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The Schalke defender Timo Becker is left in tears as the club’s inevitable relegation is confirmed.
The Schalke defender Timo Becker is left in tears as the club’s inevitable relegation is confirmed. Photograph: Friso Gentsch/AP
The Schalke defender Timo Becker is left in tears as the club’s inevitable relegation is confirmed. Photograph: Friso Gentsch/AP

Tears flow and tempers boil over as sorry Schalke bow out of Bundesliga

This article is more than 2 years old

The club’s 33-year run in the top flight ended amid ugly scenes as fans turned on the players outside the Veltins-Arena

It was all over bar the shouting, but there was plenty of shouting to come. Schalke had finally come to the end of the Bundesliga road at Arminia Bielefeld and though the final destination was not a surprise it was still hard to take. The youth product Timo Becker wept on the bench and the general manager, Gerald Asamoah, a hero on the pitch in better times, only just held back his own tears in front of the television cameras.

“We knew what to expect,” Asamoah said after relegation was confirmed. “But when the time finally comes, when you realise it’s now over … that’s brutal.”

His words would have been fitting final ones for the evening, but it wasn’t over. Between 500 and 600 supporters were waiting at Veltins-Arena as the squad returned from Bielefeld at around 1am, and what began as a civil exchange quickly escalated with objects thrown at the players and police intervention required.

A club statement issued on Wednesday morning made it clear they understood the emotion of the situation but underlined that “some currently unidentified individuals overstepped boundaries that are non-negotiable for FC Schalke 04” and promised a full investigation, while the Players’ Alliance formed in the aftermath of lockdown also condemned the attacks.

“I just ran,” one anonymous player told Sport1. “Some of us have been kicked and kicked. I’m shocked and don’t know how we can play the next games.” Some players are reportedly upset that the club put them in the position to be confronted by angry supporters in the first place.

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European roundup: Atlético win as Bordeaux go into administration

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Atlético Madrid stayed in control of La Liga's title race by beating struggling Huesca 2-0 at home on Thursday with goals in each half by Ángel Correa and Yannick Carrasco.

Correa scored for the third time in two games to give Atletico the lead shortly before halftime, before Marcos Llorente pounced on a loose ball and squared for Carrasco to knock it into the empty net 10 minutes from time.

Bordeaux have been placed in administration after its owners, investment management firm King Street, said they no longer wished to support the club financially, the Ligue 1 side said on Thursday.

The former French champions have been struggling financially due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and the premature end to the 2019-20 season also resulted in a loss of income when the league season was cancelled.

Their problems were compounded when Spanish media rights agency Mediapro, which had won Ligue 1 TV rights for a record €780m euros per season over the 2020-2024 period, went bankrupt and missed payments last year.

In Serie A, Napoli won a 5-2 thriller against top-four rivals Lazio on Thursday to stay within touching distance of the Champions League places.

Lorenzo Insigne's penalty and a Matteo Politano strike gave the hosts a two-goal lead at the break, before Insigne netted his second and Dries Mertens struck to put the result beyond doubt.

Mertens's superb finish, a powerful shot into the top corner from the edge of the box, made him Napoli's joint-top scorer of all time in Serie A with 102 league goals, alongside Antonio Vojak.

Atalanta missed the chance to go second as Roma fought back to earn a 1-1 draw against the 10-man visitors at the Stadio Olimpico. 

Gian Piero Gasperini's side went in front through Ruslan Malinovskyi in the first half but the match swung in the hosts' favour when Robin Gosens was shown a second yellow card with 20 minutes remaining, and former Atalanta player Bryan Cristante drew Roma level with a thunderous long-range strike in the 75th minute. 

Zlatan Ibrahimovic has signed a one-year contract extension at Milan that will keep him beyond his 40th birthday.

"Milan is the club for which Zlatan has played the most in Italy. After scoring 84 goals in 130 appearances with the Rossoneri, the Swedish striker will continue to be wearing the red and black jersey next season," the club said in a statement. Reuters

Photograph: Jose Breton/Rex Features
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Now is an opportunity for reflection and to calm tempers. There will be no immediate aftermath, with scheduled weekend opponents Hertha Berlin still in quarantine; their next match, rearrangements notwithstanding, will not be until 8 May at Hoffenheim, one of the two red-faced losers against Die Königsblauen this season. One would not bet on a repeat, but more important is the time in between now and then.

With four matches left in this season from which it is impossible to save any pride, the balance sheet reads two wins, seven draws and 21 defeats. If there is any relief it is that Tasmania Berlin, promoted with little notice before the 1965-66 season, will remain statistically the worst team in Bundesliga history (and Tasmania are relieved about that too, having built the club’s whole branding around that hapless campaign). But they still need a win or two more draws to beat the second-worst season recorded, by Wuppertal in 1975 (when two points were awarded for a win).

A dejected Mehmet-Can Aydin retrieves the ball after Schalke concede against Arminia Bielefeld. Photograph: Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters

The minority’s expression of their despair might have been unacceptable yet it was an indicator of how deeply the pain of not just the last season but of the past 18 months has been felt. In a week when football conversation has been taken over by a prospective Super League – a discussion in which Schalke’s name would have merited at least a mention in dispatches in the not too distant past – their fall is still remarkable. Mesut Özil, Jermaine Jones and Julian Draxler were among the club’s high-profile former players on social media who expressed sorrow about the relegation.

How did it come to this? On the pitch, Schalke said goodbye with barely a whimper. They rarely looked as if they had a foothold in the game on Tuesday night at last season’s second-tier champions Arminia, the pre-season relegation favourites and no stranger to money worries themselves but still fighting the odds – a concept that seems foreign to the current set of players wearing royal blue.

Fabian Klos scored Arminia’s winner and missed the chance for a second from the penalty spot – denied by Ralf Fährmann, who was cast off last season but has been one of the team’s rare saving graces in recent months. Short of a late effort slashed over by Sead Kolasinac, the visitors created next to nothing.

“The performance in the [game] in East Westphalia matched the entire Schalke season,” wrote Kicker’s Schalke correspondent, Toni Leito. “It was not suitable for the Bundesliga.”

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Bundesliga results

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Dortmund 2-0 Union Berlin
Hoffenheim 3-2 Borussia Mönchengladbach
Stuttgart 1-3 Wolfsburg
Werder Bremen 0-1 Mainz
Arminia Bielefeld 1-0 Schalke
Bayern Munich 2-0 Bayer Leverkusen
Eintracht Frankfurt 2-0 Augsburg
Cologne 2-1 RB Leipzig

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One wonders how much that etiquette will stick to some of these players, wherever they might end up next season. Many of them were once valued but they have simply not turned up week after week. Nine of the starting lineup on Tuesday have played in the Champions League, seven of them for Schalke. “Everyone in this team has to question themselves,” said Asamoah. “If you’re bottom of the table and have 13 points, and if you say you gave everything, then I don’t know what I would do with such a person.”

A loyal support has been resigned for a while. Der Westen reported this week that plummeting viewership of Schalke matches has become a concern for Sky, with the broadcaster recording fewer than 40,000 viewers for the 4-0 hammering at Freiburg last weekend. It was the third successive match for which the team has attracted an audience of less than 50,000. One of the best-supported clubs in Germany, they typically pull in upwards of 600,000 in the good times.

There is, ostensibly, a plan in place. Dimitrios Grammozis was appointed last month as the club’s fifth coach of the season, with regrouping in the second tier very much in mind. Yet some are nagged by the sense that even a small involvement in this season’s catalogue of failure, which has very little to do with Grammozis, could cling to him if some seeds of future success are not sown before the summer.

“Even after the game against Freiburg,” Grammozis said before the defeat on Tuesday, “I can’t say that I get the feeling from any player that he doesn’t want to give everything for the club every day.” Many supporters would beg to differ. A lot needs to change for Schalke not to become the next Hamburg – the former top-flight ever-presents fighting desperately to avoid a fourth successive season in the second tier – or something even worse.

Talking points

Köln’s surprise 2-1 win against RB Leipzig on Tuesday had meant that only a win would do for Schalke to keep the chance of survival mathematical possibility open as a double from the captain, Jonas Hector, did the trick after his team survived an opening-half onslaught for Julian Nagelsmann’s team.

Köln’s Jonas Hector celebrates his first goal against RB Leipzig. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock

Bayern Munich extended their lead at the top to 10 points with a straightforward 2-0 win against Leverkusen, with Eric-Maxim Choupo-Moting scoring for a third game in a row. Meanwhile the tone between Hansi Flick and the club has become more conciliatory in recent days with the president, Herbert Hainer, moving to protect the under-fire sporting director, Hasan Salihamidzic.

Borussia Dortmund’s 2-0 win against Union Berlin – which saw the return of Jadon Sancho as a substitute – kept their slim Champions League hopes alive, though wins for Eintracht Frankfurt and Wolfsburg mean they are still four points adrift. Their trip to Wolfsburg on Saturday is must-win if they are to keep the race alive.

At the other end, Werder Bremen’s sixth defeat in a row, albeit an unfortunate one at home against Mainz, left them looking over their shoulders and fearing a repeat of last season’s scramble for safety.

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Bayern Munich 30 47 71
2 RB Leipzig 30 28 61
3 Wolfsburg 30 24 57
4 Eintracht Frankfurt 30 17 56
5 Borussia Dortmund 30 22 52
6 Bayer Leverkusen 30 14 47
7 Borussia M'gladbach 30 8 43
8 Union Berlin 30 7 43
9 Freiburg 29 2 40
10 Stuttgart 30 3 39
11 Hoffenheim 30 -5 35
12 Augsburg 30 -15 33
13 Mainz 29 -17 31
14 Werder Bremen 30 -15 30
15 Arminia Bielefeld 30 -23 30
16 Hertha Berlin 28 -14 26
17 Cologne 30 -25 26
18 Schalke 04 30 -58 13

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