Bundesliga conqueror Bayern sets sights on Arsenal

Bayern Munich turns its focus on Arsenal and the Champions League on Wednesday having effectively ended the title-race in the Bundesliga with a fifth straight-crown now for it to lose.

Published : Feb 13, 2017 10:58 IST , Munich

Weekend's result in Bundesliga have meant that Bayern now holds a seven-point lead over its nearest rivals.
Weekend's result in Bundesliga have meant that Bayern now holds a seven-point lead over its nearest rivals.
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Weekend's result in Bundesliga have meant that Bayern now holds a seven-point lead over its nearest rivals.

Bayern Munich turns its focus on Arsenal and the Champions League on Wednesday having effectively ended the title-race in the Bundesliga with a fifth straight-crown now for it to lose.

With a third of the German league season still to play, Bayern holds a commanding seven-point lead as all its main rival lost at the weekend.

Its nearest challenger, RB Leipzig, kept Bayern off top spot for three weeks late last year after a flying start to its first Bundesliga season.

But when the sides met in Munich last December, Bayern floored Red Bull-backed Leipzig with all goals coming in a commanding first-half display in a 3-0 win.

Second-placed RB is seven points short of Bayern, but in the chasing pack Eintracht Frankfurt, Borussia Dortmund and Hoffenheim are at least 15 points adrift of Munich.

On Saturday, its rivals’ defeats played into Bayern’s hands.

“Curtains closed in the Bundesliga,” commented Munich-based newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung.

“We are delighted, it was a great day in the league for us,” beamed Bayern’s chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.

But its seemingly unstoppable path to a fifth title in a row has turned the Bundesliga into a one-horse race.

“If Bayern Munich wins 10 or 15 consecutive titles then it will become a problem, but we are not there yet,” Christian Seifert, director of the German Football League (DFL), recently told reporters.

It has been nearly five years since Bayern’s domination of German football was last questioned.

Borussia Dortmund hammered them 5-2 in the German Cup final on May 12, 2012 — a week after Borussia was confirmed league champion with Bayern eight points behind.

Mourinho’s swipe

Since then, no German rival has got close to the Bavarians.

In the 2012/13 season, with Jupp Heynckes as coach, it became the first German club to win the treble of European, league and cup titles.

Bayern won the Bundesliga with a 25-point gap over nearest rival Dortmund.

The domination continued in each of Pep Guardiola’s three years in charge, securing the 2013/14 title that March with a record seven games left to eventually finish with a 19-point gap.

The points difference was 10 in both 2014/15 and last season as Guardiola left after losing in the Champions League semi-finals for a third year in a row.

Manchester United coach Jose Mourinho recently took a thinly-veiled swip at Guardiola, now at Manchester City, by saying Bayern ‘bought’ titles in Germany before the seasons even kicked off.

“In Germany, Bayern Munich start winning the league in the summer. Every year they buy their rivals’ best player. One year it’s (Robert) Lewandowski, the next year it is (Mario) Goetze. The next year it is (Mats) Hummels,” said Mourinho.

Next season, Germany internationals Niklas Suele and Sebastian Rudy will be joining Bayern from Hoffenheim.

But despite its lead, Bayern has looked less than impressive under Guardiola’s successor Carlo Ancelotti this season.

The Italian has yet to impose his mark on the squad he inherited with only a few changes in personnel.

‘Bayern’s luck’

Guardiola was often a frantic figure on the sidelines, cajoling, urging, encouraging and demanding effort from his Bayern players.

Ancelotti is a more relaxed figure, trusting his star-studded line-up to sort out its own problems on the pitch.

Bayern lacked urgency and creativity in Saturday’s 2-0 win at strugglers Ingolstadt as Arturo Vidal netted in the 90th minute before Arjen Robben added a second 60 seconds later.

“It’s Bayern’s luck. Or the conviction that we’ll end up with goals at the end,” said captain Philipp Lahm.

But Ancelotti was clear when asked what he needed to improve before Arsenal.

“From what I saw of the (Ingolstadt) game, nothing,” he said.

“We did well. It will give us lots of courage and self-confidence for Wednesday.”

Bayern is on a record 15-match winning streak at home in the Champions League and has won five of its last 10 games against the Gunners.

After three straight semifinal exits, the Bavarian giant is desperate to win the Champions League, but defeat to Arsenal — meaning its first last 16 exit since 2011 — would be a black mark against Ancelotti.

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