One of the Bundesliga's smaller clubs is one of its most in-form teams. With 10 points from their last four games, Freiburg are flying, thanks largely to a coach who values intelligence – and a striker in a purple patch.
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Thirty minutes in to the game that had long looked as if it would define their season, Freiburg were staring down the barrel of relegation. Cologne, winless and so hapless all season, had raced out to a three goal lead in a wild, snow-laden clash on Sunday.
But a stirring four-goal comeback, capped by a pair of Nils Petersen penalties at the death, provided a little breathing space for Christian Streich’s side and all but sealed Cologne’s fate before Christmas.
Petersen was on the spot again less than 60 hours later, making it three converted penalties in half an hour of football, as the Black-Forest club upset the odds to beat high-flying Gladbach. Rather than looking at an ever-increasing gap to safety, Freiburg had suddenly leapt to 13th in the table.
"The Cologne game had a significant impact on today. The team has been playing the right type of football," Streich said after Tuesday's win. "This was an excellent game for our situation. We deserved to win."
Something a little different
While Freiburg’s football has indeed improved of late, their two wins this week have freshly demonstrated the unity and work ethic that the charismatic and idiosyncratic coach has instilled in the club since his appointment six years ago.
Petersen, who now has a goal every 113 minutes in the Bundesliga this term, recently told German news magazine Focus of the unusual but stimulating atmosphere his 52-year-old boss has created at the club.
"In the dressing room, we don't just talk about the team lineup but also about (US President) Donald Trump and (Turkish President) Recep Tayyip Erdogan. We have an American and two Turks on our team, and the coach wants to know their opinions. It could be that I'll soon have to say something about [right wing German political party] the AfD because the party got so many votes in the region where I grew up [Saxony]."
Despite his goal-scoring form and an impressive transfer policy that has seen the likes of Max Philipp, Vincenzo Grifo, Roman Bürki, Matthias Ginter, Max Kruse and Omer Töprak leave for big money in recent years, Petersen said Streich is the man that makes the club.
"Friends of mine watch every one of his press conferences," the 29-year-old former Bayern Munich and Werder Bremen striker said. "Streich has a certain wisdom and shares his insights – like for instance when he says that as time goes on the probability of war in this part of the world is increasing. Here the coach is the star and he attracts the interest of the media.”
An upturn in form
While Petersen may consider his boss the main attraction, Freiburg’s form has also turned plenty of heads. While their comeback against Cologne could, at least in part, be attributed to the vulnerability of their opponents, the victory over Gladbach, who had beaten Bayern Munich just over a fortnight previously, was all about Freiburg. Streich's men had 24 shots to Gladbach’s 5 and constantly troubled their opponents while remaining compact defensively.
"We didn't do enough to take something from the game. We never really got into the match and have to accept that Freiburg were just the better team today," admitted Ginter, who is now at Gladbach, after the defeat.
But Streich, who qualified as a teacher after injury cut his playing career short and rides his bike to home matches, has been around too long to get carried away with his side’s recent success, which comes on the back of a seventh-place finish last season.
"We now have 18 points on the board and just have to keep plugging away, because we're still very much involved in the relegation battle," he said after Tuesday’s win.
That may well be so, but with Streich's cerebral methods and an attacking spearhead in fine form, Freiburg can start looking upwards once again.
Bundesliga Matchday 16 in pictures
The Bundesliga features midweek games for the second time this term. The Peter Stöger era begins as Borussia Dortmund face Mainz and Leverkusen look to extend their unbeaten run. Leipzig held to a draw at Wolfsburg.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Becker
Petersen penalty stuns Gladbach
Nils Petersen's nerves of steel ensured back-to-back wins for Freiburg as Christian Streich's side welcomed an in-form Gladbach to the Schwarzwald-Stadion. His hat-trick against Cologne last weekend inspired an unlikely comeback from three goals down to win 4-3; he was at it again on Tuesday night, scoring the game's only goal from the spot.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Schmidt
Wolfsburg and Leipzig share the spoils
Paul Verhaegh's last 16 league goals have all come from the penatly spot; a new Bundesliga record. The home side will be stewing on a number of squandered chances from open play, however, as they secured a tenth draw of the season. Marcel Halstenberg drew Leipzig level on 52 minutes, though the visitors rarely looked like winning it.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/P. Steffen
Dortmund back to winning ways
Sokratis spins away in delight after smashing Borussia Dortmund into the lead against Mainz. The Greek defender notched the first goal of the Peter Stöger era in a 2-0 victory which wasn't nearly as comfortable as the scoreline suggests. This was Dortmund's first Bundesliga victory since September, against Augsburg on Matchday 7.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/T. Frey
Eintracht bounce back to sink Hamburg
Eintracht Frankfurt reversed an early defecit to collect all three points away at hapless Hamburg. Mijat Gacinovic provided the finishing touch on the game's decisive move, slotting home the second in the 24th minute. Frankfurt have now recorded five wins on the road this season and move up to fifth place in the table.
Image: Getty Images/Bongarts/M. Rose
Staving off Stuttgart
Hoffenheim, who had just one win in their last six games coming into the contest, was not having much success against Stuttgart. But Mark Uth (bottom of the photo, sliding for the ball) was able to deliver the killing stroke after a shot from Pavel Kaderabek (right) clanged off the post. Uth now has eight goals on the season and remains one of the Bundesliga's top scorers.
Image: picture-alliance/Pressefoto Robin Rudel
Kalou carrying Hertha
After scoring a late equalizer against Augsburg over the weekend, Salomon Kalou scored two more goals in the first half in Hertha's game against Hannover on Wednesday. His teammates welcomed him with open arms after his first, likely grateful for the four points he has helped them secure over the past four days.
Image: Imago/Contrast
Lewandowski strikes again
Cologne did all they could to prevent the defending Bundesliga champions from scoring, even deploying defender Lukas Klünter as the lone forward. But there seems to be no stopping Robert Lewandowski (pictured), who scored the game's only goal — albeit not with very much style. The Polish striker now has 15 goals in 16 Bundesliga games and sits firmly atop the German league's goal scoring list.
Image: Reuters/M. Dalder
Second placed Schalke
Guido Burgstaller (third from left, mouth wide open) had much to be jubilant about as Schalke dispatched Augsburg 3-2 in Gelsenkirchen on Wednesday. He doubled the lead for the Royal Blues shortly after the break, his seventh goal of the season. His side then was able to hold off Augsburg to rise to second in the Bundesliga table.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/AP Photo/M. Meissner
Early bird gets the win
Eleven minutes into Leverkusen's game with Werder Bremen, Lucas Alario (right) finished off a cross from Leon Bailey to open the scoring. It was the fastest goal the Werkself have scored this season, and it turned out to be the only goal they needed as they beat Bremen 1-0. Leverkusen are now in fourth place after extending their unbeaten run to 11 games.