The anger over his disallowed hack goal against Leverkusen is still lingering, as is the injury he suffered on Sunday evening. Instead of thinking about possible international matches, Arminia’s new signing Patrick Wimmer is now already thinking about the important next game.
He might have been the man of the evening if only his supposed equaliser for Bielefeld’s 1-1 draw with Leverkusen on Sunday night had been disallowed. But VAR Robert Schröder and referee Felix Zwayer conceded Patrick Wimmer’s wonderful hacked goal again because his colleague Masaya Okugawa became an active player with a slight movement in the goalkeeper’s field of vision in what was actually a passive offside – a harsh but correct decision.
“Luck was not on our side today. 0:4 is far too high in the end, but we can’t buy anything from that,” Wimmer complained after the end of the game, also about his cancelled goal. “For me, the 1:1 was a regular goal, Masaya didn’t even intervene in the scene. If the equaliser goes in, it’s a completely different game. “
Wimmer also complains of adductor problems
That’s not enough bad luck for the 20-year-old. In a duel he received a blow to the throat area early on. With a “double thick neck”, so to speak, Wimmer continued to play until his substitution after 62 minutes, but the frustrating experience was followed by another low blow on Tuesday. Complaining of additional adductor problems, the Bielefeld player agreed with Arminia and the Austrian Football Association not to travel to the games with the U-21 national team against Estonia and Finland.
The international break will therefore be a real break for Wimmer, who is expected to recover at home, but is also already looking to the future for his team in the Bundesliga: “Now we have an important game in Augsburg in a fortnight, we want to play to win there. “
The anger over his disallowed hack goal against Leverkusen is still lingering, as is the injury he suffered on Sunday night. Instead of thinking about possible international matches, Arminia’s new signing Patrick Wimmer is now already thinking about the important next game.
He might have been the man of the evening if only his supposed equaliser for Bielefeld’s 1-1 draw with Leverkusen on Sunday night had been disallowed. But VAR Robert Schröder and referee Felix Zwayer conceded Patrick Wimmer’s wonderful hacked goal again because his colleague Masaya Okugawa became an active player with a slight movement in the goalkeeper’s field of vision in what was actually a passive offside – a harsh but correct decision.
“Luck was not on our side today. 0:4 is far too high in the end, but we can’t buy anything from that,” Wimmer complained after the end of the game, also about his cancelled goal. “For me, the 1:1 was a regular goal, Masaya didn’t even intervene in the scene. If the equaliser goes in, it’s a completely different game. “
Wimmer also complains of adductor problems
That’s not enough bad luck for the 20-year-old. In a duel he received a blow to the throat area early on. With a “double thick neck”, so to speak, Wimmer continued to play until his substitution after 62 minutes, but the frustrating experience was followed by another low blow on Tuesday. Complaining of additional adductor problems, the Bielefeld player agreed with Arminia and the Austrian Football Association not to travel to the games with the U-21 national team against Estonia and Finland.
The international break will therefore be a real break for Wimmer, who is expected to recover at home, but is also already looking to the future for his team in the Bundesliga: “Now we have an important game in Augsburg in a fortnight’ time, and we want to play for a win.