Sport
Thomas Tuchel is ruthless, demanding and humourless but he’s a WINNER – and just what England need for next manager
ENGLAND’S new manager has a ruthless streak that has seen him fall foul of players and club bosses — but it might be just the job for the Three Lions.
Those who know him best admit Thomas Tuchel has not been out to win any popularity contests while fighting his way to the top.
Football writer Carsten Germann told The Sun: “He’s absolutely unhumorous.
“He’s not a coach for the people.
“He’s a football scientist, he puts tactics and results over all.
“But that winning mentality is what England could need.”
Tuchel, the 51-year-old former chief coach at Chelsea, Bayern Munich and Paris Saint Germain, was caught on video bawling out a young striker — and French superstar Kylian Mbappe said the only German word he learned from him was “scheisse” (s***).
Tuchel, who has followed rival Jurgen Klopp into posts at various club sides, has also been known to bristle if compared to the former Liverpool boss.
Experiences that have shaped him include one seven years ago, while manager of Borussia Dortmund, when he survived a bomb attack on the team bus, with shrapnel striking seats close to him.
And the father of two ended his 13-year marriage to an ex-journalist after allegedly beginning an affair with a Brazilian businesswoman 14 years younger than him.
But there are also accounts of him offering warm words of encouragement to stars in one-to-one chats — and paying for his cleaner’s son to receive life-saving medical care.
Tuchel was born in the small town of Krumbach in Bavaria, and was coached by dad Rudolf with the local side.
At 15 he was spotted by top-flight German club Augsburg, and he played three times for the national Under-18s.
Yet teammate Heiner Schuh recalled: “He had few friends as he was exacting and demanding.”
Defender Tuchel turned professional at lower league Stuttgart Kickers. He never drank with the other players and is still almost teetotal, often opting for drinking warm water.
A series of knee injuries ended his playing career when he was at FC Ulm, aged just 24.
The cartilage damage was considered wear and tear by the insurers, so he did not get a payout.
He said: “I was insured for everything apart from this one lousy condition.”
Tuchel waited tables at the Radio Bar in Stuttgart in 1999.
It helped him become more gregarious and fund his business administration course at university.
A year later he was hired as a youth coach at top side Stuttgart, before moving on to Augsburg’s second team and then Mainz 05.
In a shock move he was promoted from under-19 coach to first team manager in 2009.
IS TUCHEL RIGHT MAN FOR THE THREE LIONS JOB?
YES: says Shaun SHAUN Custis, Head of Sport
YES, it would’ve been ideal if we could have had an Englishman.
But football is not an ideal world and nobody who listened to Thomas Tuchel yesterday could doubt his passion for the job. He loves our football history and he loves the country.
He is our third foreign coach but the first to convince us this is made for him. Sven-Goran Eriksson would have left in a year for Man United had Alex Ferguson not stayed.
Tuchel rejected United this summer still hoping he’d get the England gig. Fabio Capello gave the impression he was doing us a favour.
Tuchel is a top coach and a proven winner whose dream is to deliver us the World Cup. What more could we ask for?
NO: says Harry Redknapp, Ex-Prem manager
I WANTED an Englishman. I’m very patriotic.
All the clubs are owned by foreign owners and they bring a foreign manager in.
With the FA and the money we spend on coaching courses and everything else it’s sad.
Thomas Tuchel lost his job quite quickly at a couple of clubs. It’s not like he’s been a massive success. People say you’ve got to be a great coach for England, (but) you just have to have a bit of common sense.
Pick the best players, make them feel great about themselves, make them feel good about playing for England, let them know we can go and win a trophy, that the team is fantastic.
- Harry spoke to Sky Sports
ANDY DILLON: Thomas Tuchel has all the ingredients to become a classic England manager – tactical nous, drive and a tangled love life
By Andy Dillon
THOMAS TUCHEL possesses all the ingredients to become a classic England manager.
Tactical nous, drive, energy, experience – a tangled love life.
English football should welcome back the most explosive, dynamic, charismatic and impossibly tall and gangly coach to have lit up the Premier League.
Chelsea’s colourful former boss has been leading a settled life in Munich of late.
Far enough away from ex-wife Sissi but close enough to see his two daughters.
Walking his dog in the streets in the east of Germany’s most fashionable city, residing in the posh Bogenhausen area. Living relatively quietly with his Brazilian girlfriend.
Tuchel is a vastly different personality to the man who led England quietly but assuredly to the brink of World Cups and European Championships.
An excitable nature can make him hard to handle for those seeking calm and who like to impose their way on a manager they view very much as an underling.
Read more on why Tuchel REALLY IS the best man for the England job
Tuchel admitted at the time that the Bundesliga club had been willing to take the risk because it had worked with Klopp in the past.
In the same year he married Sissi, a journalist at the highly respected national newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung.
She reportedly gave up her career to bring up their two daughters, Emma and Kim.
Sissi, who is very private, was seen by his side celebrating successes on the pitch as unfashionable Mainz twice qualified for the Europa League.
But an amateur cameraman caught Thomas screaming at young striker Shawn Parker for almost a minute in the dressing room after one game — before telling him: “So go join the under 17s.”
Club executive Christian Heidel wanted his manager to engage with the fans and media more — like the popular Klopp did.
But he regretted starting a conversation saying, “with Kloppo we used to . . .”
In an unauthorised biography titled Rulebreaker, Heidel said: “That’s when Thomas started yelling at me, ‘How dare I?’
“The conversation was over.
“I thought to myself, ‘Whoops, I hit a nerve’.”
He’s very sensitive to criticism
Football writer Carsten Germann
England’s Liverpool players, such as Trent Alexander-Arnold, may do well to remember that anecdote.
Indeed, Tuchel’s thin skin could be a problem as England coach — where flak comes with the job.
Carsten, who has interviewed Tuchel, said: “He’s very sensitive to criticism.”
Who has Tuchel coached?
Here is a list of the England stars that have already worked with Thomas Tuchel…
- Harry Kane – Bayern Munich
- Eric Dier – Bayern Munich
- Mason Mount – Chelsea
- Reece James – Chelsea
- Ben Chilwell – Chelsea
- Callum Hudson-Odoi – Chelsea
- Ruben Loftus-Cheek – Chelsea
- Raheem Sterling – Chelsea
- Ross Barkley – Chelsea
- Tammy Abraham – Chelsea
- Conor Gallagher – Chelsea
However his undoubted talents led Dortmund to hire him as Klopp’s replacement in 2015.
Two years later he won Germany’s equivalent of the FA Cup and reached the quarter final of the Champions league.
In April that year a controversial 3-2 defeat against Monaco showed how hard it can be to know the truth about Tuchel’s character.
It came after he survived the team bus attack, which left him being viewed by some as a heroic defender of his squad, and by others as a callous villain.
Sports journalist Pit Gottschalk’s book Locker Room Whispers reported he responded to seeing tearful players by saying: “I’m supposed to beat Bayern with these wimps?”
The manager gave a totally different account. He had been angry that his side had been ordered to play the game against Monaco just 24 hours after the bombing.
He said: “We had the feeling we were being treated as if our bus had been hit by a can of beer.”
Bizarrely, it turned out that perpetrator Sergei Wenergold hid homemade devices filled with hydrogen peroxide and a dozen bolts close to the bus in order to make money on the stock exchange.
Shortly before the attack he “bet” that the club’s shares would drop.
In November 2018 Wenergold, 35, was jailed for 14 years.
The fallout from the incident caused a rift with Dortmund’s chief executive and Tuchel was dismissed.
He joined PSG, taking the French side to their first Champions League final.
He’s a football scientist, he puts tactics and results over all
Football writer Carsten Germann
However it was reported that he fell out with star player Mbappe as well as Brazilian sporting director Leonardo, and he lost his job.
Before leaving the French capital, Tuchel heard his cleaner’s son was going to hospital and paid for his care.
In January 2021 he arrived in London, replacing Frank Lampard as Chelsea manager.
Tuchel took them from ninth in the Premier League to fourth, qualifying for the Champions League, but lost in the FA Cup final to Leicester.
Off the field, there were problems with Tuchel’s marriage.
He started a relationship with Brazilian Natalie Guerriero Max, 37, and in 2022 he split from Sissi.
Natalie, who still lives in London, could be one of the reasons he was keen to take the England job.
An insider said: “Thomas is obsessed with Natalie, but he is still close to his children and is a good father who sees them often.”
Tuchel led Chelsea to Champions League glory in 2021, masterminding victory against Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City.
Yet he was dismissed by the club’s new American owners in September 2022.
An email included in Sissi’s divorce papers suggested that he had been fired for “’off-field reasons” with the players “losing respect for him.”
But the manager remained in demand.
Hired by Munich, he won the league title in his first season before a poor set of results the following year led to yet another departure.
Three Lions fans will be hoping Germany’s loss is England’s gain.
Forgotten England stars could benefit from Tuchel appointment
WITH Thomas Tuchel announced as the next England manager, a few forgotten stars might be hopeful of a return to the international set up.
The former Chelsea and Bayern Munich manager usually uses a 3-4-3 formation.
That could provide an opening for Mason Mount, who’s not been involved in the England set-up since the World Cup in 2022.
The now Manchester United star enjoyed his most successful spell under Tuchel while the pair were at Stamford Bridge.
Tuchel could also offer lifelines to other previously capped players such as Ruben Loftus-Cheek and Eric Dier.
RLC has excelled since his move to AC Milan and with England struggling to find a partner for Rice, he could be the surprise answer.
Meanwhile, Dier played for Tuchel at Bayern Munich as part of a back-three last season.
The defender did enough to convince the club to make his loan move permanent after he had fallen out of favour at Tottenham.
Click here to see the full England XI who could play under Tuchel.
German laughter at rivals’ boss bid
THE Sun’s front page announcing Thomas Tuchel as the new England boss was the talk of Germany yesterday — even being retweeted by its ambassador in Britain.
Diplomat Miguel Berger cheekily added a laughing emoji as he sent out yesterday’s splash with the headline “Football’s coming home” translated into German.
He wrote: “A German manager for England! Congrats to Thomas Tuchel. A brave decision.”
Reaction across Germany was mixed, with many gleefully mocking Tuchel’s deal to manage their arch rival.
Bild, the country’s biggest-selling newspaper, used a picture of The Sun’s splash and claimed England must be desperate if we were turning to a German.
It said the ideal outcome would be England losing the World Cup final to Germany on penalties.
An online vote had 80 per cent of Germans gloating England would not win the World Cup with Tuchel.
And one journalist wrote: “The desperation on the island must be enormous if they admit that only a German can help now.”
Upmarket magazine Der Spiegel promised Tuchel “can be trusted” but warned he would inevitably “face anger” for crossing the North Sea.
Sport
Thomas Tuchel new England manager: How did we get here so quickly and quietly?
During this two-week international break interim manager Carsley gave two confusing news conferences, on Thursday, 10 October and again on Sunday, 13 October.
Both were after England games in front of the media. Both times he seemed to tie himself in knots over whether he was in the running for the full-time England job and whether he even wanted it.
BBC Sport was told by a senior FA figure 10 days ago – before the damaging Greece defeat – that the recruitment process was going “very well”.
Perhaps that was a reference to the secret talks with Tuchel.
Maybe they had been stung by reports of inertia, or the risk of Tuchel being a target for Manchester United, who spoke to the German coach in the summer.
Could the fact United stuck with Erik ten Hag – despite their poor start to the season – have pushed Tuchel towards England?
There was a convenient theory that with Carsley’s candidacy effectively over after the defeat by Greece last week, the FA’s hand was forced.
But we now know Tuchel signed his contract with the governing body two days before that match.
Astonishingly, in the era of 24-7 media coverage and the interest in the England role as one of the biggest jobs in world football, Tuchel’s appointment did not leak.
There were a handful of reports of ‘talks’ in German media, which were played down at the time by Tuchel’s representatives when BBC Sport approached them for comment.
BBC Sport was told Bullingham led a call to the FA board late afternoon on Tuesday, 8 October, which lasted around half an hour.
The board was told the contract was ready to be signed, and that the FA’s remuneration committee had been through all the terms and conditions with Tuchel.
Board members were not asked for their views, but nor did anyone speak out against the appointment. The board members were told that a number of candidates had been interviewed but they were not told who they were, sources told BBC Sport.
Motorsports
Di Giannantonio to skip final two 2024 MotoGP rounds for surgery
VR46 Ducati rider Fabio di Giannantonio will miss the final two races of the year in favour of surgery on the shoulder he injured in practice for the Austrian Grand Prix in August.
The Italian will undergo an operation on his left shoulder after the Thailand Grand Prix, which follows this weekend’s round in Australia.
If all goes to plan, he will race two successive grands prix in Thailand, where the 2025 season kicks off on 2 March.
Di Giannantonio will remain with the VR46 team next year, but will be riding a factory-spec Ducati for the first time in his career.
“We’ll do the surgery after Thailand,” said di Giannantonio. “It’s the best compromise between doing as many races as possible this year and starting next year in the best condition.
“The plan is to be as ready as possible for the Sepang [pre-season] test and then 100% in time for the first race.
“It’s not fantastic for me because it’s never good to miss races. It’s never good to finish the season a bit earlier than the others.
“But at the same time, it’s an opportunity to be 100% physically fit for next year. So we have to accept this and work with it.
Fabio Di Giannantonio, VR46 Racing Team
Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images
“I wanted to do as many races as possible. If there was the opportunity to do all the races this year before the surgery, I would have taken it. But it wasn’t possible. The doctor said the limit would be Thailand.
“We also have to work at 100% for these two races so I can finish this year with a nice vibe.”
Despite the operation plan, Di Giannantonio said pain was becoming less of an issue and was upbeat for the weekend’s racing at a circuit where he scored a podium in 2023 aboard his Gresini Ducati.
“I’m actually feeling better already, but inside the shoulder it’s a bit weak. That’s the main reason for the surgery. I hope I can ride with fewer pain killers this weekend!
“This track is just amazing, I love the island vibe and the country too. Last year was super good for us so the goal is to try and get the same feeling on the bike as last year. I really hope to back fighting for the top five and maybe for the podium.”
Di Giannantonio’s best 2024 result thus far has been a fourth place at the Dutch Grand Prix and he sits level on points with his VR46 team-mate Marco Bezzecchi in 10th.
Sport
Luke Littler follows in footsteps of darts legends like Eric Bristow as he signs major TV deal after success on the oche
DARTS ace Luke Littler will be the guest player on the Bullseye reboot.
The World Championship runner-up will join new host Andrew “Freddie” Flintoff and throw for charity on the Christmas special of the revived quiz show.
Excitement surrounding Luke’s surge to the final as a 16-year-old is said to have inspired ITV bosses to consider reviving the programme.
Professional darters were regular guests on the original series where they tried to score as many points as possible to bag money for charities chosen by the competing pairs of amateur player plus quizzer.
A TV insider said: “Luke wasn’t even born when Bullseye was on our screens with original host, Jim Bowen.
“But Luke knows this is a plum role to have landed.
“As he steps up to the Bullseye oche he knows he’s following in the footsteps of legends including Eric Bristow and Jocky Wilson who all threw darts on the programme in its 1980s heyday.
“It’s also a coup for the makers of the new Bullseye as Luke is now one of Britain’s best-known players.
“Producers moved swiftly to sign him shortly after the programme was recommissioned by ITV.
“It all adds to the huge sense of excitement for the programme to return.”
Luke, from Runcorn, Cheshire, who is now 17, was beaten by Luke Humphries in the world final. Both players have since helped raise the sport’s profile with younger fans.
The Sun exclusively revealed this month that Bullseye was returning with Freddie fronting the show, made by 12 Yard Productions.
The ex-England cricketer and former Top Gear presenter, 46, said at the announcement: “Bullseye was one of my favourite shows as a kid. I can’t quite believe I’ll get to host this.”
A date has yet to be revealed for his festive edition.
It is hoped the show will prove so popular that it could be turned into a full series next year.
The original Bullseye, known for its often-naff prizes, aired on ITV for 15 series from 1981 to 1995.
Host Bowen made it cult viewing with a string of catchphrases although he claimed he never used the most frequently quoted — “Super, smashing, great!”.
From series five in 1985 onwards, the professional who recorded the highest score during the charity segment of the show would be presented with a Bronze Bully trophy — a statuette of the programme’s bull mascot.
Past winners included five-time world champ Bristow, triple world champ John Lowe and “Limestone Cowboy” Bob Anderson.
The pro stars also featured in the animated opening titles of the show travelling in a bus driven by Bully.
It is hoped that if Bullseye is picked up for a full series, Littler, Humphries and other pros will take turns in the fundraising slot.
Football
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Motorsports
Mir’s comments after Japan clash “didn’t make sense”
Gresini Ducati rider Alex Marquez says he was “surprised” at the media comments made by Honda’s Joan Mir immediately after the most recent MotoGP round in Japan.
The 2020 MotoGP champion spoke out against Marquez after being taken out of the race by the Ducati, which literally attached itself to the back of his machine after Marquez lost control on the first lap.
Mir made his comments about the “crazy” incident a short while before news of a long lap penalty for Marquez – which the Spanish rider must serve in this weekend’s Australian Grand Prix – was announced.
At the time, Mir was also under the impression that the clash was not being investigated at all. This led him to direct considerable criticism at the stewards as well as Marquez, who did accept responsibility for the crash and later said he had apologised to Mir.
“I was surprised by Mir’s reaction,” said Marquez in Australia on Thursday. “Because what he said to me didn’t make sense to me at all [compared to] what I found in the press yesterday.
“When Joan spoke in the press, he got heated and didn’t make a lot of sense. He was pissed off with race direction about the long lap [penalty that had not yet been announced].
“I was told that the reason was that I had ruined someone else’s race. But Jack Miller caused the crash at Mandalika [when the Australian took out three riders on the opening lap, and was not penalised].”
Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing
Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images
Marquez is 12th in the points standings heading into this weekend, having secured just one podium so far this season – a third position at the German Grand Prix.
Mir is 20th, having only occasionally troubled the scorers in a very tough year for all the Honda riders. The Spaniard’s lack of speed has been compounded by unfortunate incidents.
“It’s not just a case of bad luck. It’s also being in the wrong place at the wrong time. These kinds of things always happen when you’re fighting at the back,” said Mir.
He was, however, in more optimistic mood coming into the weekend, which will play out on a resurfaced Phillip Island circuit.
“I expect that this will help us,” Mir said. “This track is always special. It’s one I enjoy and where I have been fast in the past.
“Phillip Island is a bit different. Maybe it’s a track where we can show our progress…or maybe not!”
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