Philipp Lahm Warns German Football of ‘Italian Fate’ Amid Tactical Shift
Philipp Lahm, the 2014 World Cup-winning captain and legendary defender, has issued a stark warning to the future of German football. In recent columns for The Guardian and ZEIT, the 42-year-old veteran cautioned that Germany risks falling into the same trap as Italy—a nation he describes as “left behind” after missing the World Cup for three consecutive tournaments.
Lahm believes the danger lies in a specific tactical regression: the return of classic man-marking. He argues that if Germany continues down this path, it could face an “Italian fate,” losing its grip on the international elite and struggling to compete at the highest levels of the game.
The Return of Man-Marking
The shift toward man-marking—where a defender is assigned to follow a specific opponent regardless of their position on the pitch—has turn into increasingly visible in the Bundesliga. Lahm notes that this approach gained renewed legitimacy after Atalanta Bergamo utilized it to win the 2024 Europa League.
However, Lahm is skeptical of its long-term viability. He describes the current trend in the Bundesliga as defenders following their opponents “even to the toilet,” suggesting that while man-marking can be an effective short-term tool to surprise an opponent or create immediate stress, We see not a sustainable full-game concept. According to Lahm, a football pitch is simply too large for such a restrictive system to remain effective over 90 minutes.
A Case Study in Failure: FC Bayern vs. Arsenal
To illustrate his point, Lahm points to his former club, FC Bayern Munich. Even a powerhouse like Bayern has experimented with man-marking, utilizing players such as Joshua Kimmich (31), Dayot Upamecano (27), and Lennart Karl (18) in these roles.
While the strategy may have worked temporarily against some opponents or helped them surprise teams like Paris Saint-Germain, it eventually hit a wall. Lahm highlights a match in November where Arsenal meticulously prepared for Bayern’s man-marking approach. The result was Bayern’s first defeat of the season, proving that once a top-tier opponent solves the tactical puzzle, the system collapses.
The ‘Superior Model’ of Spain
While Germany and Italy struggle with tactical identity, Lahm looks to Spain as the gold standard. He describes the Spanish school of football as “far superior” to both the German and Italian models, calling it the most effective blueprint for success in the Champions League.
The Spanish model focuses on ball-oriented defensive play, clearly defined positions and roles, and a highly organized system of combination play. In this framework, players work together to orient themselves and enter one-on-one situations only when guided by the team’s collective movement. For Lahm, the one-on-one remains the “core of excellent football,” but it must be reached through organized teamwork rather than blind man-marking.
This tactical dominance is reflected in the current landscape of European coaching. Lahm points out that Spanish managers are dominating club competitions, noting that 11 Spanish coaches reached the round of 16 across the three major European competitions. Key examples of this success include:
- Pep Guardiola (Manchester City)
- Mikel Arteta (FC Arsenal)
- Luis Enrique (Paris Saint-Germain)
- Xabi Alonso (formerly Real Madrid)
- Unai Emery (Aston Villa)
- Cesc Fàbregas (Como 1907)
- Luis de la Fuente (Spain National Team)
The Stakes for German Football
The core of Lahm’s concern is the gap widening between the Bundesliga’s tactical trends and the international peak. By relying on “special paths” like man-marking, Germany risks mirroring Italy’s decline. Italy, despite still producing high-quality coaches for the international market—such as Carlo Ancelotti, who currently manages Brazil—has seen its national team and clubs slide in prominence.
For a global audience, this debate highlights a fundamental tension in modern football: the struggle between rigid, player-specific marking and fluid, space-oriented systems. Lahm’s warning serves as a call for German football to prioritize structural organization and ball-oriented defense over short-term tactical gimmicks if it hopes to avoid a prolonged period of international irrelevance.
Key Takeaways from Philipp Lahm’s Warning
- The Risk: Germany may suffer the “Italian fate” (missing major tournaments and losing elite status) by adopting outdated tactics.
- The Problem: A resurgence of classic man-marking in the Bundesliga, inspired by Atalanta Bergamo’s 2024 Europa League win.
- The Evidence: FC Bayern’s first loss of the season in November occurred after Arsenal successfully countered their man-marking system.
- The Solution: Adopting the Spanish model, which emphasizes ball-oriented defense and organized combination play.
- The Influence: Spanish coaches (e.g., Guardiola, Arteta, Alonso) currently dominate the European club landscape.
As the Bundesliga continues to evolve, the question remains whether German coaches will heed the advice of one of the game’s most intelligent defenders or continue on a path that Lahm believes leads to a dead end. The coming months of European competition will likely provide more evidence on which tactical philosophy truly reigns supreme.
Join the conversation in the comments: Do you agree with Lahm that man-marking is a “short-term tool” rather than a viable system? Share your thoughts below.