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Amid Backroom Chaos, Bayern Munch To Groom Oliver Kahn As Future Chairman

Current Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge will eventually hand the reins to Oliver Kahn on December 31, 2021, after showing his successor the ropes, while former Adidas boss Herbert Hainer is poised to replace Uli Hoeness as club president in the November elections

Ex-Germany goalkeeper Oliver Kahn will join Bayern Munich's board in January to be groomed to replace club chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, the Bundesliga giants announced Friday amid a backroom upheaval. (More Football News)

The appointment of Kahn, who played for Bayern from 1994 until 2008, was approved by Bayern's board late Thursday, just hours after club president Uli Hoeness, 67, officially informed the club that he is stepping down in November.

Current chairman Rummenigge, 63, will eventually hand the reins to Kahn on December 31, 2021, after showing his successor the ropes, while former Adidas boss Herbert Hainer is poised to replace Hoeness as club president in the November elections.

Kahn, a former captain of both Germany and Bayern who made more than 600 appearances for the club, will sign a five-year contract and will join the club's board from January 1, 2020, serving a two-year apprenticeship before taking over from Rummenigge.

"It won't be so formal, it will be part of a fluid process," explained Hoeness in Friday's press conference.

Hoeness sees Kahn as the "perfect solution" to replace Rummenigge as the 50-year-old has served as "an important player in the history of the club" after he won the Bundesliga title eight times and was part of the team which won the Champions League in 2001.

Kahn "carries the DNA of the club in him", added Hoeness, who stressed how important it is to have a former Bayern player directing the club at boardroom level.

"It would be very difficult to establish someone in the position who has not played football at a high level," said Hoeness, who added that Kahn made "an excellent" impression on the board during Thursday's meeting.

"When you're talking to big-name players, like Robert Lewandowski or Joshua Kimmich... it's important that they take it for granted you know how to stop a ball." Kahn said it was a "great honour" to be accepted onto the board and feels "deeply connected with the club, it has strongly shaped my life".

After retiring 11 years ago, Kahn has earned an MBA in general management and built up his own business while serving as a TV expert for broadcaster ZDF.

(AFP)

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