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Hertha blankets Berlin with 60,000 flags before derby

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Hertha blankets Berlin with 60,000 flags before derby
Sport

Sport

Hertha blankets Berlin with 60,000 flags before derby

2020-12-03 20:55 Last Updated At:21:00

After sticker wars dominated the buildup to the last derby, Hertha Berlin decided on flags as its weapon of choice this time.

Hertha used the cover of darkness to plant about 60,000 flags around the German capital’s 12 districts ahead of Friday’s Bundesliga game against Union Berlin.

But Monday’s plan backfired the next day when the local Ordnungsamt — the regulatory body responsible for enforcing civic rules and order — said it was taking action.

“I understand that people want to be creative in times when fans cannot go to the stadium,” Ordnungsamt official Arne Herz told Die Tagesspiegel newspaper.

Herz criticized the flag-sharing action on the basis of producing trash and potentially causing a traffic hazard, and said it was a matter of principal to start procedures against the club.

“If we don’t do anything about Hertha, then perhaps Coca-Cola will come with its Christmas truck next week,“ Herz said.

Hertha defended its action on Wednesday. Spokesman Marcus Jung said the idea was that fans would take the flags home and wave them in front of their TV sets on Friday.

No supporters will be allowed at the derby in Hertha’s 75,000-capacity Olympiastadion because of measures against the coronavirus.

“We managed to give a little happiness to many Hertha fans in these melancholy times,” Jung said.

There was an amused reaction in the eastern borough of Köpenick, where Union coach Urs Fischer said he hadn’t seen any blue and white flags near his house and Union spokesman Christian Arbeit said he had only seen them in media reports.

“Interesting,” said Arbeit, continuing Union’s tradition of needling its richer and more ambitious city rival.

Union was promoted to the Bundesliga in 2019 and is targeting survival again in its second season.

Hertha’s flag-sharing exercise is symbolic of its general struggle to achieve backer Lars Windhorst’s target of becoming a “big city club.”

Windhorst has invested 374 million euros ($450 million) in the club since June 2019. Hertha splashed out an estimated $83 million on player signings in January 2020 — more than any other team in the world.

Signings in the offseason were complicated by the financial effects of the coronavirus pandemic, but Hertha still bolstered its squad with the arrivals of goalkeeper Alexander Schwolow, defenders Omar Alderete and Deyovaisio Zeefuik, midfielder Matteo Guendouzi (on loan from Arsenal), and forward Jhon Cordoba. French midfielder Lucas Tousart had already agreed to join in January.

So far, they’ve only shown glimpses of their potential. Hertha is languishing in the bottom half of the standings with five losses in its opening nine games.

The club’s poor results are being brought into focus by Union’s good start. Fischer’s team is surprising many in sixth place, with twice as many points as Hertha.

“We are the bigger club here, we’re Hertha Berlin, and our expectation is, nothing but a win on Friday,” Hertha sporting director Arne Friedrich said in a video call with journalists on Wednesday. “I think in general we have the better team, we have the better players. We just have to show it.”

Friedrich pointed to encouraging periods of play in Hertha’s losses to Leipzig (2-1), Bayern Munich (4-3) and Borussia Dortmund (5-2).

“Everything takes a little while, but it’s definitely on us to start winning games,” the former Germany defender said. “Union Berlin comes with very wide shoulders. They did very well so far. They don’t really have anything to lose in this game. The pressure is on us.”

Friedrich said there would be no extra pressure from Windhorst if the club again failed to secure European qualification this season. Hertha was flirting with a relegation battle last season before Bruno Labbadia took over as its fourth coach of the season and managed to steady the team.

This season started with Hertha getting knocked out of the German Cup by second-division club Eintracht Braunschweig and hasn’t really picked up.

If Union were to inflict a sixth league loss on Hertha and become “Stadtmeister” (city champion) on Friday, it would make Labbadia’s job even harder.

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Ciarán Fahey on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cfaheyAP

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Bayern aims to clinch title against Dortmund in 'Klassiker'

2022-04-21 22:59 Last Updated At:23:10

Bayern Munich is used to winning the Bundesliga title. Even so, this one is special.

Not only would it be Bayern's 10th in a row — a feat never achieved in any of Europe's top five leagues — but the club can clinch the title at home on Saturday with a win in the “Klassiker” against Borussia Dortmund.

Bayern's stadium will be packed for the match, making a difference from twice celebrating titles in empty arenas amid the pandemic.

Bayern's Serge Gnabry, left, and Arminia's Manuel Prietl challenge for the ball during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Arminia Bielefeld and Bayern Munich in Bielefeld, Germany, Sunday, April 17, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

Bayern's Serge Gnabry, left, and Arminia's Manuel Prietl challenge for the ball during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Arminia Bielefeld and Bayern Munich in Bielefeld, Germany, Sunday, April 17, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

The mood in Munich on Thursday was relaxed, with Bayern coach Julian Nagelsmann already discussing his players' tradition of celebrating league wins by pouring beer over the coach.

“Beer is supposed to be quite good for your hair,” he joked.

Still, Nagelsmann admitted that winning the Bundesliga again has “perhaps a little bit less meaning in Munich" than the Champions League, where Bayern was eliminated in the quarterfinals with a surprise loss to Villarreal.

Bayern's Jamal Musiala, down, is celebrated by Bayern's Alphonso Davies, up, after scoring his side's third goal during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Arminia Bielefeld and Bayern Munich in Bielefeld, Germany, Sunday, April 17, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

Bayern's Jamal Musiala, down, is celebrated by Bayern's Alphonso Davies, up, after scoring his side's third goal during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Arminia Bielefeld and Bayern Munich in Bielefeld, Germany, Sunday, April 17, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

“On Saturday, it's still a special situation to do it against Dortmund, to do it against your direct competitor in your own stadium with a full house,” he said.

Ten titles in a row would be a historic achievement for Bayern but less helpful for the Bundesliga. Stagnation at the top makes it a harder sell to international audiences.

Winning the league is just meeting minimum expectations for Nagelsmann in the first year of a five-year contract.

Dortmund's scorer Erling Haaland sits on the grass after winning the German Bundesliga soccer match between Borussia Dortmund and VfL Wolfsburg in Dortmund, Germany, Saturday, April 16, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

Dortmund's scorer Erling Haaland sits on the grass after winning the German Bundesliga soccer match between Borussia Dortmund and VfL Wolfsburg in Dortmund, Germany, Saturday, April 16, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

“I think that if I didn't win it with the team, then I wouldn't be the coach here any more," he said.

Dortmund trails Bayern by nine points with four games remaining and would need a big win Saturday and a dramatic Bayern collapse to have any hope for the title. Still, they would love to spoil Bayern's party.

Bayern has won its last seven meetings against Dortmund, though the last encounter was a hard-fought game which ended amid bitter recriminations. Bayern won 3-2 with two goals from Robert Lewandowski but all the focus was on referee Felix Zwayer after Dortmund midfielder Jude Bellingham used a post-game interview to recall Zwayer's links to a 2005 match-fixing case. Bellingham later was fined.

Freiburg's Lucas Hoeler, Ermedin Demirovic, Nico Schlotterbeck and Christian Guenter, from left, celebrate after winning the German Soccer Cup semifinal soccer match between Hamburger SV and SC Freiburg in Hamburg, Germany, Tuesday, April 19, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

Freiburg's Lucas Hoeler, Ermedin Demirovic, Nico Schlotterbeck and Christian Guenter, from left, celebrate after winning the German Soccer Cup semifinal soccer match between Hamburger SV and SC Freiburg in Hamburg, Germany, Tuesday, April 19, 2022. (AP PhotoMartin Meissner)

It could be the last "Klassiker" for Dortmund striker Erling Haaland, with the Norwegian linked with a move to Manchester City at the end of the season. He is coming off a period of poor form after missing February with muscle problems — a worrying repeat occurrence for the 21-year-old striker — though he ended a scoring drought with two goals in last week's 6-1 rout of struggling Wolfsburg.

Outside of the top two, there's still a fight for the other Champions League places. Leipzig is in third place and Bayer Leverkusen is fourth, and both are under pressure from fifth-place Freiburg.

Freiburg, which has also reached the German Cup final, takes on Borussia Mönchengladbach on Saturday in a game which could make or break its Champions League chances.

More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports