Timo Werner's Transfer U-Turn in Keeping With His Bumpy Rise to Top

 Timo Werner’s 2016 move to RB Leipzig was so controversial a pop song based on a derogatory terrace chant about him became a party anthem the following summer. Photograph: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images
Timo Werner’s 2016 move to RB Leipzig was so controversial a pop song based on a derogatory terrace chant about him became a party anthem the following summer. Photograph: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images
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Timo Werner's Transfer U-Turn in Keeping With His Bumpy Rise to Top

 Timo Werner’s 2016 move to RB Leipzig was so controversial a pop song based on a derogatory terrace chant about him became a party anthem the following summer. Photograph: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images
Timo Werner’s 2016 move to RB Leipzig was so controversial a pop song based on a derogatory terrace chant about him became a party anthem the following summer. Photograph: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

After looking destined for Liverpool for so long, Timo Werner is set for his Premier League move – but heading to London rather than Merseyside and wearing blue rather than red, as a move to Chelsea looms. Nothing should be assumed yet, as what appeared a done deal for the soon-to-be Premier League champions went cold, with the prospect of paying the RB Leipzig forward’s €60m (£52.7m) release clause meriting greater reflection now than it did in a pre-Covid-19 altered reality. Yet all Chelsea have to do is meet the clause – and even in the current climate it is a deal that offers fine value – and to be truly wanted is a big deal to Werner.

Liverpool fans may scratch their heads as to why their club checked their run late on, particularly given Werner’s keenness – the public praise of Liverpool and Jürgen Klopp (in excellent English) and suggestions of his own potential fit there – and the much-publicised Zoom call with the charismatic manager. Yet this apparent about-turn is not out of character with his career to date.

Werner’s path from becoming Stuttgart’s youngest professional debutant and goalscorer in 2013, at 17, has been bumpier than the raw numbers and YouTube highlights would suggest. He is softly spoken but knows his own mind, and criticism over the last few years has only strengthened his resolve. It was expected for a long time that he would join Bayern Munich, but their deprioritising of Werner as they chased more cosmopolitan targets led to him surprisingly signing a new deal at the Red Bull Arena last year, which included the current clause. When Hansi Flick recently made it clear he would love to pick up the thread and bring Werner to Bavaria after all, the player said he saw his future lying abroad.

Events had made Werner tough and adaptable. In summer 2016 he took the plunge and joined newly promoted RB Leipzig, and it changed his footballing life – on one hand in the way he would have hoped for and on the other in transforming his image in a way he would have perhaps struggled to have foreseen. Stepping into a focused, organised, nurturing environment at the age of 20 helped him realise his potential. He scored six Bundesliga goals for a dysfunctional Stuttgart in his final season there (his best total at that stage) as they stumbled to a ruinous relegation; in the following campaign at Leipzig he rattled in 21, despite playing fewer games than the season before.

Werner paid a price, though. What he gained in terms of on-pitch support and aptitude he lost in respect of his image. Having apparently fled the sinking ship of his hometown club – that he netted them a much-needed initial fee of €10m, Leipzig’s club record at the time, is sometimes glossed over – Werner attracted opprobrium for joining (and undeniably strengthening) a club whose mere presence in the top flight many German football fans found impossible to stomach. The attacks on Leipzig – banners, chants, thrown paint and bull heads – widened to incorporate very personal attacks on Werner, which escalated after he took a dive in a win over Schalke in December 2016.

The pop singer Ikke Hüftgold even released Hurensohn (son of a bitch), set to the tune of Belinda Carlisle’s Heaven Is A Place On Earth and based on a derogatory terrace chant about Werner, as a summer party anthem in 2017. Hüftgold did point out the refrain was actually “Imo Erner ist kein Urensohn” and claimed he wanted to “defuse the situation with humour”, but the production of T-shirts emblazoned with “Timo Werner ist ein Hurensohn” in German-heavy resorts in Mallorca that summer suggested the nuance had been lost on many.

“It is less about Werner’s dive,” wrote 11 Freunde’s Stephan Reich in June 2017, “and more about the jersey in which he made it.” The sensitive Werner was affected by the abuse and by the whistles he received while playing for Germany (though there were enough other culprits for the shambolic defence of the World Cup in Russia that he, hidden away on the wing in a failing team, escaped much censure).

Having come through all this, Werner is enjoying a career-high season at 24 under the guidance of Julian Nagelsmann. The young coach has started to broaden Leipzig’s palette, much as he did progressively at Hoffenheim but clearly with a higher quality set of players, moving them far beyond being simply a team of skilled counterpunchers.

This switch has done likewise for Werner. He had seen early how he and his team might be typecast as one-trick ponies, only capable on rapid breaks, when he mused in Leipzig’s second Bundesliga season that opponents would give his team the ball and challenge them to break them down. Nagelsmann has largely resisted the temptation to place Werner on the left wing, where he is highly capable (and from where he caused Sweden problems even in the wreckage of that desperately poor 2018 World Cup campaign).

Instead, he has been the coach’s go-to centre-forward, still with the pace to blaze clear of the defence should the opportunity arise as his goal in Monday’s win at Cologne showed, but also with the craft and shooting power to take on more deeply set defences. That tendency to drift out to the left, Thierry Henry-style, will never leave his game but Nagelsmann seems to have decided it should be a complementary attribute to his arsenal rather than a vocation.

Everything suggests it is a skillset that will quickly pay dividends in the Champions League. Werner is prepared and already knows he has the tools to succeed, whatever the destination.

The Guardian Sport



Nunez Late Double Rescues Win for Liverpool in Premier League

Liverpool's Darwin Nunez greets supporters after winning the English Premier League match between Brentford FC and Liverpool FC, in London, Britain, 18 January 2025.  EPA/DANIEL HAMBURY
Liverpool's Darwin Nunez greets supporters after winning the English Premier League match between Brentford FC and Liverpool FC, in London, Britain, 18 January 2025. EPA/DANIEL HAMBURY
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Nunez Late Double Rescues Win for Liverpool in Premier League

Liverpool's Darwin Nunez greets supporters after winning the English Premier League match between Brentford FC and Liverpool FC, in London, Britain, 18 January 2025.  EPA/DANIEL HAMBURY
Liverpool's Darwin Nunez greets supporters after winning the English Premier League match between Brentford FC and Liverpool FC, in London, Britain, 18 January 2025. EPA/DANIEL HAMBURY

Darwin Nunez scored twice in stoppage time as Liverpool beat Brentford 2-0 to strengthen its spot in first place in the Premier League on Saturday.
Second-placed Arsenal will look to restore the four-point gap to Liverpool by defeating Aston Villa later.
Nunez was derided by Brentford's fans after going on as a substitute in the 65th minute, but the Uruguay striker responded by turning home a cross from Trent Alexander-Arnold in the first minute of added-on time, The Associated Press reported.
Nunez then finished off a counterattack two minutes later and secured a first victory in three league games for Liverpool, which drew with Manchester United and Nottingham Forest either side of a loss to Tottenham in the first leg of the English League Cup semifinals.
Liverpool has still lost only one league game all season, at home to Forest in September. The Reds had 37 shots against Brentford and scored with their final two.
Kluivert's second hat trick Justin Kluivert scored his second hat trick of the season in the league to inspire Bournemouth to 4-1 at Newcastle, whose nine-match winning run in all competitions came to an end emphatically.
The Dutch midfielder netted in the sixth, 44th and second-half stoppage time at St. James' Park. Milos Kerkez added the fourth goal in the sixth minute of added-on time.
Bruno Guimaraes equalized for fourth-placed Newcastle.
Kluivert, whose father is former Netherlands striker Patrick Kluivert, also scored three goals against Wolverhampton in November. In that match, all of Kluivert's goals were penalties, but he scored from open play each time against Newcastle.
Six of Newcastle's nine straight victories came in the league, helping to lift the Saudi-controlled team into the top four in its bid to return to the Champions League.
Newcastle striker Alexander Isak failed to score, having previously netted in eight league games in a row. That left him three games short of Leicester striker Jamie Vardy's record for the longest scoring run in Premier League history.
Bournemouth dominated Newcastle despite being hampered by a long list of injuries. The south coast team extended its unbeaten run to 11 games and climbed to sixth place, tied for points with fifth-placed Chelsea. A fifth-place finish could earn a place in the Champions League next season for the first time.
“Why not dream big?” Kluivert posed. “We never know where we can end up.”
Van Nistelrooy under pressure Next-to-last Leicester lost a seventh straight game in the league, 2-0 to Fulham, to pile the pressure on recently hired manager Ruud van Nistelrooy.
Van Nistelrooy has won only one of his nine league games in charge — the first against West Ham on Dec. 3.
Emile Smith Rowe and Adama Traore scored for Fulham.
Crystal Palace won at West Ham 2-0 thanks to two second-half goals by Jean-Philippe Mateta, the second from the penalty spot.