The Premier League's new big-money television deal kicks in next season. Ian Walton/Getty Images

Former Liverpool and Manchester City player Dietmar Hamann does not believe the money pouring into the Premier League will improve its quality.

Writing in kicker, the 42-year-old warned the Bundesliga not to follow the example of England's top flight and to instead continue to focus on "good management," much like clubs such as Borussia Monchengladbach and Augsburg have done in the past.

German football has braced itself for the Premier League's new big-money television deal -- worth £5 billion and kicks in next season -- which "poses a great threat to all other European leagues," according to Bayern Munich CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.

Several ideas to generate more money, either in the Bundesliga or across Europe, have been made public in recent weeks, with Wolfsburg sporting executive Klaus Allofs calling for more domestic competitions to be introduced.

Rummenigge, who is also the president of the European Club Association, has not ruled out the creation of a European Super League -- an idea backed by German Football League CEO Christian Seifert, who believes this could raise the profile of Bundesliga clubs in Europe.

"It's a wrong conclusion to believe in Germany that money alone is the key to success," Hamann, who works as a pundit for Sky Germany, wrote. "English football is facing a huge problem. It is walking straight into a crisis. The inflationary growth of TV money next season will not up the level of football."