Wednesday, March 29, 2023

^ ^ Who is Julian Nagelsmann? The German manager linked with the Tottenham job

Julian Nagelsmann before a Champions League game with Bayern Munich
Nagelsmann could be on his way to the Premier League (Picture: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Since Tottenham parted company with Antonio Conte via mutual consent, a whole host of managers have been linked with the managerial vacancy in north London.

And one of those potential candidates is Julian Nagelsmann, who has reportedly received contact from Spurs since the news of the Italian’s departure was made public.

The 35 year-old, who has also allegedly drawn interest from rivals Chelsea, is regarded as one of the most promising young managers around with his energetic and modern style of play.

But who exactly is the German coach recieving plenty of looks of admiration from the Premier League? Here is everything you need to know.

Who did Julian Nagelsmann play for?

Having grown up in Bavaria, Nagelsmann played youth football for Augsburg and 1860 Munich.

Julian Nagelsmann on the touchline during a Bayern Munich game
Spurs are reportedly keen on Nagelsmann’s services (Picture: Christian Kaspar-Bartke/Getty Images)

In the 2006/07 season, Nagelsmann was part of Munich’s second team but he made no appearances due to struggles with injury.

The German returned to Augsburg in 2007/08 where he was managed by former Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel.

However, after injuring his knee and meniscus for the second time, Nagelsmann decided to end his playing career at the age of just 20.

Which clubs has Julian Nagelsmann managed?

Having retiring as a player, Nagelsmann stayed on at Augsburg as a scout in the first half of 2008.

Alongside a spell at university studying business administration and sports science, Nagelsmann returned to 1860 Munich as an assistant for the U17 team between 2008 and 2010.

He joined Hoffenheim as a youth coach in 2010, where he won the Bundesliga U19 title in the 2013/14 season and earnt the nickname ‘Mini Mourinho’.

Nagelsmann was promoted as Hoffenheim’s manager in October 2015 with his tenure set to begin at the start of the following season, with his appointment at the age of 28 making him the youngest manager in Bundesliga history.

However, Nagelsmann took the reigns earlier than planned after Huub Stevens was forced to resign as manager due to ill health in February 2016.

Julian Nagelsmann at the Allianz Arena in Munich
Nagelsmann has admirers all around Europe (Picture: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Under his guidance, Hoffenheim won seven of their final 14 games to steer themselves away from relegation danger – finishing just one point above the relegation play-off spot.

The team’s strong from rolled over to the following season with a fourth placed finish to qualify for the Champions League for the first time in their history.

Hoffenheim were beaten by Liverpool in the play-off round and they dropped into the Europa League, but a third placed finish in the Bundesliga that season saw them seal a spot straight through to the group stage for the following year.

At Hoffenheim, Nagelsmann became the youngest coach to manage in the Champions League aged just 31, but he left the club in 2019 to join RB Leipzig.

In his first season, he guided Leipzig into the knockout stages of the Champions League for this first time in their history before being dumped out in the semi-finals to Tuchel’s PSG.

Bayern Munich poached Nagelsmann from Leipzig for a then world record managerial transfer fee of £22m ahead of the 2021/22 season.

The manager won the Bundesliga and German Supercup titles in his first season in charge, although a shock exit to Villarreal in the Champions League quarter-finals took the shine off proceedings, and a second Supercup was duly added at the start of this campaign.

But despite reaching the quarter-finals of the Champions League and sitting only one point behind Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga, Nagelsmann was sacked during the March international break with the Bayern hierarchy citing inconsistency in performance as the reason behind the dismissal.

MORE : Tottenham managing director Fabio Paratici hit with worldwide ban by FIFA

MORE : Son Heung-min issues apology to Antonio Conte over his Tottenham exit

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