Football culture and spirit
Football is the national sport of Germany, and their football population is amazing. Germany has a total population of 82 million and a registered population of more than 7 million in the German Football Association, which is equivalent to one tenth of the football population.
Only in Germany can you experience the true love of football in this country. Every football match day, almost all restaurants, bars and public places, and even school canteens can see the broadcast of the game.
Even German children love playing football. Some children even as young as three or four have started playing football. About 65,438+05% teenagers play football every day. In this environment, a rich football culture has been bred.
A healthy league-Bundesliga
Although the Bundesliga is not the richest, it is the healthiest league. The Bundesliga really belongs to football, to the future and to tomorrow!
In the Bundesliga, the club cannot be taken over by any investor, and the investor can only own 49% of the shares at most, so the Bundesliga club avoids the fate of being controlled by any investor.
This financial structure makes the Bundesliga more democratic, more friendly to the people and more stable than other clubs. This most democratic model has enabled fans and members to find a great sense of identity among clubs.
The Bundesliga is also the most watched league in the world on average-450,000 fans per game, which also makes the club run well! The cheapest season ticket for the famous Dortmund club in Germany may be less than 200 euros a season.
Solid training-youth training
Before 2000, German football experienced a painful decline. Since 200 1, Germany has forced the clubs in the first and second leagues to establish their own youth training system. At the same time, state football schools must set up their own "elite schools", form a dual-track system with the youth training system, and launch a "talent training plan" to tap children with football talent.
At that time, there were 72 professional clubs and 6.5438+0.7 million non-professional clubs in Germany, and the capital injection in six years exceeded 50 million euros. The German Football Association has set up 26 1 point all over the country, and sent special coaches every week to let amateur club players join the training and fully tap talented players.
Five years after the implementation of the New Deal, Germany finally paid off, with the emergence of powerful World Cup players such as Mueller, Neuer, boateng, Hummels, Khedira, Ozil, Gotze, Croce, Royce and Drachsler.
This is a question of money and the essence of football.
German football club will not cross the bottom line when making any decision, fully respect the fans and be loyal to sports. They think football should be a pure sport. Although football is inseparable from financial support, the club will fully weigh the balance between football and commercialization.
German players are not in a hurry to ask for money when choosing a club. They believe in the club's pure football rules, management concepts and business strategies, which is also the difference between the Bundesliga and the Premier League!
Players are all trained internally.
German leagues rarely buy big-name foreign aid from outside, and most of them are inside players. At the same level and position, clubs prefer to use domestic players, which they think can change the status quo of German football.
In German clubs, only high-level players can enter the league to exercise, and the talent selection and training system at different levels has continuously improved the overall level of the Bundesliga and reached the highest level in Europe.
Sufficient coaches support grassroots training.
Germany pays attention to the cultivation of grass-roots football, and vigorously invests manpower and material resources to support grass-roots football. The German Football Association sends more than 1000 coaches to the following training outlets every week, with an average of at least 2-3 coaches at each outlet.
Germany has a large number of excellent coaches. According to UEFA statistics, there are 28,400 football coaches with UEFA Class B licenses in Germany, which is six times that of England. Among them, there are 5500 certified coaches and professional coaches 1.070.