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Bayern Munich is revamping its youth coaching model under sporting director Christoph Freund, inspired by RB Salzburg's successful approach. The new strategy focuses on appointing former players as coaches for the U-23 team to foster their development and maintain a connection with the club.
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Bayern Munich is restructuring its youth coaching model by appointing former players as U-23 coaches to develop their skills and maintain ties with the club.
Christoph Freund is the sporting director at Bayern Munich, overseeing the FC Bayern Campus and implementing a new coaching philosophy inspired by his experience at RB Salzburg.
Bayern's new strategy mirrors RB Salzburg's approach by developing young coaches from within, particularly former players, to ensure continuity and a strong club identity.
Bayern Munich may struggle to retain coaches who are promoted to higher positions elsewhere, potentially disrupting the development of young players at the club.
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The appointment of Dante as new FC Bayern II head coach marks the start of a new strategy by the club. The future model, meticulously developed over several months, envisions that young coaches will take charge of the second team â coaches who are still at the beginning of their careers and, ideally, have previously played for FC Bayern. The idea behind the strategy: The former players gain experience in coaching and are given the opportunity to develop at Bayern â in order to then take the next step. Bayern want to train former players into coaches from whom they can still benefit even after their departures â for example, through their network and identification with FC Bayern, especially if they end up at top clubs in the future. Sporting director Christoph Freund played a key role in this strategy, with the role model being RB Salzburg, where Freund worked for eight years. RB repeatedly formed coaches through their âfarm clubâ FC Liefering, who then went on to work at Salzburg and ultimately elsewhere, like Matthias Jaisse, Thomas Letsch, Oliver Glasner, Bo Svensson, Marco Rose and Adi HĂŒtter.
The new strategy isâŠthe old strategy? Bayern have struggled to keep a manager of the U-23s for long, with the longest appointment as U-23 manager in the last decade and a half lasting just two years before current manager Holger Seitz took charge (again). Most notably, the two managers of the U-23s before Seitzâs latest term were Sebastian HoeneĂ and Martin Demichelis. Notably, Sebastian is Uli HoeneĂâs nephew and the Argentinian Martin Demichelis is a former player at Bayern. HoeneĂ and Demichelis were both young coaches who had Bayern connections, but they also used the job as a spring board to TSG Hoffenheim in the Bundesliga and River Plate, one of the two biggest clubs in Argentina, respectively, interrupting the continuity of the young players at the club. The continuity is why Bayern opted to retain the safe and boring choice in Seitz for so long. HoeneĂ and Demichelis are almost exactly the sort of coaches this new model would be focused on developing. But their development has hardly born fruit for the club itself. The idea of developing coaches to go on to help Bayern even after their departure is a difficult one to see working out at Bayern. FC Liefering could do it because they were a feeder club to a team with greater ambitions. Bayern clearly, fortunately, are not a feeder club. If the previous coaches could get such illustrious jobs offers during their stint at Bayernâs U-23s, in what capacity would they wish to work at Bayern aside from the head coach job? Unless one of these former players turn out to be another Vincent Kompany, it is hard to imagine the development of young coaches benefitting Bayern. But hey, Freund did exceptional work at Salzburg and Liefering. He is an expert in this regard, so it is worth seeing how this process, if the story is true, will play out. *If you are looking for more Bayern Munich and German national team coverage, check out the latest episodes of Bavarian Podcast Works, which you can get on Acast, Spotify, Apple, or any leading podcast distributorâŠ*
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