The all-German final awaits us at Wembley tonight when
Borussia Dortmund will meet Bayern Munich to decide who gets to take home this
season’s UEFA Champions League crown.
SEASON HEAD TO HEAD
Games: 4 |Dortmund: 0 | Bayern: 2 | Draws: 2
In their successful Bundesliga run this year, Bayern pretty
much obliterated every side in the league. Dortmund though defied them forcing
draws in both of their encounters. Yet, Bayern have managed to wrest the
advantage slightly from their rivals this term.
Bayern beat Dortmund 2-1 in the DFL Supercup (equivalent of
the English Community Shield) right at the beginning of the season. Mario
Mandzukic and Thomas Müller were the scorers on that occasion. Bayern also
dumped them out of the DFB Pokal Cup in the quarterfinals, a superb Arjen
Robben strike taking care of business. Both league meetings ended 1-1; the
first was in December in which Mario Götze cancelled out Toni Kroos’ strike to
earn a point for his current team. The second was a dead rubber in May, with
the league title already wrapped up and both teams fielding reserves ahead of
the big clash in the Champions League final.
This is a match up that the Black and Yellow have had the
upper hand in during recent seasons. Ever since Jürgen Klopp’s arrival at the
Signal Iduna Park, Dortmund have enjoyed much success against their more
illustrious counterparts. Of the last 10 meetings between the 2 clubs, Dortmund
have won 5 of them while losing just 2. Last season, they secured 1-0 wins home
and away in the league, while dishing out a 5-2 thrashing, that included a
Robert Lewandowski hat-trick, in the final of the DFB Pokal Cup (German Cup).
In 2010-11 too, their first title winning season under Klopp, they did the
double over Bayern winning 2-0 at home and 3-1 at the Allianz with Nuri Sahin
having an outstanding game on both occasions.
CHANGE OF PERSONNEL
& LEARNING FROM MISTAKES
So what did the trick for Bayern? How have they managed to
get better against Dortmund while also becoming a more dominant force in the league?
Three reasons – Javi Martinez, Mario Mandzukic and Dante.
You have to appreciate how Bayern went about their summer
transfer business. All buys were strategic in nature executed with a specific
objective in mind and to cover up major weaknesses. And these 3 players have
fitted in as the missing pieces of the Bayern puzzle in their respective roles.
JAVI MARTINEZ
There were gasps of breath that went around Germany
including Bavaria when news broke that Bayern Munich have activated the release
clause of Athletic Bilbao midfielder Javi Martinez. The Spaniard is a World Cup
& European championship winner, but €40 million was an exorbitant sum, and
was met with mixed feelings. His immense contribution in this Bayern team’s success
will no doubt have pleased those
Bayern fans while being a source of
consternation for the rest of the Bundesliga and Europe.
Martinez plays as the holding midfielder along with club
vice-captain Bastian Schweinsteiger. Previously, Schweinsteiger used to partner
with Luiz Gustavo and at times, Anatoliy Tymoshchuk. Schweinsteiger is easily
one of the best in his position in the world, but when they played Dortmund, he
would end up facing the potent combination of Nuri Sahin/Lars Bender and afterwards
Lars Bender/Ilkay Gundogan, after Sahin
left for Real Madrid in 2011.
Dortmund’s high tempo attacking game with high energy
pressing has caught the everyone's eyes. Up against them, Schweinsteiger used
to get swamped by the yellow shirts because neither of Tymoshchuk or Gustavo
could ever keep up with them. As a result, the German international spent a lot
of time combating that midfield engine room of Dortmund’s which limited his
participation in Bayern’s attacks.
Now he has a riding partner in Martinez, and the guy is an
absolute terrier. At your heels all the time, the Spaniard has a terrific work
rate and does not afford time and space to opposition midfielders when they have
the ball at their feet. We got to witness this in both the semis and quarters,
during Bayern’s games with Barcelona and Juventus respectively.
Lionel Messi was not 100%, true, but there was still the
threat of Andres Iniesta to be met with. Even in games where Messi is
well-marked, Iniesta has often popped up with the goods for them. Iniesta didn’t
even have so much of a sniff as Martinez and Schweinsteiger cleaned crop. Against
Juve, he did such a stellar job on Claudio Marchisio, that the Italian merely
ghosted through the 2 legs as failed to get anything going for his team. The 2
together along with Ribery, Robben and Muller outworked and out-hustled Juve’s
industrious midfield which is no easy task.The duo work very well in
tandem as Martinez predominantly goes about winning the ball back and providing
it to the German, who then recycles it and initiates a Bayern attack. So, now
Schweinsteiger does not get overrun anymore and Bayern are able to combat
Gundogan and Bender.
DANTE
Holger Badstuber, Jerome Boateng and Daniel Van Buyten used
to take care of centre-back duties for Bayern in previous seasons. All 3 are
good in the air, but neither was really a top level defender; Badstuber is
essentially a left-back who started playing at centre, Boateng while good with
aerial ability, is slow off the ground and lacks the pace to keep up with quick
forwards. Van Buyten, now a veteran falls pretty much in the same category. In
addition, Badstuber and Boateng were not the best in keeping their defensive
shape, be it playing for offside or sitting deep with zonal marking. Dortmund with Mats Hummels and Neven Subotic held the upper hand here.
The Afro sporting Brazilian Dante was bought for €4.5
million from Borussia Mönchengladbach. Dante has come in and provided a ready
fix to all of Bayern’s teething problems in defence. Thanks to him, the
Bavarian giants have new found solidity at the back. Very good in organizing
the defence, Dante is superb in the air, always a threat from set pieces and
reads the game very well. He also has the quickness to deal with pacy strikers.
In the past, Robert Lewandowski and Lucas Barrio have had the better of the
Bayern defence often bullying them into submission. Last year’s Champions
League final too was a fine example as we saw Didier Drogba boss Boateng, Van
Buyten and Badstuber.
Finally, as is the case with most Brazilians, Dante is an
excellent ball playing defender like David Luiz and Thiago Silva. And that’s an
added quality which none of the other three can provide Jupp Heynckes with. With
excellent full-backs on either side, Dante has plugged a major loophole that
previously existed in the middle of defence.
MARIO MANDZUKIC
Croatian striker Mandzukic is the other major signing that
has had an impact in the change of fortune for Bayern. Bought from Wolfsburg
for €13 million, the striker has had a remarkable debut season with 21 goals.
But more than his goals, it is the way he attacks the centre-backs of the
opponent that often leads to stray passes and Bayern winning the ball back in
dangerous areas of the field. Relentless and tireless is how the Croatian can
be described. He does not boast of any extraordinary skill, but he is a top
notch poacher. He is very good in the air, can win most aerial duels and makes
fine runs to get into good positions in the box.
One would say that in Mario Gomez, Bayern already had that
20-goals-a-season striker. But, Gomez was never really active on defence and
committed to pressing. Also, the Croatian can make his own shot, while Gomez
used to rely on service into the box. In short, in Mandzukic, they have a
striker who replicates the work that Lewandowski puts in for Dortmund. Against
Juventus and Arsenal, Mandzukic constantly kept harrying and harassing the
defenders and sums up how Bayern have adopted Dortmund’s ‘gegenpressing’ style, from front to back.
THE FULL BACKS &
WINGERS
For Bayern Munich, their predominant outlet of attack is the wings, where
Franck Ribery, Arjen Robben and Thomas Müller can use their pace and guile to good
use. Their full-backs Philip Lahm and David Alaba make for one of the best pairings
in the world and they constantly bombard forward to support their wingers.
What’s changed is that the 2 wingers, Robben and Ribery, are
now tracking back to help out their colleagues in defence. Müller has always
been committed on defence, but the dedication of the other 2 to Heynckes’
system has just made Munich that much harder to beat.
Again, they have taken a leaf out of Dortmund’s book,
because that is exactly what Jakub ‘Kuba’ Blaszczykowski and Kevin Grosskreutz
used to do for their defence and something which newcomer Marco Reus has
continued. They are by no means, defensive-minded; ‘Kuba’ has 14 goals and 12
assists this season, Reus has 19 goals and 11 assists. But, their
double-teaming on defence meant that Robben and Ribery were kept quiet in
previous seasons and on the defensive end, Lahm and Alaba often found
themselves with a 2-on-1 mismatch as Lukasz Piszczek and Marcel Schmelzer joined the attacks.
And that’s how Jupp Heynckes has managed to get his side to
match up with Dortmund. As Jürgen Klopp pointed out, his team are still one of
the few in the continent who can hurt Bayern. But, that gap has been bridged,
with smart buys and by adopting some of their rival’s best practices. Together,
the combination has worked wonders for Bayern and victory tonight will cement that
shift of power that they have managed to achieve in the past 12 months.
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