Uli Hoeness has stepped down as Bayern Munich's president. Under his watch, Bayern have become the dominant force in German football and one of the finest teams in Europe — but he remains a controversial figure.
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Uli Hoeness bid farewell as Bayern Munich president on Friday, bringing to an end an association with the club that has lasted almost half a century.
Hoeness shed a few tears as some 9,000 members gathered at the annual meeting in Munich's Olympic Arena gave the 67-year-old a standing ovation.
Former Bayern greats Arjen Robben and Franck Ribery presented the Bundesliga and German cup trophies from last season's double, and basketball division official Marko Pesic the national title trophy.
"You have given me wonderful years," Hoeness told the club members who later in the evening elected former Adidas chief Herbert Hainer as new president.
Hoeness was a Bayern player between 1970 and 1979, was then general manager for 30 years until 2009, and president since 2010, although this was interrupted for a spell when he was sent to prison for tax evasion. He won every title as player or official, including five Champions Cups/Leagues and 23 Bundesliga titles.
Hoeness did not run for the presidency again but will see out his term as ordinary member of Bayern's supervisory board until 2023. The former striker started as general manager 40 years ago when Bayern were in financial trouble with revenue of 12 million marks (7 million dollars) and debts of seven million marks.
In the latest figures for the 2018-19 season, Bayern recorded record turnover of 750.4 million euros (830 million dollars), up from 657.4 million euros in the previous season. Bayern's profit after tax was given at 52.5 million euros, up from 29.5 million.
Hoeness departure starts the reshuffling at Bayern's top leadership. Chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, another former playing great, is to leave in 2021, giving way for former goalkeeper Oliver Kahn, who wil join Bayern's board next year.
mds (dpa/reuters)
Bayern Munich President Uli Hoeness: A reign ends
Almost 50 years after he began playing for them, Uli Hoeness' time at Bayern Munich is drawing to an end. The club president has decided not to run for a new term as president of the German record titleholders.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Balk
Calling it quits
A relationship that began in 1970 when Bayern Munich signed an 18-year-old from TSG Ulm 1846 has come to an end, with Uli Hoeness announcing that he will not run for another term as club president. He shaped one of the most successful eras in German football history. Former Adidas boss Herbert Hainer, who already holds a position with the German champions, is his replacement.
Image: picture-alliance/SvenSimon/F. Hoermann
Goal scorer
Long before current events, Hoeness the player was a forward who was part of the Bayern team that won both the Bundesliga and the European Cup three times. Playing for West Germany, he won both the EuropeanChampionship and the World Cup. For a few years, Hoeness and Gerd Müller formed one of Europe's most potent strike forces. However, his playing career was cut short by a knee injury.
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The youngest manager
After an unsuccessful attempt to come back from the injury while on loan to Nuremberg, Hoeness hung up his boots and became the Bundesliga's youngest general manager at the tender age of 27 on May 1, 1979. Here he is pictured with then-Bayern President Willi Hoffmann (left) on this third day on the job – when he got his first victory as manager with Bayern winning 3-1 in Darmstadt.
Image: picture-alliance/S. Simon
A nose for business
Even before Hoeness became manager, he negotiated a deal with truck maker Magirus-Deutz as Bayern's jersey sponsor. The funds allowed Bayern to bring West Germany star Paul Breitner back to Munich from Braunschweig in 1978. Here, Breitner is seen holding up the trophy after Bayern won the 1981 Bundesliga title. The two but have recently fallen out over Breitner's criticism of Bayern's management.
Image: Imago Images/Sportfoto Rudel
A stroke of luck
On February 17, 1982, Uli Hoeness was the sole survivor of the crash of a private jet, while he was on his way to a West German national team friendly. The three other people on board the plane died. Hoeness, who was asleep on the back seat of the plane when it crashed, remembers nothing about it.
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Sausage producer
Hoeness, the son of a master butcher, started up the HoWe sausage-making company in Nuremberg in 1985, which now supplies major businesses such as Aldi and McDonalds. HoWe, which is where Hoeness made a lot of his money, has been taken over by his son Florian.
Image: imago/MiS
From manager to president
After 30 years as general manager, on November 27, 2009, Uli Hoeness moved up in the Bayern Munich hierarchy, winning election at the club's annual general meeting as its new president. More success would soon follow, with Bayern doing the double that same season and later, beginning in 2012-13, going on a run of six-straight Bundesliga titles.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Gebert
Personal feud
Hoeness has had his share of personal animosity. A feud with former Cologne and Bayer Leverkusen coach Christoph Daum began when both appeared on a sports talk show. It reached its climax with the cocaine scandal surrounding Daum, who looked set to become Germany coach in 2000. Daum never took up the post after a test on his hair turned up positive for cocaine.
Image: picture-alliance/Alfred Harder
Big winner
Uli Hoeness won his share of silverware as a player, but has won almost countless titles as an executive. In 2013, Bayern Munich won the treble; the Bundesliga title, the German Cup, and the Champions League. "An unbelieveable year," said the top club executive, who was still a free man, despite the fact that a warrant for his arrest on tax-evasion charges had already been issued.
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Fall from grace
March 13, 2014: Hoeness was convicted of evading €28.5 million ($32 million) in taxes and was sentenced to three-and-a-half years in jail. Hoeness began serving his sentence on June 2, 2014, making the fall from grace of a German soccer legend complete.
Image: Reuters
President again
A day after his conviction, Uli Hoeness resigned as Bayern president, however he would return to the post two and a half years later, winning election at the club's annual general meeting on November 25, 2016. He was the only candidate after current President Karl Hopfner, who had stood in for him during his time in prison, agreed earlier in the year not to run for re-election.
Image: Getty Images/Bongarts/L. Preiss
A helping hand
Hoeness has always there with a helping hand for a friend in need. Clubs like St. Pauli and even rivals Borussia Dortmund have been known to profit from his generosity. He has also reached out to help former teammates like Gerd Müller, who struggled with alcohol, or players Sebastian Deisler who suffered from burnout and Dietmar Hamman, who was stricken with both alcohol and gambling addictions.
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Family man
For the most part, Uli Hoeness keeps his private life to himself. He has been married to his wife Susanne for more than 40 years and his two children, Sabine and Florian are grown up. Hoeness enjoys a quiet life at home, and there have been no known scandals involving his family.