Joachim Löw has appeared again.

And who knows, maybe football fans will see the former national coach more often in a stadium again in the future - and not just as a guest in the stands or, as in the DFB Cup final, as an ambassador for his heart club SC Freiburg.

No, a good year after the European Championship and his departure from the DFB after 17 largely successful years, the 62-year-old is flirting with a return to the excited football business - and preferably on the coaching bench.

"The will is already there," said Löw in Berlin.

He remembered and talked about himself in the Sky interview on Saturday evening.

And that at a time when a number of interesting coaching positions are also vacant in the Bundesliga.

The domestic league to which he always ruled out a return in the final years as national coach.

In the cup final with “his” sports club as the unfortunate loser, Löw, who has his roots in Breisgau and was Freiburg’s record goalscorer for many years until he was replaced by Nils Petersen, appeared on the big stage, completely recovered.

Löw carried the DFB Cup into the stadium, that “pot” that he had lifted 25 years earlier as a successful club coach after a 2-0 final win with VfB Stuttgart against Energie Cottbus.

It was his first title as a coach.

Given the advantages of being a national coach with breaks between international matches and tournaments for companions, it seems difficult to imagine that Löw could do the stressful day-to-day business of football again.

But retirement at 62?

"There is nothing concrete yet," said Löw about his plans.

"There are a few inquiries, one or the other offer, which I'll deal with in the next few weeks.

No decision has been made yet."

Löw does not want to be national coach again

The 2014 world champion is not thinking of a new job as a selection coach.

"Once you've been the coach of Germany, it's of course difficult to find something else that's adequate as a national coach." He would "love to coach a club again.

I'd enjoy that," he said.

He also worked in Turkey and Austria before his DFB position.

Löw will certainly not end up at Borussia Dortmund.

Not even at Schalke.

In Hoffenheim you could imagine the Black Forest a little earlier.

Or abroad.

A Turkey comeback at Fenerbahçe Istanbul, where he moved in 1998 after his time in Stuttgart, was always discussed.

Löw was also traded again and again at top European clubs like Real Madrid during the DFB times.

He learned Spanish for a while.

Paris Saint-Germain could be the last kick for a world champion coach to round off a life's work, maybe to crown it again.

Löw is available - an advantage.

The language barrier would be a hindrance for a communicator like Löw, the stress factor extreme.

Former national player and ARD expert Bastian Schweinsteiger, who won the world championship with Löw in Brazil in 2014, commented: "I don't know if he's interested in the Bundesliga.

But he could certainly help one or the other club in the Bundesliga.”

Löw's longtime companion Andreas Köpke spoke of a Löw comeback on the occasion of his 60th birthday in March.

After retiring as national coach, he “needed some distance first,” said the former national goalkeeping coach to the German Press Agency.

They worked together at the DFB for 17 years, they stopped together.

And they keep in touch regularly.

"I don't think that the yogi will stop completely and not want to do anything anymore.

I can't imagine that," Köpke said two months ago.

He also spoke of a new Löw/Köpke team: "Basically, I could imagine doing something with Jogi."