The Kane factor in numbers – what's behind this consistency? | OneFootball

The Kane factor in numbers – what's behind this consistency? | OneFootball

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Icon: FC Bayern München

FC Bayern München

·1 March 2026

The Kane factor in numbers – what's behind this consistency?

Article image:The Kane factor in numbers – what's behind this consistency?

When the final whistle briefly silenced the noise in the Westfalenstadion, it wasn't the force of the ‘Yellow Wall’ that set the tone – it was the broad smiles on the faces of the Bayern fans in the away section. Harry Kane got swept up by the energy, clapped and joined in with the chants as if his two goals had been building up to this exact moment. A goalscorer’s night in a big match, a 3-2 away win, and a forward who no longer functions solely as a target man, but as the orchestrator in his own attack.

“It was a big game in the season, playing away against such a strong team,” said Kane afterwards. “To come back and then show the character and quality that we did in the second half says a lot about us as a team.” And you realised: by that he didn’t just mean the result. He meant the way FC Bayern found answers in Dortmund. And how he himself pushed these answers forward.


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Two scenes that tell everything

Kane didn’t need 10 shots on goal to leave his mark on this match. For the first goal, it was one moment in which everything intertwined. Following a move just before that almost resulted in a goal, Joshua Kimmich played the ball into the path of Serge Gnabry with a delicate chip. Left of centre of the goal, he headed the ball across into the danger zone, where Kane was standing, not spectacular but precise. A quick touch, a cool finish: his next goal, in one flowing move. And another example of how Bayern create spaces for goals with speed, timing and a world-class centre-forward. 

The second strike was Kane at his best – just in a different discipline. Bayern shifted play to the right, Michael Olise tied up the winger, Josip Stanišić took on his man and was felled. Kane picked up the ball. No stuttering, no looking too much – just this composure, which briefly hushed the volume in the stadium, and a deep breath. His penalty went in, and with it another entry in the Bundesliga history books. Kane has now scored 10 penalties in this Bundesliga season – a joint record, only previously achieved by Paul Breitner for Bayern in the 1980/81 season. In a period of the season in which fine margins can decide titles, this coolness could be a factor that swings games.

“Serge lays the ball on perfectly for me, then I get the penalty,” explained the modest Kane, almost as if it were a simple job description. “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,” he added, summing up his current form.

Records in rhythm with form

The fact that Kane is in one of these moments right now is not just a feeling – it can be quantified. He scored more than once for the fourth Bundesliga game running – another record equalled, which only Lothar Emmerich (1967) and Tomislav Marić (2001) had accomplished before. And because our number nine isn't just scoring goals at the moment, but regularly deciding games, the next streak also fits the picture: the Englishman has been directly involved in at least one goal in each of his last five Bundesliga appearances – with nine goals and one assist. What a benchmark. 

The analysis of the victory in Dortmund:

The scale of his season becomes even clearer when you take a broader view: his goals in Dortmund were already his 44th and 45th in 37 competitive games in 2025/26. Kane has therefore already surpassed his personal club record for goals in a season – in his first campaign with Bayern, he hit 44 goals in 45 competitive appearances. And even within Bundesliga history, he is entering realms that are otherwise only known from record seasons: 30 league goals after 24 matchdays, only Robert Lewandowski had scored more at this point in the history of the German top flight, during his record-breaking 2020/21 campaign (31).

Kane's goalscoring instinct is also evident where it hurts: in volume. He has fired off 90 shots on goal this Bundesliga season, the most of any player. It's the profile of a striker who doesn't wait for the perfect moment, but forces it. And it's the profile of a team that consistently puts him in position: Bayern have scored in all 24 league matches this term. Kane is the pinnacle of this consistency, but not its only reason. 

The striker in the centre circle

Anyone who only saw Kane in finishing positions in Dortmund missed the more prominent story. His average position was in the centre circle – behind Gnabry, in fact. That’s not the heatmap of a classic poacher. That’s the hallmark of an attacker who picks up Bayern’s play, directs it and carries it on.

It’s here in particular where Kane is so valuable to the Munich attack. With players like Luis Díaz, Gnabry, Olise and so on, Bayern have wingers who provide pace and stretch play – but also combine well in the half-spaces. Kane is the focal point who connects both. When he drops back, he pulls his centre-back with him or occupies the holding midfielder area, opening up corridors for runs in behind. When he joins in the build-up, one attack often becomes a second wave: give and go, switch play, push up again – and still be in the right place in the penalty area when the moment comes.

That’s the modern number nine: less goalscorer and more footballer. And it explains why opponents often speak less about preventing chances, and more about recognising quality. As Dortmund midfielder Felix Nmecha said after the match: “In the second half, if you look at the goals – aside from the penalty – it’s brutal quality. It’s extremely hard to defend that.” Goalkeeper Gregor Kobel added matter-of-factly: “In the end, they’re just very, very good in front of goal.” And Kimmich summarised it from the Bayern point of view: “Harry is unbelievable, it’s so important for us to have a player like him.”

Looking ahead: Form as title currency

Perhaps the true worth of this evening lies not only in the records, but also in the timing. Bayern are entering a period in which every game in the Champions League, Bundesliga and cup could be a door opener or a stumbling block. Kane looks like a striker who steps up his game in these phases.

The 32-year-old himself appears remarkably controlled. No exuberance, no grand statements – just the focus of a player who knows how fast a season can turn. “We had an 11-point lead a few weeks ago and saw how quickly that can change with two results. We need to stay focused.” He also played down his own form. “I just have to continue as I have up to now. At the end of April, start of May we’ll see if it’s possible.”

That sounds like obligation – and yet it’s the message from a player who doesn’t look for pressure but manages it. In the business end of the season, Bayern don’t just need spectacle but also reliability. Kane delivers both: goals when it’s tight, and teamwork when the game requires solutions.

When he went over to the travelling fans again after the game, still grinning, it almost seemed like a scene from the future: a striker who knows that evenings like this are not the end, but the beginning. Dortmund was a statement. The decisive weeks are still to come. And Kane? He's already jumping along – as if he were setting the pace.

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