Wolfsburg one game away from shock relegation in Bundesliga
(Agencies)
WOLFSBURG, May 22: Christian Eriksen is one game away from Bundesliga relegation with Wolfsburg after a scoreless draw with second-division Paderborn in the first leg of their playoff on Thursday.
Eriksen, who signed a two-year deal when he joined Wolfsburg in September, likely didn’t imagine he’d find himself on the verge of demotion to Germany’s second division at the end of his first season.
But if Paderborn wins the second leg of their promo-tion/relegation playoff at home on Monday, Wolfs-burg – the 2009 Bundesliga champion – would drop a division for the first time since it was promoted to the top tier in 1997.
Paderborn is bidding to return to the Bundesliga after it was relegated in 2020 after one season in the top flight.
The end-of-season play-off pits the team that finishes third from bottom in the Bundesliga against the third-place finisher in the second division to determine which will play in the top division the following season.
Wolfsburg clinched its place in the playoff in the final round of the Bundesliga with a win over St. Pauli, sending the Hamburg-based side down to the second division, while Paderborn earned its shot at promo-tion by beating Darmstadt and capitalizing on dropped points from Hannover.
Santiago Castaneda had an early chance for Pader-born, but otherwise Wolfs-burg created more in the first half with Paderborn goalkeeper Dennis Seimen denying Adam Daghim in a one-on-one.
Nerves played a role as the game progressed, how-ever. Paderborn’s Filip Bil-bija had an effort cleared off the line late on. Paderborn defender Jonah Sticker will miss the second leg after being sent off with two book-ings in as many minutes in stoppage time.
Paderborn, a city to the east of Dortmund in the Rhine-Westphalia, is taking part in the playoff for the first time, while Wolfsburg is navigating the showdown for the third time after wins over Eintracht Braunschweig in 2017 and Holstein Kiel the following year.
With everything now set to be decided in Monday’s return leg, the pressure has shifted squarely onto VfL Wolfsburg, a club that only a few years ago was compet-ing regularly in European competitions and boasting ambitions of challenging Germany’s elite.
The prospect of relegation represents not just a sport-ing setback but a potentially massive blow to the club’s financial stability, reputa-tion and long-term project, particularly after investing in experienced internation-als like Christian Eriksen to guide the team forward.
For Eriksen himself, whose career has already witnessed extraordinary highs and dramatic personal challenges, the possibility of ending his first season in Germany with relegation would be a cruel twist in an otherwise remarkable foot-ball journey.
Yet Wolfsburg can take some encouragement from their playoff experience and the fact that they managed to avoid conceding an away goal despite visible nerves during the opening leg.
Paderborn, meanwhile, will sense a historic oppor-tunity to complete a fairytale return to the Bundesliga in front of their home supporters after years of rebuilding fol-lowing relegation in 2020.
With emotions, financial stakes and top-flight status all hanging in the balance, Monday’s decisive clash promises to be a tense and fiercely contested encoun-ter where one moment of brilliance — or one costly mistake — could define the future of both clubs for years to come.