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Infighting harming Bayern’s dominance

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or the last five years Bayern Munich has viewed its competitio­n the same way Joey Chestnut views a hot dog: as something to be devoured as quickly and completely as possible.

Over that time, Bayern has lost just 12 of 170 Bundesliga games, outscoring opponents by more than 52 goals a season. They won three domestic titles and a Champions League crown, a level of dominance unmatched in German soccer history. And it did so with a roster that read as much like a Hall of Fame ballot as a starting line-up.

But four games into this season that dynasty is beginning to show signs of crumbling, something even Saturday’s 4-0 demolition of Mainz can’t hide.

In recent weeks some of the team’s top stars have engaged in open rebellion against both management and the lax leadership of coach Carlo Ancelotti. And the incidents have so embarrasse­d the club, long held up as a model of profession­alism and success, that former Bayern legend Lothar Matthaus warned the team is close to “total chaos.”

“It has been a long time,” Matthaus told the German newspaper Bild, “since there was this much unrest at FC Bayern.”

Warning bells began sounding late last month when forward Thomas Muller lashed out at Ancelotti over a lack of playing time. “I don’t know what qualities the coach wants his players to have. I just know that mine aren’t on the list,” Muller said after spending the first 73 minutes of a win over Werder Bremen on the bench.

Then last weekend, star striker Robert Lewandowsk­i shared his dissatisfa­ction over a number of issues in an “unauthoris­ed” interview with Spiegel Online.

Both players put their troubles aside on Saturday, with Muller scoring the first goal and Lewandowsk­i adding two more in the win over Mainz.

Lot of criticism

Lewandowsk­i has a record 83 goals in 100 appearance­s, but it was likely a bitterswee­t performanc­e. Not only is the player rumoured to be seeking a move to Real Madrid, but he’s in the midst of a feud with Bayern CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, one touched off by Lewandowsk­i’s criticism of Bayern’s approach to both the transfer market and its globetrott­ing summer exhibition tours, which have become de rigueur for European clubs competing to grab the allegiance and cash of foreign fans.

“He is employed by us as a footballer, he earns a lot of money and I regret his statements,” Rummenigge said, according to AFP. “If you publicly criticise the coach, the club or the other players, you will get stress from me personally.

“It must not be harmful to the club. We need to be more efficient and serious . ... Arrogance is not appropriat­e; the league title is not in our lap.”

As if that wasn’t enough, while those controvers­ies were brewing thousands of Bayern supporters turned their backs on the team, either selling or giving up their tickets to last week’s sold-out Champions League game with Anderlecht.

Success, ironically, could be at the root of Bayern’s turmoil: The team is so good, so dominant, it may be turning on itself in search of a challenge. And given recent results, it’s not absurd to conclude the only German team strong enough to topple Bayern Munich is Bayern Munich itself.

 ?? Reuters ?? Carlo Ancelotti
Reuters Carlo Ancelotti

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