The Day

Bayern wins on Bundesliga return

- By JAMES ELLINGWORT­H

Defending champion Bayern Munich returned to action Sunday with a 2-0 win at Union Berlin as the restart of German soccer continued in empty stadiums.

Players' shouts echoed off the rows of concrete terracing around Union's stadium as Bayern moved closer to an eighth straight league title.

Bayern chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge was cautiously optimistic after the league avoided major incidents on its reopening weekend.

“It's important that we are satisfied with it but that we don't ease up now,” Rummenigge told broadcaste­r Sky, adding that soccer should stay “discipline­d” to keep German politician­s on side. “It allows colleagues in other countries to hope that they will also be allowed to start playing again some time.”

As at all games in the Bundesliga this weekend, players wore masks when not on the field and substitute­s sat apart from one another in the stands. Police were stationed outside stadiums to deter any gatherings.

Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer said it was “a question of motivation, of attitude” to succeed without fans in the stadium and that the game seemed to take longer than usual. “The minutes are always very long at a game without fans," Neuer said.

Bayern midfielder Thomas Müller wondered if his team had “a small advantage” because Union couldn't play in front of its normally fervent home crowd.

Across eight Bundesliga games Saturday and Sunday, only one ended with a win for the home team, Borussia Dortmund, which beat Schalke 4-0 on Saturday.

Robert Lewandowsk­i gave Bayern the lead with a penalty in the 40th minute following a mistimed challenge by Union's Neven Subotic. It was Lewandowsk­i's 40th goal of the season in all club competitio­ns. Union held off Bayern for most of the second half but Benjamin Pavard scored a second in the 80th.

Bayern restored its fourpoint lead over second-place Dortmund with eight games left. Dortmund hosts Bayern on May 26 in a game which could shape the title race.

Union played without head coach Urs Fischer, who had traveled to be with his family following the death of his father-in-law. The club said Fischer would only take charge of training again after he tests negative for the coronaviru­s twice.

Earlier, more than 1,000 Cologne fans lent shirts and scarves to a “lucky charm” support display in the stands for their team's 2-2 draw with Mainz. Elsewhere in the city, posters were displayed attacking the restart, which some Cologne fan groups have strongly criticized.

Not everyone followed advice on “socially distanced” celebratio­ns.

Cologne and Mainz's players marked their goals with restrained elbow bumps, but second-division Osnabrück's players and substitute­s hugged in jubilation after scoring a stoppage-time goal to earn a draw against leader Bielefeld.

Fan groups are split over the restart, much like German society in general. Many clubs have allowed fans to put banners in the empty stands for games. Some groups have taken the opportunit­y to call for changes in how German soccer is run.

Polls conducted by German broadcaste­rs ahead of the restart consistent­ly indicated that more Germans opposed resuming games than supported the plan.

Hertha Berlin faced a backlash over its players' handson celebratio­ns in its 3-0 win over Hoffenheim on Saturday. The influentia­l state governor of Bavaria, Markus Söder, suggested the players should have avoided bodily contact as other teams did.

Hertha coach Bruno Labbadia defended his players , saying it was hard to suppress emotions and players couldn't be treated “like a church choir.” The league discourage­s players celebratin­g together but won't punish them if they do.

Two more top-tier teams play Monday as Werder Bremen hosts Champions League-chasing Bayer Leverkusen.

 ?? HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/AP PHOTO ?? Bayern Munich goalkeeper Manuel Neuer gestures during the German Bundesliga match between Union Berlin and Bayern in Berlin. The Bundesliga became the world’s first major soccer league to resume after a two-month suspension because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/AP PHOTO Bayern Munich goalkeeper Manuel Neuer gestures during the German Bundesliga match between Union Berlin and Bayern in Berlin. The Bundesliga became the world’s first major soccer league to resume after a two-month suspension because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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