But goals would also be nice: what Schalke achieves has never happened in the Bundesliga

So is this record a good thing or a flaw? After the fourth zero number in a row, Schalke 04, bottom of the table, continue to encourage themselves.

But goals would also be nice: what Schalke achieves has never happened in the Bundesliga

So is this record a good thing or a flaw? After the fourth zero number in a row, Schalke 04, bottom of the table, continue to encourage themselves. Coach Thomas Reis considers it remarkable to have passed at Union Berlin at the Alte Försterei.

In his gray hoodie with the Malocher lettering, Schalke coach Thomas Reis spoke words of praise. What the opponent Union Berlin has done in the recent past is exceptionally good. He wishes all the best for the upcoming second leg in the second round of the Europa League against Ajax Amsterdam. But that was it for royal blue kindnesses. With the newly discovered fighting football of the brand hard and edgy, the bottom of the Bundesliga with the Irons had worked out the next point in the relegation battle with the fourth 0-0 in a row.

But was this completed zero number quartet, which no other club in the history of the Bundesliga has played since 1963, a great thing? Or rather a taint of abstinent victories? "We're trying to take the positives with us. But we're still working on finishing in the last third and rewarding yourself with a goal," Reis said. "We kept the game open. That gives me confidence." It is certainly just as unusual in the history of the league that a bottom team that has somehow already been written off remains without a goal four times in a row. In the table of the second half of the season, the Gelsenkircheners are the only undefeated team alongside Union and district rivals BVB. But what's the point?

Being an anti-shooting gallery alone will not be enough for S04 to close the six-point gap to their rivals in the relegation battle with the remaining 13 games of the season. "Fight and win" was the clearly audible demand of the Schalke fans after the final whistle in Berlin. They can fight, they just have to win. Goalkeeper Ralf Fährmann nevertheless spoke of an "extra point".

"It's important that we're compact. That's the basis. Of course we have to make sure that we score a few goals now, but that mustn't be at the expense of the defence," said Marius Bülter, describing Schalke's balancing act. As a former Union player, the winger knows exactly how difficult it is to succeed as a guest and outsider in the stadium at the Alte Försterei. "We played against one of the best defences, but we had one or two scenes that could have been better," said Bülter. Long-term observers of the Irons stated that Schalke had not fallen into the tactical trap of the Irons as naively as Borussia Dortmund (0:2) or VfL Wolfsburg (1:2) this season. They defended unconditionally.

Before returning west, Reis was still having a friendly chat with Union colleague Urs Fischer. The Swiss wanted to know who it was going to be against next. VfB Stuttgart comes to Revier on Saturday (6.30 p.m. on Sky and in the live ticker on ntv.de) as a direct competitor for staying in the class. Fischer's friendly facial expression was clear: with the performance in Berlin-Köpenick there is more to Schalke than a zero number.