Scottish Daily Mail

I took trophy to bed with me... now I want to win it again

BAYERN GOAL KING ROBERT LEWANDOWSK­I ON LISBON GLORY, BALLON D’OR AND A HECTIC SEASON...

- by Dominic King

IT has been a year of little sleep for Europe’s outstandin­g striker — and not just because his wife gave birth to their second daughter, Laura.

Robert Lewandowsk­i, Bayern Munich’s goal machine, will also not forget 2020 thanks to five pieces of silverware and one night in Lisbon when he didn’t get to bed until daylight.

‘To get our hands on it was something amazing,’ Lewandowsk­i says with a smile, as he reflects on the club’s Champions League triumph, secured with a 1-0 defeat of Paris saint-Germain. ‘That was the night when I knew I had got the thing I had been dreaming my whole life about.

‘It doesn’t matter how many times you have failed to win it. The only thing that matters is winning it! It was a very long night of celebratio­ns and everyone wanted the trophy. I took it with me to bed! It was in my room and, for a few hours, my trophy.’

Lewandowsk­i has scaled new heights in these 12 months. he is the most prolific No 9 around, and is favourite to land FIFa’s Player of the Year award on December 17. But it would be wrong to paint his picture without including worry.

Footballer­s have not been immune to the concerns of the pandemic and Lewandowsk­i has felt it in specific ways. at a time when he should have been able to share the joy of a new baby and outstandin­g profession­al achievemen­t, the lack of human contact has been hard.

‘It has been a big challenge to work perfectly in this situation,’ he explains. ‘It is important to meet your friends, your family.

‘In this situation, you cannot. It is a big challenge for our mentality. It was a difficult situation, playing without fans, without atmosphere in t he stadium. It wasn’t just the specific nature of football. It was also in our private life. It was something new. We didn’t want it, nobody did.

‘For one side, you have to be ready for football. Everyone expects you in top form all the time. But we are human, we have feelings. There is a second side. I’m glad we can play football. But that doesn’t stop you wanting the other things. We have to be responsibl­e for everything. You cannot spend two weeks at home because of coronaviru­s.

‘I can’t be (in a social situation) and think: “Nothing happens”. You have to be responsibl­e. We have to be more protective around everything we are doing when you are with the team and when you are at home. It is not easy. We just had to adapt.’

What c omes next in t he discussion is an observatio­n that could have come from a Premier League manager. Everyone understand­s the complexiti­es of the football calendar but to hear Lewandowsk­i explain why season 2020- 21 will be l i ke no other carries great significan­ce.

he was afforded a rest this week, when Bayern f aced atletico Madrid. he is also one of the most diligent athletes, constantly looking for ways to improve his fitness, diet and mental well-being with the help of his wife, anna.

Lewandowsk­i is an athlete in prime physical condition — he won’t eat cake, rarely touches alcohol and his only indulgence is one or two cups of coffee a day. For him to be anxious about the log-jam of fixtures next spring, then, highlights the demands.

‘after this season, when we closed in Portugal and opened the new one, with such a short time to prepare, it is very hard — very hard for the body,’ he explains. ‘It’s going to be impossible to compare this season to last year or next year.

‘so many games, such a hard time and then the European Championsh­ip straight away. You have to think about your body and, in March, how it will be. Will we be ready when the most important games come? But you are a profession­al footballer and you have to adapt.’

and you have no doubt he will. It remains a great shame that Lewandowsk­i has yet to test himself in the Premier League — the closest it has come to happening was when sir alex Ferguson called him in 2012, attempting to entice him to Manchester United — but the 32-year-old’s class endures.

he would have been an odds-on favourite to win the Ballon d’Or, which was hastily cancelled in July by France Football, but there should be some form of compensati­on at the Best FIFa awards, where he heads an 11-man shortlist.

‘someone had to decide that this year there would be no Ballon d’Or,’ he says. ‘Maybe they decide too early because every trophy has been decided.

‘We did what we did and it was spectacula­r. I’m glad everyone has seen it. These awards are something nice, amazing.’

Bayern remain favourites to retain the Champions League. and before he logs off the Zoom call, we return to the topic on which we started — now with a warning.

‘We have won this trophy but it is clear once is not enough,’ he says. ‘We are still hungry. For sure we want to taste this feeling with the fans, in a full stadium. Maybe after this season we will have a double celebratio­n.’

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/INSTAGRAM ?? Dreams can come true: Lewandowsk­i woke up next to the European Cup
GETTY IMAGES/INSTAGRAM Dreams can come true: Lewandowsk­i woke up next to the European Cup
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