Bundesliga: Werder Bremen boss backs Boniface to fuel survival fight
For Werder Bremen, the margins are tightening in the Bundesliga relegation race. And just when the battle demands experience, presence, and cutting edge, a familiar name is re-emerging from the shadows
by Gbemidepo Popoola · Premium TimesThe timing could define everything; season, survival, and perhaps even redemption.
For Werder Bremen, the margins are tightening in the Bundesliga relegation race. And just when the battle demands experience, presence, and cutting edge, a familiar name is re-emerging from the shadows.
Victor Boniface is back.
Not fully. Not yet. But close enough to shift the narrative.
From setback to possibility
Boniface’s journey this season has been anything but straightforward.
Last summer, his loan move from Bayer Leverkusen to Werder Bremen raised eyebrows, a late transfer window decision that promised opportunity but quickly turned into a test of resilience.
After struggling for rhythm and consistent minutes in the early months, the real blow landed in December, via serious knee injury that derailed his campaign and initially looked set to end his season entirely.
By January, surgery was confirmed.
The timeline was unforgiving. The expectations, minimal.
And for a striker whose game thrives on explosiveness and physical presence, the road back was always going to be long.
The long road back
While the Bundesliga moved on, Boniface went to work; quietly, relentlessly, away from the spotlight.
Rehabilitation. Gym sessions. Individual pitch work.
By late February and into March, signs of progress began to emerge. Images of training resurfaced. Movement returned. Confidence followed.
Now, the breakthrough moment: Boniface is back in Bremen, reintegrating into team training, step by step.
It is not just a return, it is a re-entry into a fight that desperately needs him.
Thioune’s vote of confidence
Head coach Daniel Thioune has seen enough to believe.
After holding detailed conversations with the Nigerian forward, the Werder Bremen boss made one thing clear, Boniface is not just recovering, he is ready to contribute.
“First of all, I’m happy to have met him. We had a long talk. He indicated that he wants to help us in our fight to stay in the league,” Thioune said via the club’s official channels.
In a survival battle, intent matters. And Boniface has made his clear.
But Thioune is also playing the long game. There will be no shortcuts. No reckless risks.
“For me, that offers another option, but not for this weekend. In the coming weeks, we’re playing against teams of similar strength, and if we can give Victor a few minutes of playing time, that could be a big help and a real asset for us,” he added.
It’s a measured approach, one built on patience, not desperation.
A fight against the clock, and relegation
Werder Bremen’s reality is stark.
They sit 14th in the Bundesliga table, just a few points above the drop zone, with the season entering its decisive stretch. Every match now carries consequence. Every point feels like survival.
And in battles like this, squads are defined not just by their starters; but by timely returns, unexpected heroes, and players who arrive when it matters most.
Boniface could be that player.
More than a comeback
For the Super Eagles striker, this is about more than minutes on the pitch.
It’s about reclaiming a season that slipped away. About proving that setbacks do not define trajectories. About stepping into a moment where impact outweighs timing.
For Werder Bremen, it’s about options; fresh legs, physical presence, and a striker capable of changing games in tight margins.
For both, the equation is simple:
If Boniface returns in time, and returns right, he could be the difference between survival and collapse.
And in a relegation fight, that’s everything.