The ex-Borussia Dortmund star is concerned by what he sees as the declining quality of the Bundesliga, but admits he may be spoiled by Pep Guardiola
Manchester City midfielder Ilkay Gundogan believes the cautiousness of coaches is to blame for the Bundesliga’s lack of title tension.
Gundogan, who is nearing the end of his second season in the Premier League, was part of the Borussia Dortmund team that were crowned German champions in 2011-12 under Jurgen Klopp.
Bayern Munich have since reasserted their dominance by winning six straight titles for the first time in the club’s history, the latest secured with five games to spare.
Article continues below
Editors' Picks
Juve on alert: Exiled Icardi may have already played his final game for Inter Sarri vindicated for dropping Kepa as Chelsea & Pedro impress in Spurs win Magnificent Mane takes centre stage as league leaders Liverpool put on a five-star show Lukaku sends reminder that his Man Utd career is far from over
Thomas Muller described the disparity at the top as “regrettable” and his concern is matched by Germany team-mate Gundogan, who says teams are too quick to resort to the safety of long balls.
“What I miss a bit – but I’m perhaps spoiled with Pep Guardiola – is that teams in the game find solutions,” Gundogan told Sport1.
“As soon as you got a bit of pressure [in the Bundesliga], the ball was knocked forward for a long time.
“Players always try to implement what the coaches tell them, and a coach has to come up with an idea.
“Coach education in Germany is actually very good, but I do not understand why many coaches do not have the guts to push through an idea when they have lost two or three times.”