Borussia Dortmund 2-3 Bayern Munich, Signal Iduna Park
(Reus 45', Haaland 83' — Alaba 45+3', Lewandowski 48', Sané 80')
This utterly absorbing game of football will only strengthen the wider appeal of the Bundesliga, but that will be of no consolation to Borussia Dortmund. They valiantly traded blows with their title rivals, but were ultimately floored by one of the greatest ever Bayern Munich teams. Dortmund were second best again, but there’s really no shame in losing to a team this good.
They are brutally effective in attack and Hansi Flick recognized this after the game, describing Bayern as the "more efficient" team in a "sensationally good game of football." Attacking midfielder Leon Goretzka framed it as a victory for the more streetwise team, saying: "We deserved to win because we were a bit smarter and savvier in the key moments."
Flick's record as Bayern coach is nothing short of astonishing. Since succeeding Niko Kovac a year and four days ago, Bayern have won 45 of their 49 games. He has advanced the team from very good to almost invincible, encouraging his players to play the game with supreme confidence but without arrogance. Hard graft, determination and athleticism is behind every swashbuckling moment of attacking fervor.
Borussia Dortmund took the lead shortly before the break, raising hopes of a halftime lead to buoy the mood in the locker room at the break. Raphael Guerreiro, Dortmund’s best player, cut a cross back to Marco Reus, whose expert first-time finish showcased the very best of Dortmund’s attacking instincts.
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But Bayern poured cold water all over Dortmund’s celebrations minutes later, courtesy of David Alaba’s deflected free-kick. This is where the game was lost for Dortmund, they just didn’t know it yet.
Robert Lewandowski, the world’s best striker for most of the past decade, showed bravery to put his head where it could hurt. His reward was an unstoppable header that flipped the game in Bayern's favor, just three minutes after the interval. The killer blow came when Leroy Sané, a second-half substitute, capped a breathless Bayern counterattack with the third. Sané produced an assured and decisive finish into the bottom corner in his first Klassiker appearance. Lewandowski, of course, provided the assist.
Erling Haaland renewed Dortmund hope late on, but Bayern withstood a grandstand finish to win in Dortmund for the second successive season. Only a potentially serious injury to Joshua Kimmich dampened Bayern's day, but there was no denying the defending champions' performance had scaled new heights in Germany's flagship game.
As it happened:
Lucien Favre:
"We had a lot of chances in front of goal. We should do a bit better, but we must be positive. We played well and we had so many chances it was unbelievable."
"The chances were there, in both halves, but we have to be positive."
"Marco scored the opener and might have scored the 3-3 at the end too."
"It's always hard to lose these games, because I think we should have got a point at least."
Manuel Neuer:
"I think based on the second half we were the better team. I think David Alaba's goal before the break was decisive. I think with two tight offside calls we stole two goals from ourselves."
On Haaland: "I think he had a bit of luck in that moment, but he did well."
On Kimmich: "I hope he recovers quickly and you could see we needed a minute to find ourselves again after he went off."
Hansi Flick:
"The game was sensational. Both sides had a lot of chances. We were a bit more composed in the final third and that's why I think we deserved the win."
"We have to be better with our patience on the ball and then fewer mistakes like the ones we made today will occur."
On Kimmich: "He is one of our key players in this position so it wouldn't be easy to lose a player like him."
Leon Goretzka:
"Fingers crossed and I hope the best."
"I think we deserved to win the game today because we were a bit smarter and savvier in key moments."
Manuel Akanji:
"Three goals are too many to concede. I think we can defend better against such a a team."
"We saw we can compete. We had enough chances. We have to convert them and do better defensively and then we can take something from this game."
Mats Hummels:
"We needed to be more composed in front of goal. All three goals we conceded were deflected. Luck wasn't on our side today."
"Bayern are really strong in attack but really open at the back. Sadly we didn't really use lots of our good chances today."
On Alaba's goal: "It was really frustrating for us. I have to stop the ball there but going into the break a goal down was not a good feeling."
As it happened:
A five-goal thriller ends with Bayern as winners, which all in all is probably a fair reflection. Dortmund could have shared the points here but in the end it was Lewandowski and the visitor's quality off the bench that made the difference. Bayern go two points clear at the top.
90+3' GOAL DISALLOWED! Dortmund push, Bayern get the ball and end up with five in the box and after Tolisso's effort is blocked, Lewandowski's shot is deflected in. The celebrations are cut short though as VAR rules the Pole offside.
90+1' Witsel goes in hard on Martinez, which causes Hansi Flick to get a little frustrated on the sidelines. Four more minutes of added time left. Can Dortmund add one more twist?
87' CHANCE! Oh Marco! Guerreiro whips in a great cross that beats Haaland but falls at the feet of Marco Reus. The Dortmund captain takes it first time and it goes narrowly over. Maybe he could have taken a touch there? What a chance. Hands on head moment for Lucien Favre...
83' GOAL! 3-2 Dortmund (Haaland) Well, who saw this coming? Haaland does have his goal. Guerreiro loops the ball over the top of a high Bayern line, Haaland takes control, rounds Neuer and scores. Quick VAR check but all is in order and what a finish we have on our hands now.
80' GOAL! 3-1 Bayern (Sané) And that is probably that. Bayern win the ball quickly, Lewandowski pushes forward, feeds Sané and the former City winger hits the ball low into the bottom corner with great power and somehow before the end of his stride. What a difference it is having him come off the bench.
77' Bellingham floats a ball through for Haaland but he isn't interested. A minute later the Norwegian raises his hands in frustration. Dortmund's press has become a little halfhearted. Bayern look solid. Reminder me if we've been here before.
73' Gnabry does that thing where he cuts in from the wing and then aims for the far corner. It's wide but it's not far away. Robben was nearly proud. Witsel looks to have taken a knock. Dortmund short of ideas and time here.
70' Double change for both teams, and quite frankly that Leroy Sane is coming on now says a lot about Bayern. He and Martinez replace Coman and Boateng. Brandt and Hazard replace Reyna and Sancho, the latter is a surprise.