As a child, Timo Werner could not handle a goalless appearance.
«When Timo didn't find the net in a game, he'd get very upset,» Werner's former Stuttgart youth coach Marc Kienle remembered. «He was simply inconsolable unless he got on the scoresheet.»
In recent years, Werner has become increasingly familiar with that sense of disappointment which — for his sake — has hopefully dulled with experience.
Werner hit double digits for Bundesliga goals in each of his first four seasons at RB Leipzig but has yet to break the ten-goal barrier since his £47.5m transfer to Chelsea in the lockdown summer of 2020. Across his two ill-fated Premier League campaigns in west London, Werner could only muster a combined ten goals.
Yet, 18 months after returning to Leipzig and failing to recapture the form from his first spell, there is the imminent possibility of Werner racing back to London with Tottenham Hotspur reportedly interested.
Leipzig head coach Marco Rose made a public call to Werner in September, demanding the out-of-form 27-year-old «defend himself» and prove «with every appearance — no matter how short it is — that he wants to be back in the first team and in every training session».
Werner rose to Rose's provocation the following day. Coming off the bench for the final 20 minutes, Werner rolled back the years with a trademark burst behind Borussia Monchengladbach's defence, taking the ball around goalkeeper Moritz Nicolas before picking out the side-netting from an acute angle.
A first goal in five months won the match for Leipzig but Werner has only scored once (a penalty) since. The most prolific marksman in Leipzig's history has played just 39 minutes of competitive football since Halloween, nudged to fourth-choice in Rose's
Read on 90min.com