Thomas received a new job offer from a top club, Thomas could start the job by October
Thomas Tuchel, who was fired recently, might be back in charge by October, with his hiring at Bayern Munich contingent on Julian Nagelsmann’s ability to turn things around.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Former Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel might be back in charge by October.
The German, who was fired by Chelsea earlier this month due to the club’s terrible start to the season, has been linked with a return to Germany via Bayern Munich.
According to Bild, Tuchel is the man the Bundesliga heavyweights will turn to if current coach Julian Nagelsmann is fired.
The Bavarians have had a dismal start to the season, and their 1-0 loss to Augsburg over the weekend brought the defending champions’ league winless streak to four games.
According to rumours, if things do not improve quickly, Bayern will turn to former Borussia Dortmund coach Tuchel, who has been without a club for a few weeks.
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In fact, Bild reports that if Bayern continues to struggle in October, the 35-year-old Nagelsmann might be fired, opening the way for out-of-work Tuchel to return to the game.
Despite rumours tying Tuchel to the top post in Germany, the club’s CEO, Oliver Kahn, has officially endorsed Nagelsmann. “We are not dealing with any other coaches right now,” Kahn told Sky Germany. Julian has really won us over.
“Of course, we’re all unsatisfied and cranky. We need to get to the bottom of this. And presume that when it resumes against Leverkusen, we will and must attack wholeheartedly.
“Perhaps one or both of you had the notion that you could do the Bundesliga on the side.” That, however, is not the case.”
Tuchel led Chelsea to their second Champions League title in 2021, but a change in ownership and the club’s sluggish start to the new season saw him become one of the Premier League’s first managerial casualties.
Following his team’s defeat against Augsburg, Nagelsmann chastised his players of being “laissez-faire” in their aggressive strategy. “Based on the numbers, we should have won… We might have attempted simple things to play into the gap behind (Augsburg’s defence), but we were too loose in the final third,” Nagelsmann explained.
“The trend isn’t promising.” “I’m thinking about myself, the circumstance, everything.”