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Bayern Munich hope for Lewandowsk­i response against rivals Dortmund after Ballon d’Or injustice

- IAN HAWKEY

So far this season, Robert Lewandowsk­i has hit hat-tricks against Benfica and Hertha Berlin. He has scored braces in Barcelona, in Dortmund and at Union Berlin. But perhaps nothing will have sharpened him up as much for Saturday’s Klassiker, the season’s first league clash between Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund, as what happened on Monday in Paris.

Bayern’s Lewandowsk­i finished second to Lionel Messi in the voting for the 2021 Ballon D’Or, and although he left the gala ceremony with the prize for Striker of the Year, he felt so many sympatheti­c pats on the back, he cannot help but know many in his profession think he was done an injustice.

Nobody, least of all Lewandowsk­i, would diminish Messi’s claims, it is just that this year seemed to belong more to the prolific Pole. He probably would have won the Ballon

D’Or in 2020 when Bayern Munich won the Treble; that year’s award was cancelled because of the pandemic.

In the 2020-21 season, Lewandowsk­i then broke a Bundesliga record dating back to the early 1970s, scoring 41 times in 29 appearance­s. This season he is already on 25 from 20 games. Around Bayern, there was genuine bewilderme­nt that Messi pipped their man. “I don’t understand the world any more,” sighed Lothar Matthaus, the former Bayern captain and 1990 Ballon d’Or winner. Alphonso Davies, Lewandowsk­i’s teammate, exclaimed: “To me, it doesn’t make sense. I’d be so mad!”

Controlled anger may be what Bayern recommend for their striker in his first match as vice-Ballon d’Or. A fired-up Lewandowsk­i might be just what the reigning champions need at what is a crossroads weekend in the defence of their title.

Bayern lead Dortmund by just a point and domestic form is in favour of the hosts. Dortmund may have suffered in the Champions League, where they are already out of contention to reach the knockout phase, but they are on a run of six wins from their last seven league games; Bayern have lost twice in the same period.

Bayern will be missing the regular provider of high-quality passes for Lewandowsk­i, Joshua Kimmich, who has been at the eye of a public storm in for his reluctance to be vaccinated against Covid-19. Kimmich is self-isolating, having tested positive for the virus. There are doubts over the fitness of his midfield partner, Leon Goteztka. Marcel Sabitzer, who might cover for either, is out.

Dortmund will be missing Jude Bellingham, their dynamic teenager, but have welcomed back their most celebrated young superstar from over a month out with a hip problem. Erling Haaland returned last weekend, and within seven minutes of coming off the bench in the victory at Wolfsburg, volleyed in his 10th goal of the Bundesliga campaign.

Only Lewandowsk­i, with 14 goals from his 13 games, has more. Haaland has reached double figures from just six starts and his brief substitute appearance at Wolfsburg. That marked a 50th Bundesliga match. The goals tally from that half-century? A neat 50.

Haaland, 21, finished 11th in the voting for the 2021 Ballon D’Or. The assumption is that in the decade ahead, he will feature much higher up, many times. Lewandowsk­i, meanwhile, has been urged by his employers to think that, at 33, he still has more chances. “‘Lewy’ reached the summit of football greats a long time ago,” said Bayern chief executive Oliver Kahn, “he will carry on being a candidate in years ahead.” But Bayern, German champions for the last 10 seasons, acknowledg­e that their keenest rivals are armed with a striker to compare with Lewandowsk­i, who was lured from Dortmund to Munich in 2014. In a new documentar­y following Bayern’s 2020-21 season, there’s footage of how club executives reacted when Haaland, long blonde hair tamed with a headband, scored twice in the first 10 minutes of their last Bundesliga meeting, in March. “He’s a machine,” Hasan Salihamidz­ic, the sporting director, exclaims to his colleague Kathleen Kruger. “Tomorrow I’m going to call his agent!” Salihamidz­ic later explained the remark was light-hearted. Fact is, when Haaland does leave Dortmund, he and the selling club will have many suitors and the last thing Dortmund want is to see him teaming up with Lewandowsk­i at a Bayern whose grip on the German title is already so hard to shake.

Nobody would diminish Messi’s claims, it is just that this year’s Ballon d’Or seemed to belong more to the prolific Pole

 ?? AP ?? Robert Lewandowsk­i has already scored 25 goals in just 20 games across all competitio­ns for Bayern Munich
AP Robert Lewandowsk­i has already scored 25 goals in just 20 games across all competitio­ns for Bayern Munich

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