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FRANZ FOR THE MEMORIES

Beckenbauer's influence over the game of soccer, as both an uncompromising player and coach, is still felt today

China Daily | Updated: 2024-01-10 00:00
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Franz Beckenbauer, one of soccer's iconic figures and a rare World Cup winner as both player and coach, revolutionized the way the game is played.

Born in Munich in 1945, he helped establish Bayern as Germany's strongest club. At international level, he played a key role in Germany becoming a soccer powerhouse.

Known in Germany as "the Kaiser", Beckenbauer played a central role in some of the country's greatest sporting achievements.

A commanding figure on and off the pitch, he was named European footballer of the year in both 1972 and 1976.

While his legacy was later tarnished for his involvement in scandals surrounding Germany's successful bid to host the 2006 World Cup, he remained soccer-mad Germany's most celebrated player.

As a player, Beckenbauer revolutionized the role of a defender as a creative playmaker, kick-starting a tactical shift that is now considered a fundamental element of modern soccer.

Alongside Brazil's Mario Zagallo, who passed away on Friday aged 92, and France's Didier Deschamps, Beckenbauer is one of only three men to have won the World Cup as both a player and a manager.

World Cup comeback

Debuting for his country in 1965, Beckenbauer played at the 1966 World Cup as an attacking midfielder. He scored four times as West Germany made it to the Wembley final, where they lost 4-2 to England.

Four years later, in Mexico, Beckenbauer scored West Germany's first as his side came from 2-0 down to defeat England 3-2 in the quarterfinals.

In the semis, Beckenbauer dislocated his shoulder after a tackle by Italian defender Pierluigi Cera. Demonstrating his toughness, he returned to the field, playing the remainder of the game in a sling as West Germany lost 4-3 in extra time.

His World Cup disappointment would end on home soil when Beckenbauer captained West Germany to the 1974 title, beating the Netherlands 2-1 in the final in his home city of Munich.

Retiring at international level in 1977, Beckenbauer took over as coach in 1984, and managed the team that beat Argentina 1-0 in Rome to lift the trophy at Italia '90.

His record in club soccer was similarly outstanding.

Beckenbauer made 424 appearances in the Bundesliga, scoring 44 goals, mostly in a 13-year spell for Bayern, where he won four German titles and three European Cups.

He won another German title with Hamburg in 1982, before joining Pele at New York Cosmos, where he finished his playing career in 1983.

Beckenbauer had stints as a club manager at both Bayern and Marseille, winning the French league title in 1991 and the Bundesliga in 1994.

In 1996, he stopped coaching and his role as president of Bayern led to a place on the executive committee with soccer's governing body FIFA.

Beckenbauer had heart surgery in 2016 and again in 2017, when worrying news about his ill health began to emerge.

German magazine Der Spiegel claimed in 2017 "his condition had deteriorated massively since April; his judgement and memory are very clouded."

In recent years, Beckenbauer made few public appearances and missed the World Cup in Qatar in 2022 due to an ocular issue that cost him his vision in his right eye.

In August 2023, Lothar Matthaus, part of Beckenbauer's 1990 World Cup-winning side, told a private function his former manager "is not doing so well in terms of health".

A blot on the copybook

Off the field, Beckenbauer led Germany's successful bid to host the 2006 World Cup.

He later became head of the organizing committee and the successful tournament is still nostalgically referred to in Germany as "das Sommermaerchen" — 'The summer fairy tale'.

However, the story turned sour in October 2015 when Der Spiegel broke the cash-for-votes story.

The magazine alleged that, in 2000, the German Football Association (DFB) had bought the votes of four Asian members of FIFA's 24-strong executive committee to secure the hosting of the 2006 World Cup finals.

Germany beat South Africa with 12 votes to 11 after New Zealand's Charles Dempsey abstained in the final ballot.

"I have not sent anyone money to acquire votes for the awarding of the 2006 World Cup to Germany," said Beckenbauer at the time, while the DFB also strenuously denied the claims.

In 2019, Swiss prosecutors charged three former DFB officials, including ex-president Theo Zwanziger, with fraud relating to the 2006 World Cup, but Beckenbauer's name was excluded.

Proceedings against him were set apart as prosecutors deemed him unable to participate or to be questioned in court for health reasons.

The unanswered Swiss accusations of fraud, criminal mismanagement, money laundering and misappropriation against Beckenbauer, sadly, tarnished "Kaiser Franz's" once-glittering image.

AFP

 

From left: Franz Beckenbauer lifts the World Cup trophy in 1974; on the ball for New York Cosmos in the United States in 1983; at a news conference with former New York Cosmos teammate, and Brazilian great, Pele, in 2006; receiving the FIFA Presidential Award from Sepp Blatter in 2013. AP

 

 

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