Friday, May 1, 2015
Bayern Suffer Horrific Double-Injury Blow Ahead of Crucial Barcelona Clash
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Bayern Munich Sign New £645m Kit Deal With Adidas
Saturday, April 25, 2015
We're Almost There
Bayern moved within an ace of sealing the 2014/15 Bundesliga title with a tight 1-0 victory over Hertha BSC on Saturday – and the club’s 25th German championship could be a mathematical reality on Sunday evening in the event VfL Wolfsburg fail to win away to Borussia Mönchengladbach. “We’re almost champions already,” commented Pep Guardiola after his team’s workmanlike victory over obdurate Berlin. “It’s not easy when you have games every two or three days,” said Manuel Neuer, “at the end of the day the result is totally OK.”
Reaction to FCB v Hertha
Pep Guardiola: “For the game after the Champions League we had a lot of youngsters in the team. We knew it was going to be tough. We have lots of playing time in our legs and we’ve had very few breaks. My team are magnificent. I’m incredibly proud of my players, because it wasn’t easy after the Champions League. We’re running on empty. A big challenge lies ahead. We’re almost champions already, so now we have to concentrate on the other competitions.”
Manuel Neuer: “Hertha parked the bus and strung everyone across the edge of their own penalty area, so you need a moment of magic like the one for the goal. I hope we were keeping our powder dry for Tuesday. It’s not easy when you have games every two or three days. We’ve used up a lot of energy and that’s why it might have looked a bit turgid in the first half. At the end of the day the result is totally OK."
Mitchell Weiser: “Berlin pulled everyone back and that made it hard for us. We had to be very patient but we were rewarded at the end.”
Pal Dardai (Hertha BSC coach): “I’m not totally disappointed today, because my team were very good in the first half. We missed a huge chance in the second half, but at the end of the day it’s a deserved win for Bayern. They put us under a lot of pressure at the end. But I’m still proud of my team. We played well with great tactical discipline. I have no criticism of my players.”
Nico Schulz (Hertha BSC): “I know I should have taken our one big chance. I’m angry with myself, but that’s football.”
Friday, April 24, 2015
When the ordinary is extraordinary - Thomas Müller
Bayern Munich on the verge of league title number 25
Pep Guardiola Ready for 'Emotional' Return to Barcelona in Champions League
Bayern v Barca in semi-finals
In the quest for a second Champions League triumph in three years Bayern face a tough but thrilling challenge in this season’s semi-finals after Pep Guardiola’s men were drawn to play the coach’s former club Barcelona. Just as in the previous round, the Reds have been handed the slight advantage of playing the decisive second leg at their home Allianz Arena.
Bayern and FC Barcelona have met eight times in European competition to date, with the record clearly favouring the men from Munich: FCB have won five and Barça only one, with two draws. Philipp Lahm and Co harbour only fond memories of the most recent duel between the teams, as Munich stunningly won 4-0 at home and 3-0 away in the 2013 semi-finals before going on to lift the trophy at Wembley.
The showdown is especially significant for Thiago and Guardiola as they face a first reunion with their former club. Guardiola guided Barça to Champions League glory in 2009 and 2011, and won it as a player there in 1992. Thiago was on the Catalans’ books from 2005 until joining Munich in 2013. Lionel Messi and his team-mates currently lead Spain’s La Liga ahead of Real Madrid, and are in fine form, as evidenced by comfortable 3-1 and 2-0 Champions League quarter-final victories over Paris St. Germain.
Friday’s draw at the Swiss headquarters of European football’s governing body in Nyon was made by UEFA General Secretary Gianni Infantino and former Dortmund star Karl-Heinz Riedle, ambassador for final venue Berlin. Bayern were represented by veteran superstar Paul Breitner.
In the semi-finals, Bayern take on the La Liga club at the legendary Camp Nou on Wednesday 6 May, before the return at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday 12 May. In the second semi-final, Juventus are at home to Real Madrid in the first leg. This year’s final takes place at the Olympiastadion in Berlin on 6 June, where FCB would nominally be the away team should they overcome Barcelona.
Champions League 2014/15 semi-final draw in full:
Barcelona v Bayern Munich
Juventus v Real Madrid
(To be played 5/6 May and 12/13 May)
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Javi Martinez kembali berlatih
Javi is back! Some eight months after sustaining serious knee damage Javi Martínez resumed the team training programme at FC Bayern on Wednesday. “It’s just fantastic! I’m overjoyed,” the Spaniard informed FCB.tv after the workout. However, the midweek squad session was “only the first step,” the midfielder warned, “I know I have a lot of work ahead of me yet.”
Martínez received a noisy welcome when he emerged onto the practice ground at the Säbener Strasse facility on the day after Bayern’s majestic 6-1 victory over Porto in the Champions League, as fans and team-mates alike applauded and saluted the 26-year-old. Martínez was visibly moved: “They were cheering and clapping for me. I guess they’re all delighted for me,” the midfielder commented.
Martínez ruptured the cruciate ligaments in his left knee during the German Super Cup meeting with Borussia Dortmund in mid-August 2014. A surgical repair was carried out in Vail, Colorado, before the player embarked on months of sports rehab training. The defensive utility man is now looking optimistically to the future: “I hope I can pick up a few minutes’ playing time very soon.”
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Six of the Best as Bayern Storm into Semis
Brilliant Bayern defied the odds and overturned a 3-1 first leg deficit against Porto in Tuesday’s Champions League quarter-final return in scintillating fashion, booking a place among the four best teams in Europe for the fourth time in a row with a fulminating 6-1 win on the night and a 7-4 success on aggregate.
The raucous 70,000 capacity crowd at the Allianz Arena turned the stadium into a cauldron of noise and colour, and Pep Guardiola’s men responded with a blistering start as Thiago, Jerome Boateng and Robert Lewandowski netted superb headed goals to put FCB in the driving seat before the half-hour was up. Thomas Müller made it four and Lewandowski completed his brace in a stupendous first half, after which the German champions shifted down a gear or two for a long spell. Jackson Martinez pulled one back on 73 minutes with Porto’s first real chance, but Porto’s resistance was short lived as Marcano was sent off for a second bookable offence three minutes from time and Xabi Alonso brought up the half-dozen with a glorious free-kick.
All eyes at the club now turn to UEFA headquarters in Nyon at midday on Friday and the draw for the semi-finals in the continent’s elite club competition. The packed schedule continues on Saturday afternoon when Hertha Berlin visit the Allianz Arena, where Bayern can wrap up the Bundesliga title if results elsewhere fall their way, before the crunch DFB Cup semi-final clash with Borussia Dortmund on the same ground the following Tuesday.
Starting line-up as expected
In the continuing absence of injured stars Arjen Robben, Franck Ribéry, David Alaba, Mehdi Benatia, Javi Martínez and Tom Starke, Guardiola sprang no surprises with his final team selection. Boateng, Xabi Alonso and Thiago were rested for the weekend clash with Hoffenheim but started against Porto, while skipper Philipp Lahm returned after shaking off a stomach upset.
Fit-again vice-captain Bastian Schweinsteiger took a seat on the bench, where he was joined by seasoned veterans Claudio Pizarro and Pep Reina, and youth in the shape of Mitch Weiser and 18-year-old Gianluca Gaudino.
The Bundesliga leaders started with Manuel Neuer in goal, Rafinha, Boateng, Holger Badstuber and Juan Bernat in defence, Alonso and Lahm in holding roles, Mario Götze and Thiago in the centre, and Müller supporting centre-forward Lewandowski.
Five before half-time
After English referee Martin Atkinson whistled play underway, the Reds roared off the blocks and penned the nervy Portuguese back into their own final third. The first big chance came on ten minutes when Porto keeper Fabiano beat out Müller’s fierce drive, Lewandowski unluckily turning the rebound onto the far post.
But despite the visitors resorting to some physically tasty stuff in an effort to stem the tide, the first goal arrived on 14 minutes when Götze raced down the left and pulled the ball back for Bernat, who charged to the byline and delivered an inch-perfect cross for Thiago to nod home at the near post.
Guardiola’s men piled on the pressure and cancelled out the first-leg deficit with just 22 minutes played, Badstuber rising on the penalty spot and meeting a corner with a header towards the right side of goal, where Boateng leaped high above the defence and headed past Fabiano to make it 2-0.
The Reds were on fire now and just five minutes later scored the goal that would if necessary take them into the last four. It was a brilliant strike too, Lahm galloping down the right and half-volleying into the centre for Muller, who cushioned a wonderful volley inside for Lewandowski to rise and power a header into the far corner.
Porto were reeling and looked vulnerable every time Munich broke forward, Müller scoring the fourth after 36 minutes when he broke into acres of space and shot goalwards. The ball took a defection off Dutch international Martins Indi and squirmed into the net at the bottom right corner, the deceived Fabiano diving too early and watching the ball trickle over his line.
Bayern had still not had enough and went five up before half-time when Müller expertly used his body to shield the ball on the right side of the box and deliver a cut-back towards Lewandowski, who showed wonderfully quick feet before lashing a low drive past Fabiano and into the far corner of the net.
Alonso's final flourish
The first chance after the restart came when Götze volleyed wide just a minute into the second half, but after their breathtaking exploits in the first 45 minutes, Lahm and Co now opted to shift down through the gears. The Portuguese focused on damage limitation and the next openings came with an hour played, Alonso curling a free-kick off target, Bernat having a shot well blocked and Badstuber heading a corner just too high.
Sebastian Rode replaced Rafinha on 72 minutes but Porto pulled one back out of the blue with their first meaningful chance a minute later, Ricardo feeding Herrera for a cross from the right and Jackson Martinez nodding home in the centre. Suddenly the Portuguese side looked lively and FCB were forced onto the back foot for a spell, but the Reds weathered the storm and secured their passage to the last four with 87 minutes played: Marcano was dismissed for a second yellow card after a brutal foul on Thiago, and Alonso fired the ensuing free-kick past Fabiano to bring up the half-dozen and complete the rout.
Live match report for fcbayern.de by Chris Hamley
Monday, April 6, 2015
Bastian Schweinsteiger is latest injury blow for Bayern Munich as Germany captain suffers ankle injury
Monday, March 23, 2015
Skill Menarik dari Gianluca Gaudino
Friday, March 20, 2015
Bayern Munich Line Up Arsenal Legend Patrick Vieira as New Youth Coach
Sunday, March 15, 2015
Phillip Lahm Delighted to Return to Action for Bayern Munich
Pep Guardiola Praises Bayern Munich's Continuing Resilience
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
How Bayern Munich have changed Arjen Robben – Paper Talk
When Arjen Robben joined Bayern Munich in August 2009, the Bavarians were very much second-division as far as the European elite was concerned, and the Bundesliga was a fun league that turned out deliciously-random champions (Stuttgart in 2007, Wolfsburg 2009) but mattered exclusively to domestic audiences.
Five years, three Champions League finals and one European Cup for Bayern later, it's very hard to say whether the Dutch winger has truly changed the club. Hard, because Bayern have not relied on any one player but instead on a collective of outstanding, steady performers like Franck Ribery, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Philipp Lahm and Manuel Neuer to find their way back to the small circle of superclubs. Hard, also, because history teaches us that history is best not pre-empted by sweeping statements when those concerned haven't hung up their boots yet. But we can say one thing: Bayern have certainly changed Arjen Robben.
The winger is reluctant to confirm that the world's currently witnessing the best Arjen Robben ever, but he'll go as far as admitting that he's never felt as much “in control” of his own body, and that he feels “very strong and fit.” Most of all, he's found consistency, in terms of playing time on the pitch and goals. Almost two years without any serious injury amount to golden patch in his often-interrupted career. He played 45 club games in 2013/14, more than ever in any one season, and his 17 league goals in the current campaign have already set a new personal best.
For the Dutch national team, too, 2013 and 2014 have been his most prolific years, culminating in an unexpected third-place finish under Louis van Gaal in Brazil. Not bad going for a 31-year-old who was assumed to be the first name on Pep Guardiola's hit-list when the Catalan came in 20 months ago.
“It's about experience,” he tells ESPN at Bayern's training ground, “you get know your body much better. I'm not really doing anything differently, but I'm working with the right [medical] people here, the right specialists.”
One of the main reasons the club were privately confident he'd turn down the chance to join Van Gaal again, at Manchester United, was the quality of the medical department. Scores of Premier League-based players have sought out team doctor Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt over the years. If anyone can keep Robben's delicate muscles from tearing, it's the 72 year old. (His son, Kilian, 34, has also started working for the club).
Robben, incidentally, has been following Van Gaal's travails from a distance. “You keep an interest in the clubs you play for, and good people you work with,” he says, but it doesn't quite stretch to watching games with such an ex-factor. “I look at the Dutch newspapers. I think Van Gaal needs time to build, and the players need time to get used to him. He has done well in the past. I'm confident he'll be successful [at Man Utd].”
Van Gaal was a key factor in Munich's renaissance by installing a playing system and possession football that Bayern still benefit from immensely today. The manager proved too divisive to reap the fruits of his labour, but the team have become so good that success, at least at national level, is practically a given these days. Anything less than a Champions League final appearance in Berlin would be seen as a disappointment, too. “Both Bayern and the Bundesliga have made a step … many steps forward since 2009,” Robben says. “You can see that in Europe, in the success of the German teams, and of Bayern. I'm really proud of that, proud how the club has developed in the last five years, on and off the pitch. To be part of this team, this club, gives you a very good feeling”.
To be a regular in one of the world's best teams increases your chance for trophies and goals, naturally, but Robben's golden autumn, career-wise, isn't just down to football's sun shining down on him. He's been willing to learn, to adapt a game that had more than a whiff of one-dimensionality about it. “It feels strange to talk about developing as a player at 31 but I think [he] made another step forward, tactically under Guardiola,” he says, “it's thanks to him.”
The manager's tactical flexibility and constant lineup rejigs have freed Robben from his traditional role next to the right touchline and brought him frequently into more central roles. It was Guardiola's idea to field him as striker in the DFB Cup final. Van Gaal saw what he liked. Robben's partnership with Robin van Persie fired a modest Netherlands within range of the biggest trophy of all.
“I'm enjoying the freedom, it's fun playing as a striker or behind a striker,” he says. “Tactically, Guardiola's one of the best coaches in the world, especially when you have the ball. There are a lot of coaches who are defensively strong, who know their tactics, but he likes attacking football and [tells you all about] positioning on the pitch. It's really nice to be on the training pitch with him.”
It feels like a million years ago that the local press were running speculative pieces about his egotism on the pitch rubbing up teammates the wrong way. Robben rode the storm, recovered from the traumatic defeat against Chelsea in the Champions League final in 2012 — he missed a penalty in extra time — and emerged as the match-winner in Wembley, for Bayern's treble triumph twelve months later.
His form has not dipped since. And he's gone from “ego-shooter” (Sport-Bild) to total team-player in the process. Dedicated penalty-taker Thomas Müller “gifting” him a spot kick in the 6-0 win over Paderborn, with a view to Robben winning the leading goal-scorer trophy would probably not have happened in years past. Maybe he'll be 2015's Bayern Munich player with a shot at the Ballon d'Or?
“Individual awards are nice but success for the team comes first,” he says firmly. That's not a surprise. The surprise is that you tend to believe him.
Raphael Honigstein is ESPN FC's German football expert and a regular guest on ESPN FC TV
Bayern Mara ke Suku Akhir - Bayern Book Quarter Final
Munich - FC Bayern München sealed their place in the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals thanks to a 7-0 home victory over ten-man FC Shakhtar Donetsk in the second leg of their Round of 16 tie.Thomas Müller settled any nerves early on by converting a fourth minute penalty after Olexandr Kucher was sent off for a foul inside the box, and, with Bayern in complete control of the game, Jerome Boateng added a second ten minutes before the break. Worse was to come for Shakhtar after the interval as Franck Ribery, Holger Badstuber, Robert Lewandowski and Mario Götze also got their names on the scoresheet, with Müller completing a brace.
First blood to Bayern
After failing to breach the Shakhtar defence in the goalless first leg, Bayern coach Pep Guardiola fielded an extremely attack-minded line-up at the Allianz Arena in an effort to establish an early lead. The strategy soon paid off as Götze was felled by Kucher inside the penalty area, leading to the Shakhtar defender receiving the quickest red card in Champions League history. Müller coolly slotted home the resulting penalty, his fourth goal of the current competition, to give the hosts a crucial lead.
Bayern were forced to reshuffle shortly afterwards when Arjen Robben hobbled off with a back complaint, but the game continued to be one-way traffic towards the visitors’ goal. Lewandowski almost extended the host’s advantage, only to see his back-post header come back off the upright, but the Pole was involved in the build-up to Bayern’s second. Controlling Müller’s headed knock-down, Lewandowski’s shot was blocked by Shakhtar keeper Andriy Pyatov, but the rebound fell to Boateng, who was left with an easy tap-in.
No mercy
Keen to avoid a nail-biting finale, the Bundesliga leaders went on the attack again immediately after the restart and were rewarded almost instantly. Ribery played a lovely one-two with David Alaba on the left-hand side of the penalty area, and upon collecting the return pass, the Frenchman slotted his effort into the far corner. Ribery was also involved in Bayern’s next goal just three minutes later, again cutting in from the left and forcing a save from Pyatov, with the ball falling kindly to Müller to stroke home.
Ribery limped off the field a short while later after taking a knock to his ankle, but if the visitors hoped that might bring some respite from the relentless attacks, they were very much mistaken. Holger Badstuber headed home is first ever Champions League goal following a pinpoint Rafinha cross before Lewandowski got in on the act as well, superbly controlling an exquisite pass from Bastian Schweinsteiger before tucking the ball past Pyatov. Götze rounded off a comfortable evening’s work for Bayern with a late finish following a counterattack, allowing Bayern to ease into the quarter-finals in style.
Line-ups:
Bayern: Neuer - Rafinha, Boateng, Badstuber (Dante 67’), Alaba - Schweinsteiger - Robben (Rode 19’), Götze, Müller, Ribery (Bernat 59’) - Lewandowski
Shakhtar: Pyatov - Srna, Kucher, Rakitskiy, Schevchuk - Taison (Krivstov 9’), Fred, Stepanenko, Douglas Costa (Wellington Nem 78’) - Luiz Adriano, Alex Teixeira (Ilsinho 70’)
Goals: 1-0 (Müller, pen, 4’), 2-0 (Boateng 34’), 3-0 (Ribery 49’), 4-0 (Müller 52’), 5-0 (Badstuber 63’), 6-0 (Lewandowski 75’), 7-0 (Götze 87')
Red card: Kucher (3’)
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Sunday, March 8, 2015
Phillip Lahm May Reconsider Plans to Retire in 2018
Friday, February 27, 2015
Bayern Munich flex giant muscles with bruising win over Köln
FC Bayern aim for 'top level' against Köln
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Preview: FC Bayern vs 1. FC Köln
Bundesliga’s back and on Matchday 23 the Rekordmeister is welcoming the Billy Goats to the Allianz Arena. With five matches in the next 16 days, FC Bayern is entering a critical phase. After tomorrow’s match, the Bavarians are going against Braunschweig, Hannover 96, Shakhtar Donetsk and Werder Bremen. Three competitions in such a short period of time could cause problems to the Bavarians. That’s why it’s important for FC Bayern to win the match against 1. FC Köln so that the self-confidence is there when their campaign continues in the DFB Cup on 4th March.
Even though the Rekordmeister has an excellent record of 20 wins in a row against newcomers, the promoted FC Köln has managed to cause problems to the Bavarians in their previous meetings. However, FC Bayern have demonstrated their power in the demolition matches against Hamburg (8-0) and SC Paderborn (6-0) and it seems like they have found back to their old form after a rather bad start of the second round.
Against FC Köln, Matthias Sammer is expecting a focused FC Bayern team “We are entering a very hot season phase now and we must be aware that we have to turn on the machine mode and not the emotion mode. Feelings don’t count now. We need to be relentlessly greedy and have to return to our unforgiving rhythm.” Will FC Bayern succeed in this is yet to see.
The match takes place today, Friday 27 February, 8:30 p.m. CET at the Allianz Arena. (Saturday 28 Feb, 3:30 a.m. Malaysia time). See you !
Ribery ponders taking German citizenship
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Robert Lewandowski Claims He's Happy
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Stefan Effenberg: Robert Lewandowski Is Not a 'Dodgy Purchase'
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Arjen Robben Warns Bayern of Shakhtar Threat Ahead of Champions League Clash
Friday, February 13, 2015
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 'Relaxed' Over Pep Guardiola Contract Situation
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