FC Bayern München
·18 ottobre 2025
How team spirit and class led Bayern to top-of-the-table clash win over BVB

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Yahoo sportsFC Bayern München
·18 ottobre 2025
The clock was ticking down in stoppage time on the big screen above, when the ball bounced at the feet of Dortmund's Fábio Silva on the pitch below. The Portuguese gathered momentum, with 75,000 fans holding their breath around him – then Harry Kane rushed in. With a loud thud, the Bayern striker blocked the shot towards the corner flag. This tackle by the striker also gave his teammates one last decisive boost: it was a powerful gust into the blazing embers of Bayern’s performance, which had been fuelled by high flames of enthusiasm, especially in the first half of the Bundesliga top-of-the-table clash against Borussia Dortmund. In the end, Bayern deservedly defeated their closest rivals until Saturday 2-1, sending them down to fourth place with a seven-point gap.
Bayern coach Vincent Kompany had declared that his team were “really fired up” for the Bundesliga’s big match on Saturday evening. His players lived up to those words from kick-off: in a sizzling atmosphere created by both sets of fans on a golden autumn evening at the Allianz Arena, the champions made it clear from the first second that they were not only determined to defeat their arch-rivals, but also wanted to steal their record of 11 wins from the first 11 competitive games of a season. After just ten minutes, Bayern were dominating so clearly that every Black and Yellow supporter must have been terrified: the hosts had 85 percent possession at one point, pressing Dortmund's defence like a pressure cooker – mainly because the outstanding Kane had as much space in central midfield as Trafalgar Square at midnight. Kane distributed the ball with millimetre precision, power and intelligence. The resulting statistics spoke volumes: Bayern had 143 to 24 passes, 83 to six of which were in the opponent's half, and three to zero shots on goal after less than a quarter of an hour – the only thing missing was a goal. “We were far too timid, not aggressive enough against a great team,” bemoaned BVB Niko Kovač.
The opening goal too came from Kane, when Joshua Kimmich delivered a corner right onto his head. The England captain got the better of Serhou Guirassy, the two men who have scored the second and third most goals in Europe’s major leagues in 2025 behind Kylian Mbappè. It was Kane’s 400th competitive goal at club level, his 22nd of this season and 12th in the league – in Bundesliga history only Guirassy in 2023/24 has registered more goals after seven matchdays, then for VfB Stuttgart.
Bayern continued to be alert, focused and strong in tackles. “If you want to survive in Munich, you have to play with courage, with forward drive, with guts, and we completely lacked that in the first half,” said BVB captain Niko Schlotterbeck afterwards. Dortmund struggled to get a foothold in the game – and when they did manage to find it briefly, it slipped away from the visitors like a piece of wet soap. FCB were unstoppable in this dominant half. Luis Diaz, Michael Olise, Joshua Kimmich, Kane again and again, who pulled the strings behind Nicolas Jackson in the absence of Serge Gnabry (adductor problems) – Bayern painted a picture of joy and intensity. But apart from Olise hitting the outside post once, the record champions didn't create any more chances before the break – their profligacy in front of goal was their only shortcoming. And Dortmund's greatest stroke of luck up to that point. The “fist” that BVB boss Kovač had demanded in the run-up to this top-of-the-clash felt more like a sponge to Bayern. “When you look at how consistent Bayern are, how dominant they are in winning games and how many goals they score, it’s not good,” conceded Dortmund's Pascal Groß.
BVB fought their way back into the game in the second half. Having had no attempts on goal (to 10 for Bayern) and not a single penalty area action until the sides switched ends – the last time that happened for the Black and Yellows was in the 2005/2006 season – they now put Groß in Kane's space and had all players close in on the Bayern players in defence. This shifted the balance away from the BVB goal. The game now consisted of minor midfield battles and numerous fouls. Dortmund managed to slow down the flow of the game, which had been running like a finely tuned clockwork in the first half. However, the visitors still delivered the gift of the evening: after a strong run by Diaz, who crossed sharply from the byline, Jobe Bellingham was able to stop the ball just before the goal line but lost his footing slightly in the process. By the time the Dortmund midfielder had cleared the ball, Olise had already thrown himself into the pass – the ball flew off the Bayern attacker's shin into the BVB goal for a decisive 2-0 lead in the 79'th minute. “I don't see any fault with Jobe there,” said Kovač. “He's standing where he needs to be – it's quite an art not to shoot the ball straight into the goal.”
The visitors still didn’t have a shot on goal until the 83rd minute. It came from Julian Brandt just 40 seconds after coming on – the substitute took advantage of the only brief lapse in the Bayern defence to reduce the deficit. Thanks to Kane’s late intervention, it ended in a narrow but fully deserved Bayern win. “You could tell there was a real unit on the pitch,” commented Joshua Kimmich proudly. They will continue to work hard and not take their foot off the gas, promised their coach. “It all starts again from tomorrow,” stated Kompany. “We’ve gained this momentum with hard work and we don’t want to lose it.” On Wednesday, Club Brugge visit the Arena in the Champions League.
The post-match reaction: