It's not just football-starved fans who'll watch the Bundesliga this weekend. It's blazing a trail as the first major sports league in Europe to resume play — but not everyone can follow, says DW's Matt Pearson.
If it all runs smoothly, it could suggest that things are starting to get back to normal, right? Well, yes — but that seems close to impossible. Every day seems to bring a new problem and a new plan. There will be crises, the only question is how serious they are.
But football is coming back, and while most of those playing and running the game want their sporting fix, there's absolutely no denying that the main reason we'll be able to watch Borussia Dortmund vs. Schalke or Hoffenheim vs. Hertha Berlin on Saturday is money.
Back to business
In a sense, that's entirely reasonable. As many as a third of the clubs in Germany's top two divisions will go bust if the season can't be completed. That's a lot of jobs on the line — not just the players but support staff, stewards, kitchen porters and ticket office administrators.
Football is far from the only business that wants to get its main revenue stream back, though the overreliance on TV money laid bare in recent weeks may provide a lesson to some. As in several other top European leagues, the pandemic has exposed the extent to which top flight German football relies on broadcast income over gate receipts, merchandise and other more traditional income streams. If the TV money tap ever dries up, many clubs will simply cease to be viable.
But not everyone sees this problem. Bayern Munich CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge was in bullish mood when asked about what the restart will mean for the league this week. "If the Bundesliga is the only league to be broadcast on TV around the globe, then I assume that we will have an audience of billions around the world," he said. Fair enough, if perhaps a little on the ambitious side.
But as he continued speaking to German tabloid Sport Bild, he touched on an issue that's more serious than a man pumping up the business that helps him pay the bills.
"This will not only be a promotion for our football, for the Bundesliga, but for the whole country and especially for German politics, which made this possible in the first place with its very good approach," he said. "When I was a young lad, 'Made in Germany' was a trademark. That has been lost somewhat in recent years. The relaunch of the Bundesliga also shows that 'Made in Germany' is once again an absolute seal of quality."
Though oddly jingoistic in tone and characteristically smug despite nothing having been accomplished yet, there is a kernel of truth in this. While Germany has had advantages, it has generally played its hand better than most in the current pandemic.
Even so, the risks of returning to football are huge and the ethics questionable. Many ask why footballers should receive preferential treatment, in terms of testing and medical care, though the DFL, who run the league, deny the estimated 25,000 tests required will leave any frontline medical staff without. Others argue that the players themselves are being hung out to dry, asked to perform a non-essential job in a health crisis. Only a few have been bold enough to express their reservations.
The danger of treating this as a success now, or even in five games' time, is that other leagues with their own financial imperatives will follow Germany's lead. The English Premier League seems particularly keen, for example.
But few seem ready or able to guarantee safety. Germany think they can, but they don't yet know it. They may not for some time. In a scenario familiar to all of us, this may well be the best bad solution available. But it should operate on its own terms. It's not a silver bullet, and it's not necessarily an example to follow.
The all-time top 10 Bundesliga goalscorers
Goals are the most important thing in football. Strikers who score lots of goals quickly become fan favorites. The Bundesliga has seen many goalscorers - here are the top 10 scorers of all time.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Sven Simon
1. Gerd Müller - 365 goals
Müller's record is unbeatable. Between 1965 and 1979 he played solely for Bayern Munich, winning four German titles in the process. He won the golden boot an impressive seven times and in five seasons he scored goals than he played games. In the 1971/72 season he scored 40 goals - a record that still stands today.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Rauchwetter
2. Klaus Fischer - 268 goals
Fischer played 100 games more than Müller but scored 97 goals fewer. Fischer scored the most of his goals for Schalke (182), but he also played for 1860 Munich, Cologne and Bochum. Fischer's Bundesliga career lasted 20 years, from 1968 to 1988.
Image: Imago Images
3. Robert Lewandowski - 227 goals*
Lewandowski might have long dreamed of a move to Real Madrid but the move never arrived. In the meantime, he has become an institution in the Bundesliga. He scored 74 goals in four seasons for Borussia Dortmund and then he joined Bayern Munich where he has since managed 153 goals. Although 31, Lewandowski's hunt for goals is not over yet. (*As of: 23.04.2020)
Image: picture-alliance/Fotostand/Ellerbrake
4. Jupp Heynckes - 220 goals
Before Heynckes celebrated success as a coach, he was one of the best German strikers of all time. Fourteen years long he played in the Bundesliga, for Borussia Mönchengladbach and Hannover. Heynckes is Gladbach's all-time leading Bundesliga goalscorer (195). As a member of "The Foals" he won four German titles.
Image: Imago Images
5. Manfred Burgsmüller - 213 goals
Between 1967 and 1990, "Manni" bamboozled opponents with his dribbling ability. He played in the Bundesliga for Essen, Dortmund, Nürnberg and Bremen and is Dortmund's all-time leading Bundesliga goalscorer with 135 goals. After his football career, Burgsmüller spent six years as a kicker for American football team Rhein Fire. He died in May 2019 aged 69.
Image: Imago Images
6. Claudio Pizarro - 197 goals*
In 1999, the Peruvian joined Werder Bremen aged 20. Other than a brief spell at Chelsea, "Pizza" has been a Bundesliga regular. He twice made the move from Bremen to Bayern (2001 and 2012). After one season in Cologne, the 41-year-old joined Werder Bremen for the fifth time, where he plans to end his career in the summer of 2020. (*As of 23.04.2020)
Image: Getty Images/Bongarts/S. Franklin
7. Ulf Kirsten - 181 goals
Kirsten was already a dangerous striker in his days playing for Dynamo Dresden in the German Democratic Republic (GDR). In 1990, he moved to Leverkusen and stayed there until the end of his career in 2003, making 350 appearances for the club in the Bundesliga. He also won the golden boot three times.
Image: Imago Images
8. Stefan Kuntz - 179 goals
Bochum, Uerdingen, Kaiserslautern, back in Bochum and finally Bielefeld - Stefan Kuntz never played for one of the big Bundesliga clubs. Nevertheless, the man in charge of Germany's U21s today won the golden boot while at Bochum in 1986. He twice won the accolade at Kaiserslautern, where he also lifted the German Cup (1990) and the Bundesliga title (1991).
Image: Imago Images
9. Dieter Müller - 177 goals
Dieter Müller still has a Budnesliga record today: On August 17, 1977 he scored six goals in Cologne's 7-2 win against Werder Bremen. Although he spent the majority of his career in Cologne, Müller also played in the Bundesliga for Offenbach, Stuttgart and Saarbrücken. Between 1977 and 1986 he made 303 Bundesliga appearances.
Image: Imago Images
10. Klaus Allofs - 177 goals
When Cologne spent 2.25 million (€1.15m) Deutschmarks on Düsseldorf striker Klaus Allofs to replace Dieter Müller, it was a then Bundesliga record signing. Few would have predicted that Allofs would go on to score just as many goals as the man he replaced, although he needed 121 more games to reach 177. After a few years in France, Allofs also played in the Bundesliga for Werder Bremen.