Football NewsJoshua Kimmich hopes Julian Nagelsmann proves to be a more permanent fixture than his predecessors at Bayern
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RB Leipzig boss Nagelsmann will take charge of the Bundesliga champions later this summer as Hansi Flick’s successor, with the latter succeeding Germany boss Joachim Low as the head coach of the national team.

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Kimmich thinks that he can already take a few more steps in his development

Joshua Kimmich hopes new Bayern Munich boss Julian Nagelsmann proves to be a more permanent fixture than his predecessors at Allianz Arena, and says that he is yet to reach his potential with the club. RB Leipzig boss Nagelsmann will take charge of the Bundesliga champions later this summer as Hansi Flick’s successor, with the latter succeeding Germany boss Joachim Low as the head coach of the national team. Nagelsmann will become the fifth permanent boss at Bayern since 2016, but Kimmich is keen for the incoming 33-year-old to stay well into the future so he can further his own development under a single guiding hand. “I think that I can already take a few more steps in my development,” the 26-year-old told reporters while on duty with Low’s Germany ahead of Euro 2020.

Joshua hasn’t reached his potential yet

“I’m looking forward to the new coach at Bayern, of course, because you learn something new again – although I had a lot of coaches in my six years at FC Bayern and that shouldn’t actually be the goal of Bayern. With the new coach’s contract signing, I hope that it will be a bit more long-term and that I can take further steps in my development. I haven’t reached my potential yet. A lot is still possible.” The midfielder admitted that while it was not easy to look beyond World Cup holders France – who Germany face in Group F – or Russia 2018 semi-finalists Begium and England, Euro 2020 remains up for grabs, with Low’s men hoping to be in the mix.

 

“I think we all agree that we have the potential to play for the title,” he added. “In recent years we have not always been able to bring this potential to bear. At the end of the day, potential alone is just theory. We had a lot of potential in 2018 as well. In the end it is important that we as a team have to move even closer together and then a lot is possible. I am quite positive.” Germany face Latvia in their final warm-up game on Monday, following a 1-1 draw with Denmark in their other pre-tournament encounter last week. They then face an eight-day wait before they kick off their Euro 2020 campaign against Didier Deschamps’ Bleus.