"Oliver Kahn has been dragged through the mud for months"
Oliver Kahn's departure as CEO of Bayern Munich caused quite a stir in Germany. In fact, his brother Axel was very critical recently in an interview for 'Sky Sports'.
1 year ago
Bayern Munich fans are still celebrating after lifting their 11th Bundesliga title in a row. However, the Bavarian club did not wait a single day to sack Oliver Kahn and Hasan Salihamidzic after the troubled campaign. The club's former CEO expressed his displeasure via Twitter.
The uproar continues in Germany and remains a topic of debate in German football. In fact, his brother Axel was very critical recently in an interview for 'Sky Sports'.
"A decision like this doesn't happen overnight. I would have liked Bayern to have informed Oliver earlier, even sat down a few months before and explained to him that they wanted to separate in the summer," he said.
"We always managed to disrespect our icons in Germany: Boris Becker, Michael Schumacher.... Oliver has been dragged through the mud for months, every decision was linked to him in a negative way. It was too much. We have to have a bit more respect," he added.
Finally, the brother of the former Teutonic goalkeeper explained how the former player is living these days: "He is doing quite well. But I haven't had any contact with Oliver in the last 1 or 2 days. Now he deserves to recover and let things sink in a bit. It's not about getting in the ring. It's about bringing a bit of calm."
The uproar continues in Germany and remains a topic of debate in German football. In fact, his brother Axel was very critical recently in an interview for 'Sky Sports'.
"A decision like this doesn't happen overnight. I would have liked Bayern to have informed Oliver earlier, even sat down a few months before and explained to him that they wanted to separate in the summer," he said.
"We always managed to disrespect our icons in Germany: Boris Becker, Michael Schumacher.... Oliver has been dragged through the mud for months, every decision was linked to him in a negative way. It was too much. We have to have a bit more respect," he added.
Finally, the brother of the former Teutonic goalkeeper explained how the former player is living these days: "He is doing quite well. But I haven't had any contact with Oliver in the last 1 or 2 days. Now he deserves to recover and let things sink in a bit. It's not about getting in the ring. It's about bringing a bit of calm."
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