Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal is high-maintenance with a 'huge ego', says Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge

The Dutch manager took charge of the German side in 2009

Agency
Tuesday 11 November 2014 08:21 EST
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Louis van Gaal
Louis van Gaal (GETTY IMAGES)

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Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has described Louis van Gaal as a high-maintenance coach with a "huge ego".

Rummenigge hired the current Manchester United manager in 2009, and Van Gaal subsequently led Bayern to a league and cup double in his first year in charge, missing out on a treble by losing the Champions League final to Inter Milan.

He was dismissed towards the end of his second season in charge with Bayern sitting fourth in the Bundesliga and already out of the DFB-Pokal, bringing to an end a relationship which had not always been easy according to the Bayern chairman.

"As soon as he presented his autobiography in a snobby restaurant, I knew hard times were ahead," Rummenigge told Germany's Spiegel magazine.

"Louis van Gaal was not always easy-care. He wanted to 'Vangaalise' our club. He has a huge ego."

Rummenigge did pay tribute to a "good and successful coach", but claimed that current coach Pep Guardiola is a much better fit for the club.

"Pep's a genius," Rummenigge said. "He's made Bayern a bit more professional.

"He's got high expectations, but he also respects the culture of this club. He has many ideas, sometimes unusual ones, but never crazy."

Guardiola won the Bundesliga, DFB-Pokal and FIFA Club World Cup in his first season in charge, and then strengthened the squad with the signings of Mario Gotze and Robert Lewandowski from league rivals Borussia Dortmund.

Although both transfers were controversial - the first for its timing on the eve of Dortmund's Champions League semi-final against Real Madrid and the second being one of the game's worst-kept secrets with Bayern agreeing terms with the Polish striker even before they were permitted to speak to him - Rummenigge says they did German football a favour.

"If we hadn't signed them, they would now be playing abroad somewhere," he said. "Both make the league attractive.

"Gotze had an incredible offer from Manchester City while Real Madrid desperately wanted Lewandowski, and would that have been better for the Bundesliga?"

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