Bayern Munich’s Karl-Heinz Rummenigge: ‘Football does not belong to the fans’

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Bayern Munich boss Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has criticized a new supporters’ initiative which aims to increase fans’ influence in football. He also insists that Bayern don’t buy players just to weaken their rivals.

Following a season which ended with matches behind closed doors, Bayern Munich chief executive Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has reignited the debate between German football and its supporters.

The Bundesliga was brought to a successful conclusion following a two-month coronavirus-enforced hiatus, securing all-important broadcasting revenue for the clubs but excluding fans who have since demanded wide-ranging reforms to the game in a new initiative called “Unser Fussball” (“Our football.”)

“I find the name itself somewhat presumptuous,” said Rummenigge in an interview with tabloid Sportbild. “Who does football belong to? Most likely to those who play it, no matter what level. The fans are part of football, but it does not belong to them.”

The “Unser Fussball” initiative was launched in June by a coalition of active fans from across Germany, some of whom were instrumental in the successful campaign to retain the 50+1 rule in 2018. A petition demanding measures to ensure a fairer competition, greater social responsibility, democracy, sustainable financing and recognition of the importance of match-going supporters has since been signed by almost 2,400 fan groups and almost 12,500 individuals.

“Unfortunately, we have reached a point where I only ever read that the ultras are demanding this, demanding that. And now they want a say in the distribution of TV money,” Rummenigge continued. “But when I only ever make demands but am not prepared to take responsibility, it ends up in a one-way street.”

The Bayern Munich boss was speaking to Sportbild alongside Dietmar Hopp, the owner of Bundesliga side Hoffenheim. At the end of February, the two men had overseen the interruption of a game between the two teams after traveling Bayern supporters had displayed banners insulting Hopp and criticizing the German Football Association (DFB).

Sportbild awarded the pair their “Gesture of the Year” award in recognition of their actions – a controversial choice in a season that has also seen high-profile Bundesliga players stand up in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and clubs and fan groups support their local communities through the coronavirus crisis.

DW SPORTS