Bayern Munich manager Carlo Ancelotti will be expected to challenge for the Uefa Champions League as well as maintain a domestic dominance. Friedmann Vogel / EPA
Bayern Munich manager Carlo Ancelotti will be expected to challenge for the Uefa Champions League as well as maintain a domestic dominance. Friedmann Vogel / EPA
Bayern Munich manager Carlo Ancelotti will be expected to challenge for the Uefa Champions League as well as maintain a domestic dominance. Friedmann Vogel / EPA
Bayern Munich manager Carlo Ancelotti will be expected to challenge for the Uefa Champions League as well as maintain a domestic dominance. Friedmann Vogel / EPA

Carlo Ancelotti under pressure from younger rivals to maintain Bayern Munich's superiority


Ian Hawkey
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Carlo Ancelotti celebrated his 58th birthday in June. Barely had he finished blowing out the candles than he was looking at the fixture list for his 23rd year as a manager and wondering at what point he might come across an opponent who is not young enough to be his son.

As Ancelotti’s Bayern begin their defence of the Bundesliga title, Ancelotti surveys a managerial landscape where experience seems to be a commodity of diminishing value.

No doubt stimulated by what Julian Nagelsmann, the 30-year-old in charge at Hoffenheim, achieved last season guiding his provincial club into fourth place, a host of German clubs are placing collective faith in youth when it comes to their managers .

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The most striking appointment of the summer is that of Domenico Tedesco, 31, at Schalke, a club as grand in scale as Hoffenheim are small. Tedesco, who has less than half of season under his belt as a senior manager - his brief spell in charge at second-tier Erzgebirge Aue from March until June – is one of six managers now on Bundesliga benches who are under 40.

Time was that Ancelotti was making his immense reputation through an ability to coax the best out of footballers of that sort of age, men like Paolo Maldini and Alessandro Costacurta at an AC Milan full of veterans and guided to a pair of Uefa Champions League titles by the sage Ancelotti.

Schalke manager Domenico Tedesco. Felipe Trueba / EPA
Schalke manager Domenico Tedesco. Felipe Trueba / EPA

The Italian would add another European Cup to his managerial CV at Real Madrid, and his clinching of the German league in his first season gave his record a striking, dazzling completeness. Ancelotti has won Serie A, the Bundesliga, the Premier League – with Chelsea – and France’s Ligue 1, which he conquered at Paris Saint-Germain.

With a stash of trophies like that, Ancelotti can turn a dismissive, selective ear to the sounds of dissatisfaction that were audible at times last season about the style of Bayern’s football, and later, about another Champions League campaign that did not finish with an appearance in the final.

Bayern suffered some bad luck with marginal refereeing decisions when they were eliminated by Real Madrid, but it was the fourth successive season they have not made the podium in that tournament. That hurts their executives.

As for the domestic sphere, Ancelotti, appointed in 2016, knows that a sixth successive title for Bayern is an expectation, almost an assumption. The novice and greenhorn managers lining up against him in the Bundesliga are jousting for as high a finish as they can between 2nd and 15th spot in the table.  But Ancelotti must sense he is under pressure to show that his methods, so successful over two decades, are not becoming superannuated.

Last season, Bayern’s main chasers were the newly promoted RB Leipzig, determined and energetic and, in the autumn months, a contrast to a Bayern perceived to have lost some of the press and vigour of their football under previous manager Pep Guardiola. Bayern then reacted well to push clear of Leipzig.

RB Leipzig finished second in the Bundelisga in their first season. Daniel Kopatsch / EPA
RB Leipzig finished second in the Bundelisga in their first season. Daniel Kopatsch / EPA

Yet Ancelotti knows he needs to refresh his serial champions again. He has lost key allies. Philipp Lahm, the long-serving captain, and Xabi Alonso, who worked with Ancelotti in Madrid and in Bavaria, have retired.

Lahm’s stepping down should be an opportunity for the impressive young Joshua Kimmich to make the right back position, or perhaps a midfield role, his own for his club and for the German national team, while in central midfield, where Arturo Vidal gives Bayern their snap and Thiago their silk, the new signing Corentin Tolisso, has an obligation to justify a transfer fee, to Lyon, that could rise to nearly €50 million (Dh214.9m).

Ancelotti must make Tolisso feel at home rather better than he did Renato Sanches, the young, costly Portuguese who made little impression last season.

Then there’s James Rodriguez, richly gifted but an awkward footballer for both of Real Madrid’s most recent managers, Rafa Benitez and Zinedine Zidane to deal with. Rodriguez has landed in Munich on loan, hoping Ancelotti’s subtle promptings will make him great again.

“I think we have the spirit to win the title once more,” Ancelotti said. “I expect Borussia Dortmund to challenge most strongly and it will be interesting to see how Leipzig cope with a stressful season in the Champions League.”

It may be that, in that competition, Ancelotti needs another gold medal if Bayern are to invite him to stay with them into his 60th year.

Ian Hawkey's five players to watch for the 2017/18 Bundesliga season:

  • Dayot Upamenaco, RB Leipzig Only 18, the French defender impressed after joining upwardly mobile RB Leipzig in the winter window. Poised and athletic, he has the twin challenges of a Champions League campaign and building on his growing reputation. Robert Michael / AFP
    Dayot Upamenaco, RB Leipzig Only 18, the French defender impressed after joining upwardly mobile RB Leipzig in the winter window. Poised and athletic, he has the twin challenges of a Champions League campaign and building on his growing reputation. Robert Michael / AFP
  • Mario Gomez, Wolfsburg Gomez, a Bundesliga champion a decade ago with Stuttgart and twice since with Bayern Munich, will captain a Wolfsburg he hopes will do a great deal better than their 16th-place last season. At 32, he remains an effective target man, keen to add to his 70 Germany caps. Ronny Hartmann / AFP
    Mario Gomez, Wolfsburg Gomez, a Bundesliga champion a decade ago with Stuttgart and twice since with Bayern Munich, will captain a Wolfsburg he hopes will do a great deal better than their 16th-place last season. At 32, he remains an effective target man, keen to add to his 70 Germany caps. Ronny Hartmann / AFP
  • Leon Goretzka, Schalke 04 Outstanding the Confederations Cup, which his Germany won despite resting most of their senior World-Cup winning players, the 23-year-old, versatile across midfield, will hope to add more goals to his fine all-round repertoire this term. Felipe Trueba / EPA
    Leon Goretzka, Schalke 04 Outstanding the Confederations Cup, which his Germany won despite resting most of their senior World-Cup winning players, the 23-year-old, versatile across midfield, will hope to add more goals to his fine all-round repertoire this term. Felipe Trueba / EPA
  • Marc Bartra, Borussia Dortmund Bartra suffered the kind of misfortune nobody should endure when he was injured in the bombing of the Dortmund bus ahead of a Champions League tie last season. He came back bravely. A good season for the defender could mean a World Cup berth with Spain. Daniel Kopatsch / EPA
    Marc Bartra, Borussia Dortmund Bartra suffered the kind of misfortune nobody should endure when he was injured in the bombing of the Dortmund bus ahead of a Champions League tie last season. He came back bravely. A good season for the defender could mean a World Cup berth with Spain. Daniel Kopatsch / EPA
  • James Rodriguez, Bayern Munich Joint top scorer at the 2014 World Cup, Real Madrid paid €80m for James after that. But he has drifted to the margins at the Spanish club since. Bayern have him on long-term loan, and the brilliant Colombian has a career to resurrect. Christof Satche / AFP
    James Rodriguez, Bayern Munich Joint top scorer at the 2014 World Cup, Real Madrid paid €80m for James after that. But he has drifted to the margins at the Spanish club since. Bayern have him on long-term loan, and the brilliant Colombian has a career to resurrect. Christof Satche / AFP