Neuer: Keeping on

It’s been a long road back from injury for Manuel Neuer, but at 38 he is once again integral to Bayern München’s success. After breaking the Champions League clean sheet record against Arsenal in the quarter-finals, he reflects on a career that still has plenty of road ahead

WORDS Simon Hart | INTERVIEW Antonia Wisgickl

Cover Stories
“There are always moments when you despair because I didn’t know how my life would be if I wasn’t able to play football at all again. But I never stopped believing that it would work”

Manuel Neuer is in a reflective mood. Now 38, the Bayern München goalkeeper became a father for the first time in March – something which can add a fresh layer of perspective to anybody’s outlook. Yet right now, as he sits speaking to Champions Journal, his focus is on another event which prompted much introspection on his part – the career-threatening lower-leg break he suffered in a skiing accident in December 2022.

“If we were to ask the medical staff and the rehab team, they would scarcely believe that we are where we are today because I think out of every ten people only one or two manage to come back from that,” he says. “Particularly after the injuries and with the games I played, it couldn’t have gone any better than it did, for me to be standing in goal and performing well again. It was a big strain for me, which is normal for a serious injury. I think everything takes time and ultimately nature decided if it would work out or if I would never be able to play again.”

That he was back playing for Bayern ten months after the fracture to the tibia and fibula in his right leg was down to “thinking positively and the desire to play football and play professional sport again”. That determination should surprise none of us given the admirable longevity of a player who, among the goalkeeping fraternity, is second only to Iker Casillas for most appearances in the Champions League, with 138 (prior to this month’s semi-finals) to the Spaniard’s 177.

Moreover, with his clean sheet in the quarter-final home victory over Arsenal, he did not just help his team into another semi-final but surpassed Casillas’s record of 57 shutouts in the competition. “It’s not the most important thing there is but it’s nice for my team-mates — and all the colleagues I’ve played with in the past —if we think about our defensive work. I started with Schalke and then continued at Bayern, right up to the present day, and it’s great that it’s not over yet.”

Those clean sheets are part of a bigger picture in which he has made over 500 appearances for Bayern and worn the captain’s armband since 2017 – earning a special place in the club’s pantheon as one of only three goalkeepers to have held aloft the European Cup along with Sepp Maier and Oliver Kahn.

As an interviewee, Neuer speaks with the clarity and maturity of a man on the verge of 500 Bundesliga games and – ahead of this summer’s EURO – 117 senior caps for Germany. He is polite to the point of shaking the hand of every member of the film crew present as he introduces himself.Since his early days at Schalke, his first club, he has been considered a pioneer of the sweeper-keeper role though in his eyes, defensive security still represents the most important thing a goalkeeper can give his colleagues. “I think being able to give the rest of the team the feeling that they’ve got someone at the back that they can rely on to provide assurance, that’s the decisive factor.”

“giving the team the feeling they’ve got someone t0 rely on, that’s the decisive Factor”
Neuer holding the Champions League trophy in Lisbon

That assurance was there again in Bayern’s semi-final first leg against Real Madrid as he flung himself to his left to keep out a deflected shot from Toni Kroos, then stood tall to foil Vinícius Júnior in a one-v-one. Arguably, it has always been there – at least to some degree. His first clean sheet in the Champions League was on 3 October 2007 in a 2-0 Schalke win at Rosenborg. Then he was a fresh-faced 21-year-old playing for his home-town team. Looking back on his younger self, and how he has changed, he says: “I would just be more relaxed [nowadays] and also not try and decide everything on the pitch – that is kind of the difference from Manuel at the beginning, at Schalke, who wanted to take a lot into his own hands, to do a lot himself. I also know that I cannot influence everything. I’d say I was a bit wilder — I didn’t have this sense of calm and maybe the charisma as well. I was, of course, always an attacking goalkeeper who tried to join in the build-up play.

“It’s obviously been a long time since then when you look back on it. It’s also very normal, given that I’m now 38, that I’ve developed a fair bit since then. But it’s nice to cast your mind back to those days, and how things were at that time.”

Now we are back in those days, let’s stay there a little longer. With Schalke, he reached the Champions League quarter-finals in his debut season of 2007/08. In 2011 he helped the Gelsenkirchen club into the semi-finals where they lost to Manchester United. That summer he headed south to Bayern. Remembering the move, he says: “It certainly wasn’t easy. There was a lot of media scrutiny about my character in making the switch from Schalke to Bayern. There were lots of fans who weren’t thrilled about it.

“I think that the support of the club, of the team, was very important. I already knew lots of the German players from the national team – they were definitely very excited that I was coming to Bayern. That was something that I realised from the first day when we started training at Säbener Strässe [Bayern’s training ground in the south of the city] and then at the training camp. And so, I felt very comfortable from the beginning.”

His first campaign in Munich ended with a Champions League final defeat at Bayern’s home stadium against Chelsea. He had shone in the preceding semi-final victory over Real Madrid, saving from Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaká in the concluding shoot-out. These were not his first spot-kick heroics, mind: two saves against Porto had taken Schalke to the last eight in that debut season.  

“You have to radiate confidence and try to show your opponent that you are stronger than they are,” he says of the mano a mano challenge that penalties bring. Yet he tasted the downside of those duels in the final against Chelsea, with Bayern beaten despite his stop from Juan Mata. “Fundamentally, we were satisfied with how we performed on the pitch, but in the end we didn’t get over the line,” he recalls of a year in which they also finished runners-up in the Bundesliga and German Cup. “It meant that we were extra motivated when we went into the next season and that made a difference. I think that the coaching staff around Jupp Heynckes were also very motivated. From the first day, it was clear that we all wanted to achieve something that season, and you could see that from then on.”

Cue a treble-winning campaign, with successes in the German league and cup allied to a 2-1 Champions League final success over Borussia Dortmund at Wembley. Back-to-back clean sheets against Barcelona in the semi-final had underlined, in Neuer’s own words, that he was “someone that can be relied upon”. It meant he ended his first two campaigns in the competition with Bayern with a total of ten clean sheets. And his development continued the following year with Germany’s World Cup triumph in Brazil, where he racked up four more shutouts.  

He relates: “I gained a lot of experience from 2012 and 2013, from the success, and also the next stages because we had coaches who taught us a lot. I think the team developed too, which we also benefited from, and then the German national players became world champions. We had a lot of self-confidence. I was able to learn a lot from the good coaches and from my good team-mates and no one can take that experience away from you. That is why I can always play to the best of my ability, even in big games.”

If that was one golden chapter, another came in 2020 when he lifted the Champions League trophy again, with the Bayern team who defeated Paris Saint-Germain in the final in Lisbon. That was the competition that concluded in empty stadiums in Portugal owing to the pandemic. “It meant a lot to me,” he remembers. “I think it was the best team performance that we put together for the club. It was a bit harder given the conditions that we had to play under during the coronavirus period. How we prepared, and the spirit and fitness we went into these games with... put simply, we earned that success. It wasn’t always clear that we would beat Paris in the end. We worked really hard to stay in the game and then Kingsley [Coman] made it 1-0.

“That was a team success and, unfortunately, you could not celebrate with the fans. That was the downside, that we won the Champions League in Lisbon, which of course meant just as much to us, but it would have been even better if the spectators had been there.”

Neuer, for the record, registered clean sheets in both the one-off semi-final against Lyon and then that final versus Paris. His enduring excellence has been on display this season too, since his return from injury – with four shutouts in seven outings up to the semi-final stage.

It would be no surprise if the first of those, clean sheet no55 of his Champions League career at home to Copenhagen on 29 November, had felt especially sweet, coming 421 days after the previous one against Viktoria Plzeň on 4 October the previous year. If this takes us back to the difficulties – physical and mental – of his injury, he cites a silver lining.

“I think every break and every injury also has some good in it.

Nothing comes at the right time. The injury was supposed to be simple but you have to look deep into your eyes and say, ‘Hey, I will take this challenge on and will try to come out of it stronger.’ That took a little while of course but I couldn’t expect anything else.”

Once again, Neuer has experienced enough of football’s ups and downs to see the bigger picture. And right now, it holds more than one reason for optimism, including the prospect of playing in Germany’s home EURO this summer — home town Gelsenkirchen and adopted home town Munich are among the ten venues. He has not forgotten the feeling of the last major tournament his nation staged, the 2006 FIFA World Cup. “In 2006, I was watching in public viewing areas and soaking up the atmosphere – it was just sensational how Germany hosted the world,” he says.

Back then he was 18 and had just completed his first full season with Schalke’s second team. We go back to the question of his evolution as a player over the years. “I would say that maybe I am a bit calmer, and also more disciplined in my actions, though it always depends on the team-mates we have, who is playing, how do I have to adjust as the goalkeeper, what game plan we have, what does the coach want, how high is the line, how are we defending, how do we want to play out from the back? There are always little things that change and that is the case whether I play for the national team or for Bayern, and it is the same from coach to coach in the seasons when we have competed in the Champions League – there are always nuances that are different, but fundamentally I have always stayed true to the way I play.” And while that involves Neuer’s work with the ball at his feet, he has not lost sight of the one thing that matters above all for a goalkeeper: “The clean sheets.”

Manuel Neuer is in a reflective mood. Now 38, the Bayern München goalkeeper became a father for the first time in March – something which can add a fresh layer of perspective to anybody’s outlook. Yet right now, as he sits speaking to Champions Journal, his focus is on another event which prompted much introspection on his part – the career-threatening lower-leg break he suffered in a skiing accident in December 2022.

“If we were to ask the medical staff and the rehab team, they would scarcely believe that we are where we are today because I think out of every ten people only one or two manage to come back from that,” he says. “Particularly after the injuries and with the games I played, it couldn’t have gone any better than it did, for me to be standing in goal and performing well again. It was a big strain for me, which is normal for a serious injury. I think everything takes time and ultimately nature decided if it would work out or if I would never be able to play again.”

That he was back playing for Bayern ten months after the fracture to the tibia and fibula in his right leg was down to “thinking positively and the desire to play football and play professional sport again”. That determination should surprise none of us given the admirable longevity of a player who, among the goalkeeping fraternity, is second only to Iker Casillas for most appearances in the Champions League, with 138 (prior to this month’s semi-finals) to the Spaniard’s 177.

Moreover, with his clean sheet in the quarter-final home victory over Arsenal, he did not just help his team into another semi-final but surpassed Casillas’s record of 57 shutouts in the competition. “It’s not the most important thing there is but it’s nice for my team-mates — and all the colleagues I’ve played with in the past —if we think about our defensive work. I started with Schalke and then continued at Bayern, right up to the present day, and it’s great that it’s not over yet.”

Those clean sheets are part of a bigger picture in which he has made over 500 appearances for Bayern and worn the captain’s armband since 2017 – earning a special place in the club’s pantheon as one of only three goalkeepers to have held aloft the European Cup along with Sepp Maier and Oliver Kahn.

As an interviewee, Neuer speaks with the clarity and maturity of a man on the verge of 500 Bundesliga games and – ahead of this summer’s EURO – 117 senior caps for Germany. He is polite to the point of shaking the hand of every member of the film crew present as he introduces himself.Since his early days at Schalke, his first club, he has been considered a pioneer of the sweeper-keeper role though in his eyes, defensive security still represents the most important thing a goalkeeper can give his colleagues. “I think being able to give the rest of the team the feeling that they’ve got someone at the back that they can rely on to provide assurance, that’s the decisive factor.”

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“giving the team the feeling they’ve got someone t0 rely on, that’s the decisive Factor”
Neuer holding the Champions League trophy in Lisbon

That assurance was there again in Bayern’s semi-final first leg against Real Madrid as he flung himself to his left to keep out a deflected shot from Toni Kroos, then stood tall to foil Vinícius Júnior in a one-v-one. Arguably, it has always been there – at least to some degree. His first clean sheet in the Champions League was on 3 October 2007 in a 2-0 Schalke win at Rosenborg. Then he was a fresh-faced 21-year-old playing for his home-town team. Looking back on his younger self, and how he has changed, he says: “I would just be more relaxed [nowadays] and also not try and decide everything on the pitch – that is kind of the difference from Manuel at the beginning, at Schalke, who wanted to take a lot into his own hands, to do a lot himself. I also know that I cannot influence everything. I’d say I was a bit wilder — I didn’t have this sense of calm and maybe the charisma as well. I was, of course, always an attacking goalkeeper who tried to join in the build-up play.

“It’s obviously been a long time since then when you look back on it. It’s also very normal, given that I’m now 38, that I’ve developed a fair bit since then. But it’s nice to cast your mind back to those days, and how things were at that time.”

Now we are back in those days, let’s stay there a little longer. With Schalke, he reached the Champions League quarter-finals in his debut season of 2007/08. In 2011 he helped the Gelsenkirchen club into the semi-finals where they lost to Manchester United. That summer he headed south to Bayern. Remembering the move, he says: “It certainly wasn’t easy. There was a lot of media scrutiny about my character in making the switch from Schalke to Bayern. There were lots of fans who weren’t thrilled about it.

“I think that the support of the club, of the team, was very important. I already knew lots of the German players from the national team – they were definitely very excited that I was coming to Bayern. That was something that I realised from the first day when we started training at Säbener Strässe [Bayern’s training ground in the south of the city] and then at the training camp. And so, I felt very comfortable from the beginning.”

His first campaign in Munich ended with a Champions League final defeat at Bayern’s home stadium against Chelsea. He had shone in the preceding semi-final victory over Real Madrid, saving from Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaká in the concluding shoot-out. These were not his first spot-kick heroics, mind: two saves against Porto had taken Schalke to the last eight in that debut season.  

“You have to radiate confidence and try to show your opponent that you are stronger than they are,” he says of the mano a mano challenge that penalties bring. Yet he tasted the downside of those duels in the final against Chelsea, with Bayern beaten despite his stop from Juan Mata. “Fundamentally, we were satisfied with how we performed on the pitch, but in the end we didn’t get over the line,” he recalls of a year in which they also finished runners-up in the Bundesliga and German Cup. “It meant that we were extra motivated when we went into the next season and that made a difference. I think that the coaching staff around Jupp Heynckes were also very motivated. From the first day, it was clear that we all wanted to achieve something that season, and you could see that from then on.”

Cue a treble-winning campaign, with successes in the German league and cup allied to a 2-1 Champions League final success over Borussia Dortmund at Wembley. Back-to-back clean sheets against Barcelona in the semi-final had underlined, in Neuer’s own words, that he was “someone that can be relied upon”. It meant he ended his first two campaigns in the competition with Bayern with a total of ten clean sheets. And his development continued the following year with Germany’s World Cup triumph in Brazil, where he racked up four more shutouts.  

He relates: “I gained a lot of experience from 2012 and 2013, from the success, and also the next stages because we had coaches who taught us a lot. I think the team developed too, which we also benefited from, and then the German national players became world champions. We had a lot of self-confidence. I was able to learn a lot from the good coaches and from my good team-mates and no one can take that experience away from you. That is why I can always play to the best of my ability, even in big games.”

If that was one golden chapter, another came in 2020 when he lifted the Champions League trophy again, with the Bayern team who defeated Paris Saint-Germain in the final in Lisbon. That was the competition that concluded in empty stadiums in Portugal owing to the pandemic. “It meant a lot to me,” he remembers. “I think it was the best team performance that we put together for the club. It was a bit harder given the conditions that we had to play under during the coronavirus period. How we prepared, and the spirit and fitness we went into these games with... put simply, we earned that success. It wasn’t always clear that we would beat Paris in the end. We worked really hard to stay in the game and then Kingsley [Coman] made it 1-0.

“That was a team success and, unfortunately, you could not celebrate with the fans. That was the downside, that we won the Champions League in Lisbon, which of course meant just as much to us, but it would have been even better if the spectators had been there.”

Neuer, for the record, registered clean sheets in both the one-off semi-final against Lyon and then that final versus Paris. His enduring excellence has been on display this season too, since his return from injury – with four shutouts in seven outings up to the semi-final stage.

It would be no surprise if the first of those, clean sheet no55 of his Champions League career at home to Copenhagen on 29 November, had felt especially sweet, coming 421 days after the previous one against Viktoria Plzeň on 4 October the previous year. If this takes us back to the difficulties – physical and mental – of his injury, he cites a silver lining.

“I think every break and every injury also has some good in it.

Nothing comes at the right time. The injury was supposed to be simple but you have to look deep into your eyes and say, ‘Hey, I will take this challenge on and will try to come out of it stronger.’ That took a little while of course but I couldn’t expect anything else.”

Once again, Neuer has experienced enough of football’s ups and downs to see the bigger picture. And right now, it holds more than one reason for optimism, including the prospect of playing in Germany’s home EURO this summer — home town Gelsenkirchen and adopted home town Munich are among the ten venues. He has not forgotten the feeling of the last major tournament his nation staged, the 2006 FIFA World Cup. “In 2006, I was watching in public viewing areas and soaking up the atmosphere – it was just sensational how Germany hosted the world,” he says.

Back then he was 18 and had just completed his first full season with Schalke’s second team. We go back to the question of his evolution as a player over the years. “I would say that maybe I am a bit calmer, and also more disciplined in my actions, though it always depends on the team-mates we have, who is playing, how do I have to adjust as the goalkeeper, what game plan we have, what does the coach want, how high is the line, how are we defending, how do we want to play out from the back? There are always little things that change and that is the case whether I play for the national team or for Bayern, and it is the same from coach to coach in the seasons when we have competed in the Champions League – there are always nuances that are different, but fundamentally I have always stayed true to the way I play.” And while that involves Neuer’s work with the ball at his feet, he has not lost sight of the one thing that matters above all for a goalkeeper: “The clean sheets.”

Manuel Neuer is in a reflective mood. Now 38, the Bayern München goalkeeper became a father for the first time in March – something which can add a fresh layer of perspective to anybody’s outlook. Yet right now, as he sits speaking to Champions Journal, his focus is on another event which prompted much introspection on his part – the career-threatening lower-leg break he suffered in a skiing accident in December 2022.

“If we were to ask the medical staff and the rehab team, they would scarcely believe that we are where we are today because I think out of every ten people only one or two manage to come back from that,” he says. “Particularly after the injuries and with the games I played, it couldn’t have gone any better than it did, for me to be standing in goal and performing well again. It was a big strain for me, which is normal for a serious injury. I think everything takes time and ultimately nature decided if it would work out or if I would never be able to play again.”

That he was back playing for Bayern ten months after the fracture to the tibia and fibula in his right leg was down to “thinking positively and the desire to play football and play professional sport again”. That determination should surprise none of us given the admirable longevity of a player who, among the goalkeeping fraternity, is second only to Iker Casillas for most appearances in the Champions League, with 138 (prior to this month’s semi-finals) to the Spaniard’s 177.

Moreover, with his clean sheet in the quarter-final home victory over Arsenal, he did not just help his team into another semi-final but surpassed Casillas’s record of 57 shutouts in the competition. “It’s not the most important thing there is but it’s nice for my team-mates — and all the colleagues I’ve played with in the past —if we think about our defensive work. I started with Schalke and then continued at Bayern, right up to the present day, and it’s great that it’s not over yet.”

Those clean sheets are part of a bigger picture in which he has made over 500 appearances for Bayern and worn the captain’s armband since 2017 – earning a special place in the club’s pantheon as one of only three goalkeepers to have held aloft the European Cup along with Sepp Maier and Oliver Kahn.

As an interviewee, Neuer speaks with the clarity and maturity of a man on the verge of 500 Bundesliga games and – ahead of this summer’s EURO – 117 senior caps for Germany. He is polite to the point of shaking the hand of every member of the film crew present as he introduces himself.Since his early days at Schalke, his first club, he has been considered a pioneer of the sweeper-keeper role though in his eyes, defensive security still represents the most important thing a goalkeeper can give his colleagues. “I think being able to give the rest of the team the feeling that they’ve got someone at the back that they can rely on to provide assurance, that’s the decisive factor.”

“giving the team the feeling they’ve got someone t0 rely on, that’s the decisive Factor”
Neuer holding the Champions League trophy in Lisbon

That assurance was there again in Bayern’s semi-final first leg against Real Madrid as he flung himself to his left to keep out a deflected shot from Toni Kroos, then stood tall to foil Vinícius Júnior in a one-v-one. Arguably, it has always been there – at least to some degree. His first clean sheet in the Champions League was on 3 October 2007 in a 2-0 Schalke win at Rosenborg. Then he was a fresh-faced 21-year-old playing for his home-town team. Looking back on his younger self, and how he has changed, he says: “I would just be more relaxed [nowadays] and also not try and decide everything on the pitch – that is kind of the difference from Manuel at the beginning, at Schalke, who wanted to take a lot into his own hands, to do a lot himself. I also know that I cannot influence everything. I’d say I was a bit wilder — I didn’t have this sense of calm and maybe the charisma as well. I was, of course, always an attacking goalkeeper who tried to join in the build-up play.

“It’s obviously been a long time since then when you look back on it. It’s also very normal, given that I’m now 38, that I’ve developed a fair bit since then. But it’s nice to cast your mind back to those days, and how things were at that time.”

Now we are back in those days, let’s stay there a little longer. With Schalke, he reached the Champions League quarter-finals in his debut season of 2007/08. In 2011 he helped the Gelsenkirchen club into the semi-finals where they lost to Manchester United. That summer he headed south to Bayern. Remembering the move, he says: “It certainly wasn’t easy. There was a lot of media scrutiny about my character in making the switch from Schalke to Bayern. There were lots of fans who weren’t thrilled about it.

“I think that the support of the club, of the team, was very important. I already knew lots of the German players from the national team – they were definitely very excited that I was coming to Bayern. That was something that I realised from the first day when we started training at Säbener Strässe [Bayern’s training ground in the south of the city] and then at the training camp. And so, I felt very comfortable from the beginning.”

His first campaign in Munich ended with a Champions League final defeat at Bayern’s home stadium against Chelsea. He had shone in the preceding semi-final victory over Real Madrid, saving from Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaká in the concluding shoot-out. These were not his first spot-kick heroics, mind: two saves against Porto had taken Schalke to the last eight in that debut season.  

“You have to radiate confidence and try to show your opponent that you are stronger than they are,” he says of the mano a mano challenge that penalties bring. Yet he tasted the downside of those duels in the final against Chelsea, with Bayern beaten despite his stop from Juan Mata. “Fundamentally, we were satisfied with how we performed on the pitch, but in the end we didn’t get over the line,” he recalls of a year in which they also finished runners-up in the Bundesliga and German Cup. “It meant that we were extra motivated when we went into the next season and that made a difference. I think that the coaching staff around Jupp Heynckes were also very motivated. From the first day, it was clear that we all wanted to achieve something that season, and you could see that from then on.”

Cue a treble-winning campaign, with successes in the German league and cup allied to a 2-1 Champions League final success over Borussia Dortmund at Wembley. Back-to-back clean sheets against Barcelona in the semi-final had underlined, in Neuer’s own words, that he was “someone that can be relied upon”. It meant he ended his first two campaigns in the competition with Bayern with a total of ten clean sheets. And his development continued the following year with Germany’s World Cup triumph in Brazil, where he racked up four more shutouts.  

He relates: “I gained a lot of experience from 2012 and 2013, from the success, and also the next stages because we had coaches who taught us a lot. I think the team developed too, which we also benefited from, and then the German national players became world champions. We had a lot of self-confidence. I was able to learn a lot from the good coaches and from my good team-mates and no one can take that experience away from you. That is why I can always play to the best of my ability, even in big games.”

If that was one golden chapter, another came in 2020 when he lifted the Champions League trophy again, with the Bayern team who defeated Paris Saint-Germain in the final in Lisbon. That was the competition that concluded in empty stadiums in Portugal owing to the pandemic. “It meant a lot to me,” he remembers. “I think it was the best team performance that we put together for the club. It was a bit harder given the conditions that we had to play under during the coronavirus period. How we prepared, and the spirit and fitness we went into these games with... put simply, we earned that success. It wasn’t always clear that we would beat Paris in the end. We worked really hard to stay in the game and then Kingsley [Coman] made it 1-0.

“That was a team success and, unfortunately, you could not celebrate with the fans. That was the downside, that we won the Champions League in Lisbon, which of course meant just as much to us, but it would have been even better if the spectators had been there.”

Neuer, for the record, registered clean sheets in both the one-off semi-final against Lyon and then that final versus Paris. His enduring excellence has been on display this season too, since his return from injury – with four shutouts in seven outings up to the semi-final stage.

It would be no surprise if the first of those, clean sheet no55 of his Champions League career at home to Copenhagen on 29 November, had felt especially sweet, coming 421 days after the previous one against Viktoria Plzeň on 4 October the previous year. If this takes us back to the difficulties – physical and mental – of his injury, he cites a silver lining.

“I think every break and every injury also has some good in it.

Nothing comes at the right time. The injury was supposed to be simple but you have to look deep into your eyes and say, ‘Hey, I will take this challenge on and will try to come out of it stronger.’ That took a little while of course but I couldn’t expect anything else.”

Once again, Neuer has experienced enough of football’s ups and downs to see the bigger picture. And right now, it holds more than one reason for optimism, including the prospect of playing in Germany’s home EURO this summer — home town Gelsenkirchen and adopted home town Munich are among the ten venues. He has not forgotten the feeling of the last major tournament his nation staged, the 2006 FIFA World Cup. “In 2006, I was watching in public viewing areas and soaking up the atmosphere – it was just sensational how Germany hosted the world,” he says.

Back then he was 18 and had just completed his first full season with Schalke’s second team. We go back to the question of his evolution as a player over the years. “I would say that maybe I am a bit calmer, and also more disciplined in my actions, though it always depends on the team-mates we have, who is playing, how do I have to adjust as the goalkeeper, what game plan we have, what does the coach want, how high is the line, how are we defending, how do we want to play out from the back? There are always little things that change and that is the case whether I play for the national team or for Bayern, and it is the same from coach to coach in the seasons when we have competed in the Champions League – there are always nuances that are different, but fundamentally I have always stayed true to the way I play.” And while that involves Neuer’s work with the ball at his feet, he has not lost sight of the one thing that matters above all for a goalkeeper: “The clean sheets.”

Centre-back Matthijs de Ligt on playing in front of the evergreen goalkeeper
‘He is one of the best of all time’

Such are the tactical demands on goalkeepers today that they are required to practically be as good with their feet as with their hands. Manuel Neuer was ahead of the curve in this regard, emerging as an early prototype for the new generation of sweeper-keepers during his time at Schalke where he helped with his team’s build-up play and produced four goal assists in his 156 Bundesliga matches for the Royal Blues. Such was his impact for his country, meanwhile, that his former national coach Joachim Löw once praised him for his “new way of interpreting how to be a goalkeeper”.

Today Neuer remains a formidable presence, as underlined by his defensive colleague at Bayern, Matthijs de Ligt, who finds two reasons for putting him in the bracket of history’s finest. “I think he is one of the best goalkeepers of all time, not only in terms of goalkeeping, but also in the way in which he plays outside his box, so I feel he is extraordinary,” says Bayern’s Dutch centre-back. “He is 38 now and still incredibly good. I can only imagine what he was like four years ago – likely even more amazing.

“He is so well-rounded. Often you see goalkeepers who can play football well, but are not as good in goal, or who are great goalkeepers but cannot play as well. He is so well-rounded and is the best at everything. That is very special. What he brings to the team with his composure, his calmness, his strength, his footballing abilities, as well as his goalkeeping abilities is huge.”

Centre-back Matthijs de Ligt on playing in front of the evergreen goalkeeper
‘He is one of the best of all time’

Such are the tactical demands on goalkeepers today that they are required to practically be as good with their feet as with their hands. Manuel Neuer was ahead of the curve in this regard, emerging as an early prototype for the new generation of sweeper-keepers during his time at Schalke where he helped with his team’s build-up play and produced four goal assists in his 156 Bundesliga matches for the Royal Blues. Such was his impact for his country, meanwhile, that his former national coach Joachim Löw once praised him for his “new way of interpreting how to be a goalkeeper”.

Today Neuer remains a formidable presence, as underlined by his defensive colleague at Bayern, Matthijs de Ligt, who finds two reasons for putting him in the bracket of history’s finest. “I think he is one of the best goalkeepers of all time, not only in terms of goalkeeping, but also in the way in which he plays outside his box, so I feel he is extraordinary,” says Bayern’s Dutch centre-back. “He is 38 now and still incredibly good. I can only imagine what he was like four years ago – likely even more amazing.

“He is so well-rounded. Often you see goalkeepers who can play football well, but are not as good in goal, or who are great goalkeepers but cannot play as well. He is so well-rounded and is the best at everything. That is very special. What he brings to the team with his composure, his calmness, his strength, his footballing abilities, as well as his goalkeeping abilities is huge.”

Centre-back Matthijs de Ligt on playing in front of the evergreen goalkeeper
‘He is one of the best of all time’

Such are the tactical demands on goalkeepers today that they are required to practically be as good with their feet as with their hands. Manuel Neuer was ahead of the curve in this regard, emerging as an early prototype for the new generation of sweeper-keepers during his time at Schalke where he helped with his team’s build-up play and produced four goal assists in his 156 Bundesliga matches for the Royal Blues. Such was his impact for his country, meanwhile, that his former national coach Joachim Löw once praised him for his “new way of interpreting how to be a goalkeeper”.

Today Neuer remains a formidable presence, as underlined by his defensive colleague at Bayern, Matthijs de Ligt, who finds two reasons for putting him in the bracket of history’s finest. “I think he is one of the best goalkeepers of all time, not only in terms of goalkeeping, but also in the way in which he plays outside his box, so I feel he is extraordinary,” says Bayern’s Dutch centre-back. “He is 38 now and still incredibly good. I can only imagine what he was like four years ago – likely even more amazing.

“He is so well-rounded. Often you see goalkeepers who can play football well, but are not as good in goal, or who are great goalkeepers but cannot play as well. He is so well-rounded and is the best at everything. That is very special. What he brings to the team with his composure, his calmness, his strength, his footballing abilities, as well as his goalkeeping abilities is huge.”

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