Big change at Bayern Munich? Bundesliga side expected transfer chief Max Eberl to resign amid chaotic window with director's future still unclear

Bayern Munich are facing fresh turmoil as sporting director Max Eberl is tipped to step down following a chaotic summer window.

  • Director’s future remains in doubt
  • Chaotic summer window fuels pressure
  • Bayern braced for major leadership change

Big change at Bayern Munich? Bundesliga side expected transfer chief Max Eberl to resign amid chaotic window with director's future still unclearBig change at Bayern Munich? Bundesliga side expected transfer chief Max Eberl to resign amid chaotic window with director's future still unclear

Concerns have been growing inside Bayern that sporting director Eberl may be preparing to resign after a chaotic transfer window, according to a recent report by tz. Eberl publicly admitted after the 3-2 win over last week that the squad was “too thin” and lacked attacking depth, a remarkable admission just days before the market closed. Bayern scrambled to secure a last-minute loan move for striker Nicolas Jackson, but the messy process left scars internally after the missed out on a host of attacking targets over the summer. Board members believe Eberl is frustrated by the restrictions imposed on him, particularly by club power figures Uli Hoeness, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, and president Herbert Hainer.

The turbulence reflects the wider instability at Bayern’s leadership level and for the first time in years, the club’s transfer strategy has looked reactive and fragmented, with Eberl caught between his sporting vision and financially strict measures demanded by the supervisory board. Bayern’s reputation as a ruthlessly efficient operator in the market has taken a hit, and doubts now hang over the balance of power between board members and executives.

At the heart of the issue is Eberl’s sense of accountability without authority as reports suggest he is unhappy at being held responsible for shortcomings he believes were beyond his control. The decision from Hoeness that Bayern’s final signing “had to be a loan” is said to have tied his hands further, limiting options. Meanwhile, Bayern’s board faces its own instability with CFO Michael Diederich stepping down without a successor appointed, meaning that if Eberl were to resign, CEO Jan-Christian Dreesen would be left as the sole executive board member. For Herbert Hainer, as supervisory board chairman, this would be nothing short of disastrous.

Eberl’s future hangs in the balance, and the club faces the very real prospect of losing its transfer chief, and should he walk, Bayern would not only be short on executive leadership but also scrambling to reshape their sporting direction mid-season. Much will depend on whether results on the pitch can steady nerves off it. For now, Bayern are left in limbo with a strong squad on paper, but doubts over whether the political infighting at the top could undermine their season both domestically and in Europe.