Rudi Völler as national coach? The majority are against it and have little hope for the European Championship

Civey survey for the star
Should Rudi Völler continue as national coach? Majority is against it

Rudi Völler (r.) was in the coaching bench for the DFB against France and Germany won 2-1

© David Inderlied / DPA

Rudi Völler did a good job as a substitute coach for the national team in the game against France. The majority still doesn’t want him to continue. And the Germans have little hope for the home European Championships next summer.

After the dismissal of Hansi Flick, the DFB is desperately looking for a new coach for the national team. Rudi Völler was on the bench as a one-off against France on Tuesday and managed an immediate win. Of course only a test match, but there are already increasing voices that Völler should take over the position. The opinion research institute Civey has commissioned the star a survey was carried out about this. Result: A majority of 35 percent are against the former team boss as the new coach. 28 percent were in favor of Völler’s return to the coaching bench, 37 percent are undecided. The rejection is particularly clear among football fans, with almost half of the votes cast.

Völler himself had already stated that he only wanted to return to the DFB team’s coaching bench for one game and would not be available beyond that. The hottest candidate is currently Julian Nagelsmann, who was recently kicked out of FC Bayern Munich.

Germans are pessimistic about the home European Championships

The DFB also has to hurry up with the search for a coach because the home European Championships are coming up next summer. In our survey, however, the Germans are very skeptical about the 2024 European Championships. Almost 30 percent expect a preliminary round elimination, 14 and 15 percent respectively expect failure in the round of 16 or quarter-finals. Only seven percent believe the DFB team will reach the semi-finals and only three percent believe in winning the European Championship in their own country.

Among football fans among those surveyed, the quarter-finals were just ahead of the preliminary round at 25 percent at 24 percent. At least five percent believe in success at the tournament. Also interesting: Apparently young people in particular have no trust in the national team. Among those under 40, almost 40 percent expect a preliminary round exit at the European Championships. As you get older, your pessimism decreases. Among people over 65, only one in five believes they will fail in the group phase.

Civey surveyed around 5,000 German citizens aged 18 and over online for Stern from September 13th to 15th. The data is collected in an online panel with around one million verified and monthly active participants. The results are representative due to quotas and weighting, taking into account the statistical error of 2.5 percentage points (overall result).

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