The Bayern Munich head coach died of a heart attack some hours ago due to the shocking and world-terrible message and news he had received.
The head coach of Bayern Munich passed away from a heart attack a few hours ago as a result of the bad news and startling message he received.
The Bavarians made a grave error by choosing to stick with a coach who is obviously out of touch with the players.
Three weeks prior, following his team’s mysterious second-half collapse at the Stadio Olimpico, a startled Thomas Tuchel claimed that Bayern Munich had lost the match, not Lazio.
The coach frequently brings up the topic of his team’s self-inflicted wounds during his post-game news conferences. This was evident following Friday’s 2-2 draw with Freiburg, which effectively destroyed the Bavarians’ chances of winning the Bundesliga.
“We played really early, like it was the 85th minute, and we were behind 1-0,” he said to DAZN, looking obviously shocked by what he had just seen. “I don’t believe effort or willpower played a role. For the first thirty minutes, we just played blindly and were penalized for it.
“We lost the ball in the forward movement and invited them to counterattack after we launched attacks before anything had started at all. We were just too careless, played with no structure at all, and weren’t even in the right spots. It was harakiri in part.
Not only did the German media react emotionally to the mention of ritualistic suicide by disembowelment, but the club did as well. The anxiety building inside the Allianz Arena before Tuesday night’s Champions League second-leg matchup between Lazio and Arsenal was not alleviated by such graphic visuals.
Though Bayern is mostly to blame for dashed dreams of winning this season, the use of ‘harakiri’ wasn’t totally out of place.
At that point, it was evident that Tuchel lacked solutions for all of Bayern’s issues. He was seen angrily raising his arms on the touchline after the shocking loss to Lazio on February 14, urgently attempting to inspire his squad to play faster and more aggressively. Bayern failed to respond meaningfully to his passionate instructions, and the belief that had mysteriously vanished during the second half of a game they had been controlling did not return.
“I can’t explain it,” Tuchel said later, “because we told the team to maintain their intensity and be even braver going forward, but we seemed to lose face at the start of the half.”
Why did Bayern choose to extend the suffering when Tuchel appeared bewildered and midfielder Leon Goretzka likened the circumstances to an unending “horror movie” the same evening?
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