The end of the ideal YB world: will they ever mourn Wicky in Bern like Fischer in Basel?

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Raphael Wicky was released from YB after ten days of setbacks.
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Oliver GoriziaBlattmacher Sports

Football is a matter of the mind. Not exclusively, but to a not insignificant extent. Anyone who has ever had to take a decisive penalty knows this and has seen first-hand how the goal gets smaller and smaller as they move towards the penalty spot. Or ask the players of a top club that has just been eliminated in the cup against a blatant outsider from a lower competition what the reason was. “We weren’t ready for it in our heads” – or something like that – will be the answer.

Having the skills in your legs is one thing. Being able to mentally deal with a certain pressure situation is something completely different. Every week, football gives us vivid examples of how seasoned professionals suddenly lose their nerve.

Darmstadt debacle, YB collapse – both start in the head!

On Saturday, for example, the players of Bundesliga bottom Darmstadt provided a real treat for sports psychologists in their 6-0 defeat by Augsburg when, following a hair-raising defensive error after just a minute and the subsequent early goal, they suddenly added misfortune after misfortune and almost defeated the opponent who was invited to score goals every minute. So after half an hour of the best slapstick entertainment the score was 0:5 from the perspective of the Darmstadt team – a figure that has only been exceeded three times in 60 years of Bundesliga.

But uncertainty is not always so obvious. It is usually an unremarkable, gradual process that only gradually reaches the ears of those affected.

More about the Wicky Bang in Bern
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Who will the YB bosses get as Wicky’s successor?
YB boss Spycher explains the emotional Wicky-Out

“We hugged each other”
YB boss Spycher explains the emotional Wicky-Out
The Wicky Crash Log
Injuries, bankruptcies and problems
The Wicky Crash Log
YB switches to panic mode
After Wicky’s dismissal
Spycher and Von Bergen must also take credit for the crisis

Who would have thought a few weeks ago that YB had a head problem? The champions appeared to be heading confidently towards their sixth title in seven years and were also in the Europa League knockout round play-offs and cup quarter-finals. Coach Rafael Wicky? Apparently an ideal cast for the BSC Young Boys. Down-to-earth, precise, successful. Okay, the Valais is perhaps a bit more emotional here and there. But please: 2023 Double winner, Champions League participant with respectable performances against overwhelming Man City and Super League leaders RB Leipzig. What else do you want?

Wicky fired (not) a quick shot

Apparently a lot. Because just 10 days were enough to let go of the seemingly perfect yellow-black world. Europa League exit against Sporting Lisbon? Actually not a broken leg. Play cups in Zion? Can happen. Two defeats in the league? Not every day, but it’s happened before. But all at once? Too much of a bad thing.

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At the start of the Super League era, Hans-Peter Zaugg (71, June ’03 – October ’05) took over at YB. Biggest success: second in 2003/04.

Serious? I do not believe it. The otherwise down-to-earth population of Bern around strongman Christoph Spycher cannot be expected to show such a short-circuit reaction. The coach’s departure was a long time coming, perhaps at the end of last year, even though they would have liked the end of the Wicky era to have come at the end of the season. Of course decorated with at least one more championship title.

But the club’s long-standing mental move to break away from the coach must also have reached the players in recent weeks. And with that comes uncertainty. Unconditional trust in a coach who no longer trusts the club management? Impossible. Accidents occurred – first off the field, where a noise was heard that was unusual by YB standards, and then also during the sporting activities. And to look like a watered-down poodle, you don’t always have to concede five goals in half an hour.

Parallels with the Fischer end in Basel

It is no secret that those responsible for YB have higher ambitions than the sometimes sedate football that Wicky had to offer. Becoming champion every year with timpani and trumpets and regularly shining internationally would be good for the club. That’s what the bosses at FC Basel thought too almost seven years ago – and said goodbye to the supposedly sedate double winner Urs Fischer. They still mourn that at FCB today. And at YB? Maybe you’ve already hooked the new guy.

Next week we’ll know if YB actually managed to turn things around in game one after Wicky vs. Basel or if the long-forgotten word ‘Veryoungboysen’ is experiencing a renaissance.

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“Bloodless with little emotion”: Ex-YB coach talks about Wicky’s deportation(07:25)
Super League 23/24
team
SP
T.D
PT
1
BSC Young Boys
BSC Young Boys
26
27
51
2
Napkin FC
Napkin FC
26
16
50
3
FC Zurich
FC Zurich
26
11
42
4
FC Lugano
FC Lugano
26
7
40
5
FC St. Gallen
FC St. Gallen
26
5
40
6
FC Lucerne
FC Lucerne
26
-3
37
7
FC Winterthur
FC Winterthur
26
-4
37
8th
FC Basel
FC Basel
26
-7
31
9
Yverdon Sports FC
Yverdon Sports FC
26
-19
30
10
Grasshopper Club Zurich
Grasshopper Club Zurich
26
-1
29
11
FC Lausanne Sport
FC Lausanne Sport
26
-5
29
12
FC Stade Lausanne Ouchy
FC Stade Lausanne Ouchy
26
-27
16

Source : Blick

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Emma

Emma

I'm Emma Jack, a news website author at 24 News Reporters. I have been in the industry for over five years and it has been an incredible journey so far. I specialize in sports reporting and am highly knowledgeable about the latest trends and developments in this field.

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