Business Day

Bayern face Spanish hoodoo in Real match

- Agency Staff Madrid

Bayern Munich face a familiar problem as they travel to old European foes Real Madrid on Tuesday — needing to make history to keep faint hopes of Champions League glory alive.

Cristiano Ronaldo’s secondhalf double in Munich last week made him the first man to reach a century of European goals, but more importantl­y handed Madrid a vital 2-1 first-leg lead.

The 11-time European champions have never failed to progress after winning the first leg away from home in the Champions League.

“It won’t be easy, we’re the underdogs, but we’ll have a chance to win in Madrid,” insisted Bayern captain Philipp Lahm after Saturday’s 0-0 draw at Bayer Leverkusen.

Recent history would say otherwise. Should Bayern fail to pull off a fightback, it will be the fourth successive season they have been eliminated by Spanish opposition.

When Pep Guardiola was hired as Bayern boss in 2013, he was expected by the Bavarians’ demanding hierarchy to build on Jupp Heynckes’s treble and create a Bayern dynasty of the likes that saw them win three consecutiv­e European Cups from 1974 to 1976.

Heynckes’s Bayern thrashed a worn-down Barcelona that was left behind by Guardiola a year earlier 7-0 on aggregate on their way to winning the Champions League.

However, the Germans have only known defeat in four visits to Spain since without even scoring a goal.

Guardiola was humiliated on his three returns to Spain as Bayern boss in three semifinal first legs on the way to eliminatio­n against Real, Barcelona and Atletico Madrid.

Carlo Ancelotti was named as Guardiola’s replacemen­t specifical­ly for his European nous, having won the Champions League a record three times as a coach.

Yet, the Italian has been unable to find a solution for Bayern’s Spanish travel sickness as they lost 1-0 to Atletico on their most recent visit, in September.

Bayern’s struggles tell a broader tale though, as Spanish sides have won their last 11 European ties against German opponents in the past three seasons. With Ancelotti’s men needing to score at least twice to have any chance of progressin­g, it is just as well top scorer Robert Lewandowsk­i looks set to shake off a shoulder injury to start at the Bernabeu.

The Pole, who has scored 38 goals in 40 games this season, missed the first leg and the stalemate against 10-man Leverkusen in which Bayern missed a host of chances.

“The chances we missed were fatal,” fumed Thomas Mueller, while former Bayern star Lothar Matthaeus said Lewandowsk­i was simply “irreplacea­ble”. Lewandowsk­i has haunted Madrid in the past, scoring four times in a famous semifinal first-leg rout for Borussia Dortmund on their way to the Champions League final in 2013.

If Bayern need more encouragem­ent, Ancelotti has shown he can dramatical­ly turn around historic streaks in the past.

Before the 2013-14 season Madrid had won just once in 25 visits to Germany.

However, after smashing Schalke 6-0 in Gelsenkirc­hen, they went on to eliminate Dortmund and Bayern on their way to winning the competitio­n.

A similar turnaround in Bayern’s fortunes would be sweet revenge for Ancelotti on his first return to the Santiago Bernabeu since being sacked by triggerhap­py Real president Florentino Perez in 2015.

 ??  ?? Thomas Mueller
Thomas Mueller

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