BSS
  14 Sep 2022, 10:02

Bundesliga leaders Union aim to bring Berlin cool to Europe

 

BERLIN, Sept 14, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Cult club Union Berlin have enchanted
German football on their fairytale rise all the way to the top of the
Bundesliga, and this season they are hoping to carry their domestic form onto
the European stage.

Union head to Portugal to play Braga in their second group game in this
season's Europa League on Thursday, having lost at home to Union Saint-
Gilloise last week.

"The only thing that matters on Thursday is that we get our first points on
the board. We want to show our league face," Union goalkeeper Lennart Grill
told German media on Tuesday.

The 1-0 loss to their Belgian opponents is the only blemish on a brilliant
start to the campaign for Union, who reached new heights last weekend as they
stormed to the top of the Bundesliga for the first time in their history.

The popular minnows from East Berlin are full of confidence after notching up
four wins from their opening six games in Germany's top flight.

Union are on the Bundesliga's longest unbeaten run, having not lost in 13
games, despite having faced Bayern Munich, RB Leipzig (twice) and cross-town
rivals Hertha Berlin (twice) during that spell.

"I'm particularly happy about the 14 points, which will help us, because
there will certainly be phases in which we are not doing well," said coach
Urs Fischer.

"It's a nice moment to remember", the notoriously stoic Swiss said of his
side's view from the top.

- 'Cool' Union -

Union Berlin's outsider appeal existed a long time before their promotion to
the Bundesliga in 2019, but in recent weeks the club have won the support of
German football's mainstream.

After his side was held to a 1-1 draw away at Union on matchday four, Bayern
coach Julian Nagelsmann was full of praise for Union.

"The fans are cool, the stadium is cool, the club is cool, Urs is cool," he
said.

Even former Bayern president Uli Hoeness served up one of his famous
backhanded compliments -- a sure sign Union have captured German football's
attention.

"(They are) very successful, very likeable, I like it," he said.

"They do a great job, but that's a different concept. You can't win the
Champions League with that."

Whether Union will ever be able to win the Champions League remains to be
seen, but the fact the club could even take part shows how far things have
come in the eastern Berlin borough of Koepenick.

- Greatest asset -
Despite their promotion ahead of the 2019-20 season, most observers expected
Union to quickly fall back to the second division, particularly after the
Covid-19 pandemic robbed them of their greatest asset -- fans at the Stadion
an der Alten Foersterei, their 22,000-capacity home ground.

However, they finished an impressive 11th -- equal on points with Hertha --
in their first top-flight season, before seventh and fifth-placed finishes in
their next two campaigns secured them European football.

They failed to make it beyond the group stage of last season's Europa
Conference League before losing to Union Saint-Gilloise last week, although
that was just their fifth loss at home in all competitions since the summer
of 2020.

While Union may have avoided some of the larger clubs like Manchester United,
Arsenal, Monaco and Jose Mourinho's Roma in the draw, Braga, their opponents
on Thursday, are in the middle of a purple patch of their own.

With five wins and a draw they sit narrowly behind Benfica -- and ahead of
Porto and Sporting Lisbon -- in the Portuguese league.