Xabi Alonso has ‘done enough for a statue’, says Bayer Leverkusen CEO
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Bayer Leverkusen coach Xabi Alonso has achieved success with his team, but it remains to be seen if he will stay at the club for the long term.
PHOTO: AFP
LEVERKUSEN – Asked if coach Xabi Alonso could one day be commemorated outside Bayer Leverkusen’s BayArena home, club chief executive Fernando Carro said that “after last year, it’s already enough for a statue”.
Given the scope of the 2024 achievements, in which Alonso took Leverkusen to an unbeaten league and Cup double in Germany, Carro’s tongue-in-cheek quip is believable.
Long known as “Neverkusen” for failing to win the Bundesliga with five second-placed finishes since 1997 and a loss to Real Madrid in the 2002 Champions League final, Alonso has changed the club forever.
Carro, who brought the Spaniard – who had never before coached a top-division side – to Leverkusen in 2022, now faces a battle to keep him.
When Leverkusen called Alonso in October 2022, they were sitting second last in the Bundesliga table, having fired previous coach Gerardo Seoane.
“We had the impression that we would need a change, a new impulse in the team,” Carro said.
Alonso, a former superstar midfielder who won almost everything on offer for club and country as a player with Spain, Liverpool, Real and Bayern Munich, had limited coaching experience.
“For us, it was not a risk,” Carro added. “We were quite sure after the first conversation that he was clear in his ideas and he would be able to put his ideas and his experience into the team.
“When you have a resume like his, having won basically everything, when you combine his personality and sporting success, it multiplies, it accelerates.”
Alonso steadied the ship, taking Leverkusen to sixth place in 2022-23. A year later, his team had put together one of the greatest seasons in European history.
Leverkusen lost just one of 53 matches in 2023-24, the Europa League final, to fall just short of a remarkable treble.
The club were able to hold on to Alonso despite reported interest from Real, Liverpool and Bayern last season.
“We assume he will be the coach next year,” insisted Carro.
Star player Florian Wirtz, already a regular German international at 21, is also coveted by Europe’s elite.
“On Florian Wirtz, he has a contract (until 2027) and he’s happy here,” said Carro.
“He’s a competitive person... as long as we can offer him a team which is competitive and can fight for everything. It’s the same as Xabi, he is happy here.
“We’ve got a club that has developed a lot over the last years. So the combination of the good people in the club, the professionalism and the good management of the club, has been very positive.”
A former Barcelona season-ticket holder, Carro took over Leverkusen in 2018 after a successful business career.
The Spaniard also said his background has “a hell of a lot” of influence over how he runs the club.
“Certain things are different in football than in business... but other things are the same. You work as a team, make decisions and you need leadership,” he explained.
Through to the last 16 of the Champions League and the German Cup semi-finals, Leverkusen next host Bayern on Feb 15.
With Bayern sitting eight points ahead, the match is likely to be second-placed Leverkusen’s last chance to drag themselves back into the title race.
Bayern, who finished third last season, are clear favourites for the title. But they have not beaten Leverkusen since September 2022, a month before Alonso took over.
Leverkusen eliminated Bayern from the German Cup in December 2024, a match in which Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was sent off for the first time in his career after an uncharacteristic rush of blood to the head, where he collided with an onrushing Jeremie Frimpong.
“I don’t think they fear us, but they respect us,” added Carro.
“They know they can beat us, and we can beat them. That’s what football is about. To compete, to respect each other, and fight for success.” AFP


