Union Berlin appoints Marie-Louise Eta as first female head coach in a top-five European league
Promotion from the under-19s makes the 34-year-old the first woman to take charge of a men's team in a major European league, tasked with saving Union from relegation.

Marie-Louise Eta has made footballing history by becoming the first woman to manage a men’s professional side in one of Europe’s five leading leagues. The 34-year-old was promoted from Union Berlin’s under-19 team to head coach of the senior squad after the club sacked Steffen Baumgart following a 3‑1 defeat away to bottom-placed Heidenheim. The announcement, made on the night of Saturday 12 April, sent a jolt through the Bundesliga and far beyond.
Viewed from Berlin, the decision was as much a reaction to a deteriorating league campaign as a bold institutional statement. Baumgart’s side had won only two of their last 14 Bundesliga matches, a second half of the season the club’s chief executive Horst Heldt described as “disastrous”. Relegation is a genuine threat: with five games remaining, Eta must immediately arrest the slide for a team that looked rudderless in Heidenheim.
Yet an intimate portrait of the new coach had already been sketched by the German press weeks earlier. A Bild reporter who watched Eta’s under-19 side face Nürnberg captured a coach who was loud, uncompromising and utterly unafraid. “Why are you blowing for every piece of shit, keep a consistent line, for Christ’s sake!” she bellowed at the referee – an outburst that earned her a yellow card and left the reporter in no doubt that if any woman were to break this barrier, it would be her. That vignette, now freighted with prescience, explains why the club trusted her to command a dressing room in crisis.
The appointment has resonated globally as a landmark. Italian commentators speak of a “svolta epocale” – an epochal turning point – while French and British outlets emphasise that Eta is the first female head coach in any of the big five European men’s leagues. Her own pedigree fuels the narrative: a Women’s Champions League winner with Turbine Potsdam in 2010, she had already been named the club’s first women’s team head coach from next season. For now, however, the task is grimly immediate.
Whether the appointment proves to be a fleeting symbol or a durable transformation hinges on the next five matches. Eta inherits a squad low on confidence but rich in collective organisation, the very quality that had previously made Union a Bundesliga overperformer. If she can rekindle that spirit, her name will be etched not merely as a pioneer, but as a pragmatist who saved a season. For a game still wrestling with gender representation at its summit, the eyes of Europe will be fixed on an unassuming coach who learned her trade on the under-19 touchlines of Köpenick.
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