A crucial win and masterful triumph | OneFootball

A crucial win and masterful triumph | OneFootball

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Icon: FC Bayern München

FC Bayern München

·1 March 2026

A crucial win and masterful triumph

Article image:A crucial win and masterful triumph

If further proof were needed of which team are deservedly top of the table with a now even greater lead than before, then this Saturday evening in Dortmund provided it. With tremendous will, strength and class, FC Bayern ground out a 3-2 win away to closest rivals Borussia Dortmund. “It was hard work,” said a battle-weary Jonathan Tah after the final whistle. “I think it was a very passionate game, both teams threw everything at it. At the end it was about mentality and team spirit, and we showed them on the pitch.”

The German record champions started the game with a supposed advantage: rest. Bayern had been able to prepare diligently for the top-of-the-table clash in sunshine and springlike temperatures in Munich, whereas BVB were still recovering from a trip to Bergamo in midweek and elimination from the Champions League. “It could have any kind of effect,” FCB head coach Vincent Kompany had warned beforehand.


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A lot of anger and energy

And so it turned out. The exit from Europe produced a lot of force, anger and energy in the second-placed hosts. “It was an all-in game for us, you saw that,” commented Germany defender Nico Schlotterbeck. “You can’t accuse us of not doing enough.” Certainly not: Dortmund went into every tackle with full intensity, sometimes with a little too much aggression. “That could’ve been a red,” admitted Schlotterbeck himself in relation to his challenge on Josip Stanišić in the first half. Luckily the Bayern defender was able to play on. Schloterbeck was allowed to play on as well – and scored the surprising opening goal for Dortmund shortly after.

Surprising because although Dortmund offered great desire and a deafeningly loud stadium, they had little left for their attack up to that point. Bayern had registered almost 74 percent possession, and five attempts to zero. 86 percent of all passes found the next player, whereas Dortmund lost almost every second ball due to a misplaced pass. But then Daniel Svensson stepped up to take a free kick near the Bayern goal and Schlotterbeck headed it in past the helpless Jonas Urbig. It was the Black-and-Yellows’ 12th goal from a set piece out of 24 in total in 2026, while half of Bayern’s goals conceded (11 of 22) have come from dead balls – the highest proportion of any Bundesliga club.

Crowd behind them

The opening goal gave the hosts a healthy injection of courage until the break – with the crowd behind them, Bayern’s pursuers were able to increasingly break free from the Reds’ grip and shake off the shackles. The Dortmund defence was particularly impressive, managing to keep the attacking trio of Olise, Díaz and Kane quiet up until then. The Bayern striker only had 13 touches of the ball in the first half. “We put up a great fight,” described BVB goalkeeper Gregor Kobel. “We gave everything, tried to get the fans behind us, be physical and make it extremely difficult for them. And for much of the game we succeeded in that.”

Behind at the break for only second time

So the leaders went in at half-time behind for only the second time in the Bundesliga this season, the other time being in the 5-1 win at RB Leipzig. Notably, despite the match in midweek, Dortmund put so much into this Klassiker that Nico Kovac’s side ran almost 1.5 kilometres more than Bayern. “It was a reaction to Atalanta,” added Kobel. “We struggled for a long time,” analysed Joshua Kimmich. “It was a very physical game, very scrappy in the first half with a lot of breaks, set pieces and fouls. No real rhythm emerged,” continued Bayern’s captain on the night, but eventually the effects of Dortmund’s European travels would show. “We knew: the longer the game goes on, the greater our advantage.”

Kane with more records

The record champions then came out of the dressing room with renewed determination, energy and pressure from the front. It took just nine minutes until Kimmich deftly lifted the ball inside, and Serge Gnabry brilliantly headed it across for Kane to make it 1-1. The England captain needed 45 games to score 44 goals in all competitions last season – this time it’s taken him just 37 matches. “In games like these you have to be ready to take your chances – whether it’s one, two or three,” said Kane.

The equaliser opened the game up a little as we now witnessed a top-of-the-table clash that was above all defined by tension, by duels, by passion – but also by the tireless attacking drive of both sides. The hosts needed to win with a view to the battle for the Champions League places and the distance to the top of the table. “You could tell that Dortmund desperately wanted to seize their opportunity,” commented Kompany. “We felt that over the whole 90 minutes. Even at 2-2, they kept coming forward and wanted to win.”

Just like Paul Breitner

But his team didn’t make the mistake of sitting back. No: Bayern had the big opportunity to take a big step towards the title in this head-to-head clash. And they now played like it in front of over 81,000 fans at Signal Iduna Park, producing a marvellous spectacle in the process. When the lively Stanišić dribbled into the penalty area, he tripped over Schlotterbeck’s outstretched leg. Kane put the visitors in front from the penalty – his tenth goal from the spot this season. Only Paul Breitner in 1980/81 netted so many penalties in a single campaign before. And even more remarkably, Kane scored more than once for the fourth consecutive Bundesliga match – a feat previously achieved by only Dortmund’s Lothar Emmerich in 1967 and Tomislav Marić for Wolfsburg in 2001. “There are periods in a season when a lot of things fall at your feet and go your way, and that’s exactly what I’m in at the moment,” beamed the goal-getter afterwards.

Tired legs and incredible spirit

And the excitement didn’t end there. As their legs grew tired, BVB demonstrated incredible spirit to restore parity through Svensson’s volley out of nothing. Now it was a question of a final surge, of energy, of willpower. And it was Bayern who had the last word: Kimmich’s left-footed volley into the corner earned the Munich men a late 3-2 victory. One goal, one victory forced after falling behind 1-0 and equalising at 2-2 in an away stadium that resembled a madhouse; one shot straight to the heart of BVB and into Bayern joy.

“Nevertheless, I want to expressly give credit to my team,” said BVB boss Kovac. “I’ve also said that to them already, because they fought with everything they had today. Bayern had to really stretch to come away as winners here.” He hailed an “advert for football”, which is also how his counterpart Kompany saw it. “It was a good advert for the Bundesliga in my opinion – with intensity, goals, and above all that absolute desire of both teams to keep getting forward and to want to win the game.”

'We’re not going to surrender this'

At the end of it, Bayern went home with the three points. “With an 11-point lead now, we’re not going to surrender this,” promised Kimmich. “No one has ever squandered that and it will stay that way.” The joyous travelling fans agreed with him. Long after the teams had returned to the dressing rooms on a windy and rainy Saturday evening in Dortmund, they were still singing with full fervous in the away block: “Only FCB will be German champions!”

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