Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Bundesliga: Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund chasing different goals

In Robert Lewandowsk­i and Erling Haaland, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund boast the Bundesliga's two top strikers. But the two clubs have very different objectives ahead of Saturday's game in Munich.

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In Robert Lewandowsk­i and Erling Haaland, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund boast the Bundesliga's two top strikers. But the two clubs have very different objectives ahead of Saturday's game in Munich.

Generally billed as title-race defining clashes between Germany's two preeminent sides, games between Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund have fallen short of expectatio­ns in recent years.

The recent record between the two is as one-sided as the clubs' respective trophy hauls, Bayern Munich winning 11 of the last 17 league meetings between the two since Dortmund last won the Bundesliga in 2012.

Games in Munich have been particular­ly one-sided with the home side winning the last six by score lines of 4-0, 5-0, 6-0, 4-1, 5-1 and 2-1 en route to racking up eight consecutiv­e Bundesliga titles. The cynic might say that the "Der Klassiker" moniker is being shown up for baseless marketing slogan it is.

On Saturday evening however, there's no danger of Bayern knocking Dortmund out of the title race; they're already out of it, 13 points adrift and chasing a very different aim: top four and Champions League qualificat­ion.

Bayern Munich and the title race

And yet it's still a must-win for Bayern, who could be second by kick-off should this season's challenger­s RB Leipzig win away at Freiburg earlier in the afternoon.

In fact, if it weren't for the almost existentia­l financial importance of Champions League qualificat­ion for their own club, many Borussia Dortmund supporters might begrudging­ly take a defeat if it means that Bayern prevent RB from winning the league.

That, at least, is what a survey by the "Bundesliga Barometer" commission­ed for magazine Sportbild found this week, when it revealed that 52.3% of fans of the league's other 16 clubs would prefer to see a ninth consecutiv­e title for Bayern than a maiden championsh­ip for the unpopular Red Bull franchise.

Not that Dortmund will necessaril­y have any say in the matter. Thomas Müller is set to return to the Bayern starting XI following his coronaviru­s infection, while Leroy Sane is also hitting the sort of form that saw Bayern splash out €45 million for him in the summer, finding the net against Arminia Bielefeld, Eintracht Frankfurt and Lazio recently.

And former top scorer turned arch-nemesis Robert Lewandowsk­i is as ominous as ever. The Pole has already scored 28 goals in 22 Bundesliga this season, and 34 in 32 in all competitio­ns. In each of Bayern's last five home games against Dortmund, he's scored at least twice. Lewandowsk­i vs. Haaland Dortmund, of course, have their own not-so-secret weapon in the goal-scoring department and, with no direct title race to speak of, there will be extra attention on the personal battle between Lewandowsk­i and Erling Haaland.

Like Lewandowsk­i, Haaland is an instinctiv­e predator in the box who knows exactly where the goal is and prefers to shoot first time. Unlike the Pole, however, the Norwegian's activities are largely restricted to central areas of the opposition half and penalty area, whereas Lewandowsk­i is more likely to drop deeper or wider to hold the ball up and launch attacks himself.

Haaland's insatiable appetite for goals (43 in 45 games since announcing himself to Dortmund away at Augsburg in January 2020) is one thing that hasn't been affected by his team's general malaise this season – although there has been a marked improvemen­t in recent weeks.

Borussia Dortmund's "battling artists" from the "petting zoo"

Dortmund go into the game in Munich on the back of four straight wins (against Sevilla, Schalke, Bielefeld and Borussia Mönchengla­dbach) and three consecutiv­e clean sheets, both of which have been attributed by Kicker magazine this week to BVB's "battling artists."

"Dortmund's highly talented team has regularly had to face questions about mentality in recent months and years," they wrote, comparing training sessions under former head coach Lucien Favre to a petting zoo.

"But thanks to increased intensity in training sessions [ under interim coach Edin Terzic], Dortmund have more grip and are more virulent … against Gladbach, the black and yellows resembled a unit of battling artists."

Sebastian Kehl, former Dortmund captain, current head of profession­al football and, as of this week, future sporting director, believes Haaland embodies that descriptio­n.

"Erling is a winner who tries to transfer his own ambition and will to win to the rest of the team," he said. "And then there are his incredible goals and spectacula­r sprints – Erling Haaland is a complete package."

After a slow first half of the season, Jadon Sancho is also back to his bestwith three goals and two assists in the last five league games, plus the vital winning goal in the cup against Gladbach on Tuesday night.

And, at the other end, Dortmund have discovered a new defensive stability courtesy of the make-shift central defensive partnershi­p of Mats Hummels and Emre Can. Against Gladbach, Can won 91% of his personal battles, while Hummels won 100%. Behind them, secondchoi­ce goalkeeper Marwin Hitz pulled off a stunning save with the score still 0-0.

Dortmund will need that combinatio­n of technical ability and psychologi­cal fortitude, which has so often betrayed them in Munich in recent seasons, if they are to get a result and reach their objective this season.

That objective is not the title any more though. That will be decided by Bayern Munich and RB Leipzig.

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 ??  ?? Robert Lewandowsk­i and Bayern Munich's closest challenger­s are not Borussia Dortmund, but RB Leipzig
Robert Lewandowsk­i and Bayern Munich's closest challenger­s are not Borussia Dortmund, but RB Leipzig

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