Monday Night Football: Union Berlin host stranded Kaiserslautern
Can Keller's side end winless run?
Union Berlin will take on Kaiserslautern under the floodlights at the Stadion An der Alten Försterei, looking to get the season back on track following the recent run of five consecutive matches without a victory.
“The situation isn’t comfortable. It’s a dry spell and we have to accept criticism. No matter how the performances were in previous games, the results stand and it’s not acceptable,” said Union head coach Jens Keller at the pre-game press conference. "We can train and talk about how we don't have much more resource. But it isn’t that everything that has happened so far has been cruel. The results were not correct, so we are very dissatisfied. Football is a result sport."
The situation is similarly perilous for Kaiserslautern, the German champions in 1998, who sit at the bottom of the second division. This week, the Red Devils twisted and axed experienced coach Norbert Meier after two points from the first seven league games this season. The hunt for a permanent coach is ongoing, with Manfred Paula, Head of the Academy, and U19 coach Alexander Bugera leading the side to Berlin.
“First and foremost, it was important to brighten the mood after the last few days and get the last few weeks out of our system,” Paula explained. “It was important to put everything down for a bit and look ahead. This was the intention of the first training sessions and the team is very focused. Until now we have been working mainly in the tactical area so that the boys there are wide awake. We wanted to teach the team how we want to play the game and what it means to play for Kaiserslautern.”
Keller warned against complacency in Köpenick, despite Kaiserslautern’s rough start to the campaign. “We can’t take this game lightly. The team is not as bad as they are right now. That is why it is important that we call up our performance 100 percent and for over 90 minutes, then we'll win the game. If we're not ready, Monday's gonna be tough. Nevertheless, it would of course be helpful for everyone if we could get three points at home.”
What the tactical structure of Kaiserslautern will be under new management, remains to be seen. “It is difficult to say how Lautern will perform. Maybe the coach has a whole new philosophy,” questioned Keller, who instead focused the attention on his side’s performance. “In Sandhausen our movements were missing in the last third, but in other games we created many chances. Against Braunschweig we got down to a good depth, in Sandhausen this didn't work out.”
There isn’t much for Keller to worry about on the fitness front, with Toni Leistner and Felix Kroos training comfortably this week. Standing tickets at the STADAF are sold out for Monday’s encounter, but there are still seated tickets available in the main stand and for visiting supporters.