in 8:27 you say 1860 was relegated to the second bundesliga in 2017, but they were relegated to the third division in that year
    10:08.. did not check it again but I believe Hamburg got relegated as 17th, not 18th.
    starting from 14:07: when it comes to small clubs that have risen one should DEFINITELY mention Freiburg who despite not having a lot of money established as a team that fight for European places year over year thanks to a phenomenal youth academy

  • @JAYCS2
    @JAYCS2 Год назад +5

    16:20 thats not true, we have a very casual audience too that would love to have more money in their clubs with reasonable owners. 50+1 made Bayern dominate for 12years now, our minds have changed a lot over that time!

  • @saskoreacts
    @saskoreacts Год назад +4

    I'm sorry but all that talk about tradition from these clubs and their fans is just excusing their own incompetence. Hamburg has been heavily supported by the investor Kühne, Schalke by Tönnies, Hertha by Windhorst/Tenor even Bayern (Audi, VW, Adidas) and Dortmund (who is the only German club who's selling stocks) are heavily supported and involved with big corparate investors. It's hypocrisy that they claim they basically owned their lifetime spot in the top flight simply because they have the "tradition" and they won some trophies in the 50s-70s. If they didnt mess up so majorly they would still have their old status because they still have a higher budget than almost all the clubs in the second tier and also more than most in the first tier.

    • @716_ハディくん
      @716_ハディくん Год назад +1

      right ? love reading those fans copium 😂😂

    • @socialismandrevolution8299
      @socialismandrevolution8299 Год назад

      I partially agree with this. It's natural that things change over time, and I find it annoying when clubs like Freiburg, Mainz or Union are attacked for being newer to the Bundesliga. Honestly, if Hamburg, Schalke, Stuttgart and Werder had been replaced at the top by Union, Freiburg, Mainz and Augsburg, I don't think anyone could complain. But the truth of the matter is that these clubs were instead replaced by clubs which have massive financial backing and not much of an actual fanbase.

    • @saskoreacts
      @saskoreacts Год назад

      @@socialismandrevolution8299 but they got easily surpassed by the teams you mentioned too. They finished in front of teams like Wolfsburg & Hoffenheim for years too. They still have huge potentials when it comes to revenue and sponsoring but they waste money and get distracted by their own club politics. That’s no one else’s fault but their own imo.

    • @socialismandrevolution8299
      @socialismandrevolution8299 Год назад +1

      @@saskoreacts Oh absolutely, there's definitely mismanagement at some of the old giants. I think a lot of fans of these clubs are actually aware of that, almost every Hamburg fan I've seen hates how their club is being run. It's just that while it was probably time for at least some of these clubs to fall from the top, the teams that (mostly) took their spot are the wrong ones. It's definitely harder to succeed when you're up against clubs for whom money isn't an issue, at a time when there's so much money in European competitions that they're becoming almost like a closed competition. As a fan of Werder Bremen, I've actually been quite happy to see Freiburg and Union succeed last year. It's nice to see that the financial power of the new top can still be overcome at times, if only for a while.

  • @fistofren3483
    @fistofren3483 Год назад +4

    In Germany we have a say: "Liebe kennt keine Liga" which means "Love does not know any league".

  • @samuelschonenberger
    @samuelschonenberger Год назад +1

    My friend in high school from Nürnberg always said every year that "this year we are going up just you see"

  • @silvesta5027
    @silvesta5027 Год назад +24

    This mainly taught me that German football is awesome and I WISH other leagues could be as community and fan focused as they are ❤️

    • @jediknight5600
      @jediknight5600 Год назад +4

      You think the same team winning every single year is awesome?

    • @ninodino444
      @ninodino444 Год назад +4

      @@jediknight5600 manc would have won the PL six time in a row if not for one blip year. You are deluding yourself if you think the PL is not a one team league

    • @jediknight5600
      @jediknight5600 Год назад

      @@ninodino444 5 out of 6 is completely different to 11 in a row. That's double if my simple maths is correct. Also, Manchester City are despised. Everyone hates them in England. But in Germany? They hate small teams like Leipzig and Hoffenheim more than the big bully Bayern, and they also sell all their best players to Bayern to serve their lord and master from Munchen.
      So, who is deluded now?

    • @ifldiscovery8500
      @ifldiscovery8500 Год назад

      @@ninodino444 Man City wins cuz they ae best team in the world Bayern wins cuz everyone else is commited to 50+1 which is socialistic approach. Fans don't fund or run a club ...... that what makes them fans, random low iq idiots that don't know how the real world works.

    • @Oskar.s.s
      @Oskar.s.s Год назад +1

      @@jediknight5600nearly every league in Europe has one team dominating

  • @nemanjabibic9032
    @nemanjabibic9032 Год назад

    Alfie, you're doing god's work! Keep at it my brother!

  • @depekthegreat359
    @depekthegreat359 Год назад +20

    For me,German football is the best European football league and of the best ever in this world but of course,I am extremely so sad about the respective bigger German teams getting relegated,good friends!!!Yet,I fully be updated from the top till bottom tiers of the German football and long live German football!!!🇩🇪

    • @lordpembridge303
      @lordpembridge303 Год назад +1

      Their reserve teams play in the 3rd tier which devalues and makes the German league system unappealing.

    • @andreasgamperl9583
      @andreasgamperl9583 Год назад +2

      @@lordpembridge303where else should they play? They aren’t allowed to play higher, because they might compete against their own first team

    • @lordpembridge303
      @lordpembridge303 Год назад +1

      @@andreasgamperl9583 Their own reserve league like in England.

    • @lisaruhm6681
      @lisaruhm6681 Год назад +7

      @@lordpembridge303 ehm, you realize, the problamy that system currently has? Noone watches the games, and it basically is the game of which club is richer. Integrating the U23 teams into the normal league structure gives the young players the ability to play against experienced opponents and grow.

    • @Monaleenian
      @Monaleenian Год назад

      The best football league in the world?! Bayern Munich have won the league every year for the past 11 years. The league is nonsense.

  • @cheruvatoor
    @cheruvatoor 9 месяцев назад +1

    Coming from a Dortmund Fan 💛🖤 I am glad that Byer Leverkusen has won this season ❤🤍.

  • @nikospurr307
    @nikospurr307 Год назад +4

    I think it's a cultural thing too, the same happens in Spain with Barca and real. When I was a kid (I was a footy fanatic and watched all the top leagues) I wasn't asked what team do you support; it was are you Barca or Madrid. Not enough support goes to your local team. Even on a 1 hour la liga show 20 min is dedicated to 18 teams and 40 min to Barca/real. Always hated that, maybe the same happens in Germany idk

    • @starboyhimself7538
      @starboyhimself7538 Год назад +1

      No we will complain but it's a lot of Bayern München content I'm lucky cause Hertha causes a lot of Hollywood so they mobbing us in the news 😂

    • @rstein926
      @rstein926 Год назад +2

      Same in Scottish football. I am a Heart of Midlothian fan but the best my team can do is finish third.
      Them, Hibernian and Aberdeen cannot compete against Celtic and Rangers due to financial reasons.
      Celtic and Rangers have dominated with Aberdeen the last league winners outside the old firm in 1985.
      And obviously Celtic and Rangers get all the publicity stunts just because they are bigger.

  • @gj1234567899999
    @gj1234567899999 Год назад +1

    They show this video to MLS executives when they wonder if relegation should be introduced…

  • @mellowado6184
    @mellowado6184 Год назад +4

    Respect to German football. England also has plenty of glory hunters who support Premier League teams on the other side of the country to where they're from with no shame. Like Londoners who support Liverpool, Man City and United, and embarrassingly use terms like 'We' and 'Us' to describe these teams. To be fair lower league teams still have the old spirit like the Germans are upholding.

  • @Ted_83
    @Ted_83 Год назад +1

    I would argue the 50+1 rule saves a lot of clubs
    While there's some disadvantages there are also plenty of examples of clubs in other leagues having bad owners and destroying clubs, this format at least helps the team stay from liquidation or all out eliminated from existence
    I'd say more incompetence from their from offices is the cause of the down fall esp when some of these clubs have such massive support. If the 50+1 rule wasn't in how far woukd some of these big clubs fall

  • @valentinshort8910
    @valentinshort8910 Год назад +4

    A similar video about the entire history of Romanian football in which only 5 teams that won the title of champion in which they played in a period when there was relegation, Ripensia Timișoara, Colțea Brașov and Venus București which were abolished by the communists and FCSB and CSA Steaua Bucharest and the fans of the two teams want the other team to be disbanded. Well, I don't think it could be a video because there wouldn't be enough interest, but at least I'm helping with the algorithm.

  • @Zentrum234
    @Zentrum234 6 месяцев назад +1

    Why?
    1. Talking about past successes rather than working towards winning new titles.
    2. Complacency. Being part of the Bundesliga seems to be enough for some clubs.
    3. Attitude. Finding and forming talents is constantly talked about. I never hear clubs like Frankfurt (or others) coming up with a plan to build the club up to be able to compete for the league in a few years.
    4. Discipline. Firing coaches every 18 months sure doesn’t help.

  • @716_ハディくん
    @716_ハディくん Год назад +3

    Fiago will love this video