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DFB: Presidential candidate Fritz Keller promises ‘no more one-man-show’

  • August 21, 2019

Hermann Neuberger, Egidius Braun, Gerhard Meyer-Vofelder. The heads of the German Football Association (DFB) were once powerful men. They represented German football within UEFA and FIFA, exercising power and influence over the game not just in their own country but around the world.

The most recent incumbents of the office, Theo Zwanziger, Wolfgang Niersbach and Reinhard Grindel, were no different – although all three were forced to resign prematurely. Fritz Keller, however, who is set to become the 13th DFB president after being nominated unanimously by the selection committee, doesn’t appear to fit the profile.

Keller, from the south-western region of Baden, is hardly a household name, even among the most well-informed German football fans. And yet the 62-year-old has a long curriculum vitae in the game as chairman, and then president, of Bundesliga side SC Freiburg.

“The role of DFB president was not exactly on my list,” he admitted with a smile at a press conference in Berlin. “I was very happy with my family, my job and my role in Freiburg.”

Urgent need for restructuring

But Keller, a wine connoisseur who owns several high-end restaurants in Freiburg and the Black Forest, will soon be entrusted with the leadership of the biggest sports federation in the world, an organization with over seven million members and which turns over around €400m ($443m) a year.

“I’m only doing it to myself because I love football,” he responded when asked what led him to take on the role. Or does he feel some deeper calling? After all, Keller’s godfather was none other than Fritz Walter, the legendary captain of the Germany team which beat Hungary to win the 1954 World Cup, the so-called “Miracle of Bern.”

Deutschland Zentrale des Deutschen Fußball-Bundes DFB Logo (picture alliance/dpa/F. von Erichsen)

With over seven million members, the DFB is the largest sporting federation in the world

But Keller doesn’t want to rest on the laurels of tradition; one of his conditions for making the leap to the top of the DFB was reform in the organization. To this end, he has already prepared suggestions which have met with the approval of other leading figures.

And the DFB, having lurched from one crisis to the next in recent years, is in dire need of reform. “There are far too many tasks for one person to tackle on his own,” said Keller. “It simply can’t be a one-man-show nowadays.”

For Keller, it’s going to be a case of thoroughness over speed, while involving as many different people as possible. “A good leader gives people room to work,” he said. “That’s what I’ve learnt in my years as president in Freiburg and that’s how I want to work at the DFB as well.”

As part of the planned reforms, Keller has announced that he does not intend to strive for potential positions at UEFA or FIFA – a key departure from his immediate predecessors who seemed to devote a disproportionate amount of energy to acquiring such roles, and the lucrative remuneration which comes with them.

In future, Rainer Koch, the DFB vice-president, will represent German football on the international stage, where Germany currently has no representation at either UEFA or FIFA. Re-acquiring a seat at world football’s top table won’t be easy.

Fritz Keller (Imago Images/Beautiful Sports)

Fritz Keller has presided overe a period of success at SC Freiburg

Support from both professionals and amateurs

While Koch focusses on restoring Germany’s influence abroad, there’s work to be done closer to home as well, as Keller well knows. As club president, he has played a major role in establishing minnows Freiburg in the Bundesliga. Women’s football is also close to his heart, while he insists he still wants time to “watch a non-league game with a Bratwurst and a beer.” 

Such remarks go down well at the DFB, an organization in which amateur football clubs across the country have great influence due to their sheer numbers. It is here, at the grassroots, where the DFB will have the best chance of polishing up its image.

At the official vote on September 27, Keller will be able to count on the support of both the 36 Bundesliga and Bundesliga 2 clubs, plus the representatives of German amateur football. 

Should he keep them all happy and succeed in his stated ammbition to “restore the unity of German football,” maybe Fritz Keller will also be counted among the powerful men who have stamped their mark on the game.

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/dfb-presidential-candidate-fritz-keller-promises-no-more-one-man-show/a-50119403?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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