Today used to be the day She Who Must Be Obeyed would
dread – the first day of Bundesliga season.
She has since mellowed and actually enjoys watching the games. Quite a bit has happened in Munich since the
end of last season. Arjen Robben retired,
Franck Ribery left [time caught up with ‘Robbery’]. Defender Mats Hummels went back to Borussia
Dortmund, and James Rodriguez returned to Real Madrid. French defender Benjamin Pavard joined from
Stuttgart [just in time to avoid playing in 2. Bundesliga], French defender
Lucas Hernandez joined from Atletico Madrid.
Bayern has yet to replace the departed Robbery, and in the German Super
Cup against Dortmund, it showed. Dortmund
earned a shutout against Bayern, 2-0.
Bayern has been slow to replace departed players, and Bayern fans who
are used to complete domination in the Bundesliga are nervous [for once].
Bayern’s opponent today was Hertha Berlin. They have a new singing as well. Dodi Lukebakio joined Hertha from Fortuna Düsseldorf. The last time Lukebakio played in Munich, it
was last season when he scored a hat trick against Bayern, giving Düsseldorf an unexpected
3-3 draw against Bayern. Bayern was
ahead 3-0 in that game, so this result was a bit of a shock for Bayern fans,
and the death watch for first-year coach Niko Kovac began. After the winter break, Bayern righted the
ship and won the Bundesliga championship on the season’s last day, the first
time that had happened in a long time.
With some holes still left to fill, Bayern is not the prohibitive
favorite to win it all again this year.
Bayern started in their usual 4-3-3 formation. Hertha started in an attacking 3-4-1-2
formation, and in the first half it looked like that would pay off. Bayern scored first – Robert Lewandowski
broke the ice at 24 minutes, who slotted home the first goal from a perfect
cross from Serge Gnabry. The lead lasted
twelve minutes. In his second game at
the Allianz Arena, Dodi Lukebakio scored his fourth goal against Bayern. His shot at goal bounced off the back of
teammate Vedad Ibesevic and bounced past Bayern goalie Manuel Neuer. Only three minutes later Hertha grabbed the
lead when Marko Grujic took an excellent long pass from Ibesevic, dribbled
around Neuer and scored. The long ball
was working well for Hertha, and Hertha speedsters Mathew Leckie and Dodi
Lukebakio gave Bayern’s defense some trouble.
Bayern’s Achilles Hell is the counter attack. Two mistakes from Bayern’s defense cost them
two goals. They controlled the ball
sixty percent of the time, but when you’re susceptible to the counterattack,
that statistic is meaningless. Three
minutes were added to the end of the first half, which ended with Hertha
leading, 2-1. Could this be Bayern’s
first opening weekend defeat in 17 years?
Neither side made any substitutions at the half. Bayern had two early scoring
opportunities. At 49 minutes Thomas Müller received a header
in the penalty box off a corner kick. But missed. There was an offside call anyway – it
wouldn’t have counted. Kingsley Coman
had a chance three minutes later, but it went directly at Hertha goalie Rune
Jarstein. But at 58 minutes Lewandowski
was pulled down in the box and was awarded a penalty. He converted the penalty and tied the score,
2-2. After Lewandowski’s equalizer,
Hertha made two substitutes – Alexander Esswein for Ibesevic, and David Selkie
for Lukebakio. There would be no second
hat trick for Lukebakio today. As in the
first half, Bayern continued to control the ball, hoping to wear down Hertha
into making a mistake and give up a goal.
At 75 minutes Benjamin Pavard committed a hard foul. Hertha was awarded a free-kick on the edge of
Bayern’s penalty area. However, Hertha’s
Ondrej Duda slammed his free kick into Bayern’s wall. He was substituted for Per Skjelbred shortly
thereafter.
Bayern had plenty of scoring chances off set pieces in
the second half. They had seven corner
kicks to none for Hertha. In the 85th
minute, Bayern substituted Renato Sanches for Thomas Müller. Two minutes later Alphonso Davies substituted
for Serge Gnabry. Three minutes of
stoppage time was added on at the end of regulation. It ended up being four minutes of additional
time, but it wasn’t enough for either team to break the deadlock. The game ended with a 2-2 draw. Hertha must be ecstatic about grabbing a
point at the Allianz Arena, but they should be kicking themselves for letting
an away win elude their grasp. Bayern
continues to remain undefeated on opening day since 2002, but they didn’t
exactly cover themselves in glory today.
This is going to be a long season for Bayern fans.
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