DFB summons expert advice: Rummenigge and Völler are there

media reports
New start for the national team with old friends: DFB brings Rummenigge, Kahn and Völler on board

With Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (left) and Rudi Völler, among others, the DFB wants to lead the national team out of the crisis (archive image)
© ActionPictures / Imago Images
The DFB wants to make the home EM 2024 a success for the national team. After the World Cup bankruptcy, a new crisis committee, including Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, should help.
DFBPresident Bernd Neuendorf hired an expert council led by former Bayern boss Karl-Heinz Rummenigge to deal with the bankruptcy of the World Cup and realign the national team for the home European Championship in 2024. According to information from the DPA news agency, the new body is similar to the so-called National Team Task Force, which also put Rummenigge as the leading person after the EM debacle in 2000 to put the DFB structures to the test.
DFB crisis committee with big names
According to information from the “Bild” newspaper In addition to Rummenigge, the new body with Matthias Sammer, Rudi Völler, Oliver Kahn and Oliver Mintzlaff are current or former leading players of the Bundesliga clubs Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Bayer Leverkusen and RB Leipzig. The working group is headed by Neuendorf and his DFB Vice and DFL Supervisory Board Chairman Hans Joachim Watzke. The DFB has not yet confirmed this selection of personnel.
Venues
Uefa has specified Berlin as the final venue for the EM 2024 – games will also be played in these stadiums
Neuendorf had announced an in-depth analysis after the end of the group phase in Qatar. “We still have to look ahead and will therefore initiate an orderly process on how to deal with this situation,” was a core sentence Neuendorfs in a statement immediately before the flight home at Hamad International Airport in Doha.
The first consequences were the separation of the managing director Oliver Bierhoff after 18 years in a responsible position for the DFB-Elf. The 54-year-old left his post just five days after the group knockout in Al Khour. Two days later, on Wednesday last week, there was a pledge of loyalty to national coach Hansi Flick, who, after his failed tournament premiere from Neuendorf and Watzke, was given a second chance at the home event in 18 months.
Who follows Oliver Bierhoff?
After Bierhoff’s exit, numerous names had been speculated as successors in the past few days. Hertha managing director Fredi Bobic, European champion with the DFB team in 1996, and Rio world champion Per Mertesacker, currently the successful director of Arsenal FC’s youth academy, are considered the most promising candidates.
However, Neuendorf quickly hinted that the first thing to do was to create a requirements profile and a job description. It is considered sensible to divide Bierhoff’s tasks for the DFB academy and the national team between two people. The new Commission should also deal with these considerations in the coming weeks.
There is no great deadline pressure. The next international matches are not due until March 2023. Then, however, the countdown to the home EM begins. flick has until the opening game on June 14, 2024 only test games for the rebuilding of a title-capable team. Participation in the final tournament of the Nations League in June 2023 was lost in September with a 0-1 loss to Hungary two months before the World Cup collapse.
Long tradition of expert committees at the DFB
In 2000, national coach Erich Ribbeck had to leave after the preliminary round of the European Championship. The Task Force National Team, to which next Rummenigge including Uli Hoeneß, whose brother Dieter Hoeneß, Klaus Allofs, Rudi Assauer and Rudi Völler, who had just been appointed DFB team manager, initiated a concept for promoting young talent. In addition, the schedule of the DFB-Elf was influenced and a concept for a so-called Team 2006 as a perspective selection for the home World Cup was developed.

Just four years later, another panel of experts had to be installed. After Völler’s resignation as a result of the early failure of the European Championships in Portugal, the so-called coach selection committee headed by Franz Beckenbauer looked for a new national coach. After several rejections, the choice fell on Jürgen Klinsmann. When the sporting goals under the reform-zealous national coach seemed in danger in autumn 2005, another task force was set up, this time under the title “National Team Working Group” with Uli Hoeneß as the driving force.