

Power Struggles Bei Hertha
By: Abby | December 5th, 2007thank you to Jan for help with the translation of a couple of articles, because this is way too complicated for me.
Hertha BSC Berlin had their annual meeting the other week. The good news is that they’ve posted a positive financial result, to the tune of €800,000, for the first time in 6 years. That doesn’t even include the sales of the Boateng brothers (Jerome went to Hamburg and Kevin-Prince went to Tottenham). It’s good news, but it wasn’t what made the initial headlines.
Instead, that honor went to the remarks made by the Hertha Berlin board about the general manager Dieter Hoeneß. Basically, the board were annoyed at some decisions Hoeneß had made, particularly regarding transfers (a Blackburn-supporting friend of mine is still gloating over how little they paid for Chris Samba) and the hasty season preparations. One board member declared that “[t]he Dieter-Hoeneß-model, the one man show, should not determine our future.” For an 86-year-old, harsh words indeed.
Dieter isn’t universally beloved around Hertha and German football circles. The fan club that Patrick Ebert got in trouble for wearing a T-shirt in support of, for example, were at one point referring to him as Public Enemy Number #1 (around when I wrote that post, actually). Raphael Honigstein at the Guardian referred to him in April as not only hopeless presently, but the worst player ever in a World Cup final to boot, as well as insinuating that he’s been in the position because his brother Uli doesn’t want Berlin to potentially challenge the Bayern hegemony. I personally love a ludicrous conspiracy theory, so it was a nice chuckle for me.
However, Hoeneß himself believes that he should get more credit, and he may have a point. He did establish Hertha in the Bundesliga after their 1997 promotion, and even raised them to European places on a few occasions. They’re starting to post a profit and look stable for the future, but questions about Hoeneß remain, and his general paranoia and unwillingness to be a team player don’t help.
All of which become clear when we get to Michael Preetz. Preetz, a former Hertha captain and top scorer, was appointed as an ‘assistant’ to Hoeneß in 2003. Hoeneß was supposed to train him in some of his duties, but he doesn’t seem all that thrilled with the idea and generally won’t say a good word about him. The chairmen want to see Hoeneß handing over some of his power to Preetz, with an eye to a smooth changeover in power when Hoeneß retires. They’re particularly keen to see Preetz take over as sporting director, which is one of Hoeneß’ many titles, and may appoint him as soon as 2008.
So what does all this have to do with the board meeting? Lots of things. At said meeting, the chairmen demanded that Preetz be appointed. Hoeneß demanded Preetz say something about it. To his credit, he praised Hoeneß far more than Hoeneß had ever praised him, talking about the good work relationship they had and generally being kind. However, he also said that he wanted Hoeneß’ job in 2010.
Hoeneß often mentioned 2010 as his retirement date, and it’s been generally assumed that Preetz will take over after that. It’s the first time that he’s said it aloud, though, and some speculate that Hoeneß was always hoping that they’d beg him to stay on for lack of a suitable candidate…
Anyway, that’s where it is right now. I’ll keep you updated when/if more happens on this.
Oh, and Hoeneß also blamed Preetz for not taking the players out to applaud the fans in a recent game. Stay classy!
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Comments
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Abby, that’s very interesting. Thanks (Jan, too!) for digging around to get the story. I don’t know that I would’ve heard that anywhere else.
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United States

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Dieter needs to go. He’s done the club well in the past (Lulu, Pantelic, etc.), but is now causing too many problems in the organization. Why did we hire a Bayern Muenchen flunky anyway?
Posted from
United States

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[...] Power struggles at Hertha Berlin. (Hertha Berlin Offside) [...]
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No problem! That’s my job.
He was available? No idea, Ben. He’s done well in some cases, and confusingly in others. I think the question is whether the board/us the fans want Hertha to stay where they are- mid-table, occasionally a bit lower- or if the ambitions are higher. I keep hearing about the potential of Hertha, but nothing ever seems to come of that. Also, what I like about Preetz is that he’s definitely a Hertha man. No arguing with that. I don’t know how he’d do, though, since Hoeneß isn’t giving him the training he needs…
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I’m not sure what to make of Dieter Hoeness. He surely established Berlin as a Bundesliga mainstay, with a Champions League season and several UEFA Cup seasons as main achievements (though, the club was in a bit of relegation trouble last season). But Berlin is also servicing a debt of over €40m, and I don’t know to what extend this is also Hoeness’ fault. Somewhere back in 2001(?) a TV deal broke, because a media tycoon went bankrupt, and those who picked up the pieces seized the moment to lower the price of the TV deal (also one reason why it’s so small compared to other leagues). This got the Bundesliga as a whole in financial trouble, but especially exposed those clubs with a rather shaky way of budgeting >> Hertha.
You can also question whether establishing a club from Germany’s largest city with a 72000 capacity UEFA-5-Star stadium as a rather anonymous mid-table team that currently averages around 42000 per home game is such an achievement? Maybe it is. I don’t know what circumstances Hoeness had to deal with.
Hoeness might have just made one of the smarter moves of his managing career by appointing Lulu as coach. Lulu wants to play attractive and highly tactical football in the long run, and this could help boost the profile of the team and help attract more fans. Which again would help the economic side of things.
But I wonder what the combo of Bremen’s Klaus Allofs+Thomas Schaaf could have done with Hertha in the same timeframe…
Posted from
Germany

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[...] Abby also analysed a power struggle within her club, that promises to entertain us for about two more years. (Hertha Offside) [...]
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Yeah. I think that’s the big question, Jan. What should Hertha expect? Teams like Bremen and Leverkusen, with a local fanbase and venue far smaller than Hertha’s, have had sustained success. Bremen are a good example- they consolidated their success and are now expected to be good each season.
Again, I always see a lot of talk about the potential of Hertha. Berlin is a major city with a massive population and a big tourist draw, with one team in the top league that plays in a large historic stadium. Should it be expecting more? Why hasn’t it consolidated its success in the way other clubs have? If it’s a monetary issue, it can perhaps be laid on Hoeness- he’s the one who’s supposed to be managing it. It’s hard to say for sure, though. I don’t know what’s really going on behind the scenes. It does sound like the board is getting fed up, though.
Allofs and Schaaf would have done a great job with Berlin, I bet. But they’re special.
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Maybe all will be OK by 2010. I think that’s the year Lulu planned to compete for the Champions League spots. That’s when Dieter Hoeness supposedly leaves the club as well. And by then they plan to reduce the debt to just €20-25m.
Posted from
Germany

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