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How Baumjohann’s school mate Neuer almost didn’t make the grade

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Neuer may now be Germany’s undisputed no.1 and rated as one of the world’s leading gloveman, but he almost didn’t make the grade as a teenager.

Western Sydney Wanderers playmaker Baumjohann and Neuer went to school together and both had dreams of breaking into the big time at Bundesliga club Schalke.

Western Sydney Wanderers playmaker Baumjohann and Neuer went to school together and both had dreams of breaking into the big time at Bundesliga club Schalke.

You can get your tickets to Saturday’s Sydney Derby here.

Neuer may now be Germany’s undisputed no.1 and rated as one of the world’s leading gloveman, but he almost didn’t make the grade as a teenager.

Western Sydney Wanderers playmaker Baumjohann and Neuer went to school together and both had dreams of breaking into the big time at Bundesliga club Schalke.

While both starlets eventually achieved that feat, it almost didn’t work out for Neuer.

“He was pretty small when he was young and there was a time between 14 or 15 where they thought about not keeping him as he was pretty small,” Baumjohann told www.a-league.com.au of Neuer.

“But there was a coach of the U17 of Schalke who believed him and wanted to keep him.

“In that year he just grew up and made a big step. From this time you couldn’t stop him and I already knew that he would be one of the best keepers ever.”

Manuel Neuer and Alex Baumjohann

The pair were only together at Schalke for a couple of seasons, with their careers taking very different paths over the last decade.

While Neuer has stayed in the Bundesliga and is currently enjoying remarkable success with Bayern Munich, Baumjohann has played for a host of Bundesliga clubs as well as playing two years in Brazil.

But the 31-year-old is enjoying a new lease of life in the Hyundai A-League with the Wanderers, a competition and club he has known about for some time.

“In Germany, after Thomas Broich played for Brisbane they showed some [Hyundai A-League] games,” Baumjohann said.

“Western Sydney Wanderers is a club [that] after the [Asian] Champions League win, is a club that everybody knows.

“I knew the club before because I watch a lot of football and I know almost everything about football.”

While it’s been a challenging start to the campaign for the Wanderers, Baumjohann’s form has been the biggest positive and he’s caught the eye almost every week.

But it’s the upcoming round where he hopes to produce his best, with the Wanderers set to take on Sydney FC for the second Sydney Derby of the 2018/19 Season.

“The derbies are always the best game. I played a lot of derbies like Schalke-Dortmund and these are the best games,” he said.

“If some players are not excited for these games then they are in the wrong job.

“You can see in the training that everybody wants to play soon and we can’t wait to start this game.”