Running on Empty

In Bre­men, VfB Stutt­gart fai­led to deli­ver much of what had distin­gu­is­hed them in recent months. Yet, thanks to an out­stan­ding per­for­mance by Erme­din Demi­ro­vić, the team mana­ged to come back twice from a defi­cit. Both the thras­hing in Bel­gra­de and the tight sche­du­le see­med to weigh hea­vi­ly on the play­ers that after­noon.

What didn’t sur­pri­se anyo­ne in Bre­men was that VfB didn’t win, even though ano­ther three points after their home vic­to­ry against Bochum could have fur­ther nar­ro­wed the gap to the top third of the table. After all, Stutt­gart has only won three times in Bre­men over the past 20 years—once behind clo­sed doors when Silas chee­ki­ly scored from the goal line. Befo­re that, Mario Gómez was the last Stutt­gart play­er to secu­re a win­ning goal on the Weser. What was sur­pri­sing was that VfB didn’t lose, despi­te allo­wing Bre­men a dou­ble-digit num­ber of cor­ners and despi­te an over­all lack­lus­ter per­for­mance just days after their dis­ap­poin­ting Cham­pi­ons League game in Bel­gra­de. The two might be con­nec­ted, but let’s begin with an ana­ly­sis befo­re del­ving into the cau­ses.

The game had bare­ly star­ted when the home side took the lead. After a duel along the side­line, Stuttgart’s play­ers stop­ped to pro­test ins­tead of defen­ding, allo­wing Mar­vin Ducksch to sprint down the wing, cross, and set up Jus­tin Njin­mah, who hea­ded the ball into the net despi­te being mark­ed by two defen­ders. It was a goal that came tog­e­ther far too easi­ly and typi­fied how Bre­men repea­ted­ly put Stuttgart’s defen­se under pres­su­re with high pres­sing and long dia­go­nal balls. Wer­der had twice as many shots as VfB, who were for­t­u­na­te that only six were on tar­get for Alex Nübel to save. Sebas­ti­an Hoeneß’s team strug­g­led against Bremen’s com­pact and aggres­si­ve approach. Leo Ster­giou and Anrie Cha­se won only a third of their duels, and Jeff Cha­b­ot was lucky when refe­ree Harm Osmers rever­sed a pre­ma­tu­re­ly award­ed penal­ty.

Demirović Well-Prepared

That the match still ended 2–2 was again due to indi­vi­du­al qua­li­ty, as was the case against Bochum. While Chris Füh­rich had an off day, Erme­din Demi­ro­vić step­ped up and lob­bed Bremen’s goal­kee­per Micha­el Zet­te­rer twice. This time, Zet­te­rer wasn’t bea­ten by bright­ly-colo­red jer­seys but rather by smart pre­pa­ra­ti­on. After the match, Demi­ro­vić admit­ted he knew Zet­te­rer ten­ded to dive ear­ly during chal­lenges. Taking advan­ta­ge of this, Demi­ro­vić skillful­ly finis­hed both Maxi Mittelstädt’s cross and a bril­li­ant through ball from Stil­ler with just one addi­tio­nal touch. The fact that Nick Wol­te­ma­de came clo­se to scoring a win­ner in inju­ry time reflects the team’s unshaka­ble belief in them­sel­ves. Howe­ver, that might have been asking for too much given the over­all per­for­mance.

Once again, VfB did not play well. Their coll­ec­ti­ve defen­ding was as inef­fec­ti­ve as their dyna­mic attack­ing play. Sub­sti­tu­tes Diehl and Wol­te­ma­de even­tual­ly injec­ted some ener­gy into the offen­se, though their efforts didn’t lead to suc­cess. Other­wi­se, Stuttgart’s game was mark­ed by safe pas­ses that brought high pos­ses­si­on and pas­sing accu­ra­cy but litt­le gain in space and even fewer scoring oppor­tu­ni­ties. The fear of com­mit­ting to an attack was evi­dent after Bre­men lost the ball in mid­field. Ins­tead of capi­ta­li­zing on the mista­ke, VfB fai­led to crea­te a pro­mi­sing coun­ter­at­tack. The team appeared as hel­p­less as they did during the late stages of Matarazzo’s tenure—though this time with a point in hand, and for enti­re­ly dif­fe­rent reasons.

No Time for Recovery

The team is cle­ar­ly run­ning on emp­ty, men­tal­ly and per­haps phy­si­cal­ly. Per­haps more foun­da­tio­nal trai­ning during the sum­mer would have been bet­ter than DFL-spon­so­red matches in Japan’s sum­mer heat. Regard­less, by Christ­mas, VfB will have play­ed 25 com­pe­ti­ti­ve matches this season—just nine or ten fewer than they play­ed in enti­re sea­sons in recent years. The *Ver­ti­kal­pass* blog high­ligh­ted it in its match report: VfB’s rou­ti­ne curr­ent­ly con­sists of tra­ve­ling, play­ing, reco­ve­ring, and repea­ting. There’s hard­ly any time for pro­per reco­very, let alo­ne for trai­ning, which explains the lack of coor­di­na­ti­on on the pitch. In Bre­men, one could won­der whe­ther the play­ers were sim­ply too exhaus­ted or belie­ved their per­for­mance was suf­fi­ci­ent to win an away game. Even during last season’s fairy­ta­le run, the­re were games whe­re the team fai­led to reach its full poten­ti­al. Howe­ver, it’s unli­kely that the play­ers think they can win matches wit­hout full effort.

In Bel­gra­de, they were over­whel­med by Red Star’s “all or not­hing” approach, as descri­bed by Red Star fan Denis on the pod­cast, and that game cle­ar­ly lin­ge­red in their legs and minds on Satur­day. The absence of three key attack­ing play­ers who could have pro­vi­ded reli­ef only added to the dif­fi­cul­ty. The team is rea­li­zing that the packed sche­du­le is wea­ring them down. This fati­gue is evi­dent in their lack of focus and men­tal blocks, with their minds con­stant­ly on the grue­ling sche­du­le ahead: five more games in the next three weeks, deci­ding their fate in the cup, Cham­pi­ons League, and Bun­des­li­ga.

Shared Responsibility

This pha­se, empha­si­zed by sport­ing direc­tor Wohl­ge­muth and coach Hoe­neß, is exact­ly why a deep squad was assem­bled. Against Regens­burg, Hoe­neß will have the oppor­tu­ni­ty to rest seve­ral regu­lar star­ters. Play­ers like Kei­tel, Krät­zig, Hen­driks, Sten­zel, Diehl, and Wol­te­ma­de will have the chan­ce to pro­ve they can pro­vi­de con­sis­tent sup­port in the Bun­des­li­ga, allo­wing Hoe­neß more free­dom in squad rota­ti­on. Despi­te the inju­ries, this deman­ding stretch was always expec­ted. The team must navi­ga­te it tog­e­ther, with the respon­si­bi­li­ty spread across many should­ers.

Pic­tu­re: © Selim Sudheimer/Getty Images

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