The appeal of TSV 1860 against the two-game ban for red-sinner Dennis Dressel did not bring a more favorable result.
A teammate is brave and defiant.
Dennis Dressel
is missing in Cologne on Saturday and in the subsequent home game against Mannheim.
In the end, TSV 1860 agreed to the ruling on the
two-game ban
.
First it was injuries, now there are increasing barriers that stand in the way of personal constancy.
Munich - just a
celebrated four-packer
(at 6-1 against Halle), now an 1860 professional with December short-time work.
After Dennis Dressel's controversial
dismissal in the derby against Türkgücü (2: 2)
, the
DFB sports court was
not impressed by the collective lion lament and banned the blue red sinner
for two games
.
The objection, which TSV 1860 immediately lodged, did not bring a more favorable result.
It is therefore certain that TSV 1860 will have to compete in midfield for half of the four Advent dates without the junior boss.
Dressel is absent
from Viktoria Köln on Saturday
and also in the following
home game against Mannheim
(December 12, 2 p.m.).
He can participate again in the
away game at 1. FC Kaiserslautern
(Tuesday, December 15, 7 p.m.) - and at the end of the
year against Wehen Wiesbaden
(Friday, December 18, 7 p.m.).
In the end, the club agreed to a ruling that forced coach Michael Köllner to continue experimenting with his starting eleven.
TSV 1860: Unsightly snapshot in the fairness table of the third division
In addition to some injuries that bothered the lions (first Lex, then Willsch), there are increasingly bans (Steinhart, Tallig, Dressel) that stand in the way of personal constancy.
In the
fairness table of the third division
, this leads to an ugly snapshot:
1860 is currently third from bottom
- ahead of Kaiserslautern and Viktoria Köln, the opponent on this Saturday.
I don't think we're an unfair team.
Dressel's midfield colleague Daniel Wein.
Dressel's midfield colleague Daniel Wein
looks bravely ahead.
“We have no other choice than to accept the ban and do two games without Dennis,” says the six and thinks it is a
whim of fate
that there is now a
duel between the hard-working card collectors
in Cologne
.
"That doesn't say that much," says Wein, who defends himself against stigmatization: "I don't think we're an unfair team."