Bayern Munich 2 Borussia Dortmund 1: Robben banishes pain of 2012 as German champions claim fifth European title
By Rob Draper
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‘It’s coming home, it’s coming home,’ chanted the Bayern Munich fans as they waited for their team to mount Wembley’s steps and claim their European crown. Shortly after their captain, Philipp Lahm, would hold that famous old trophy aloft, a cathartic moment for a club scarred by defeat in the previous two Champions League finals.
And, as he did, the memory of that sad old song, now regularly appropriated by celebrating Germans, lingered, haunting the natives. Long have we been used to the German national team’s supremacy. Now their club teams are surpassing ours as well.
Last night at our brash, modern national stadium, Bayern and Dortmund delivered perhaps the finest final since Wembley reopened. Two years ago Barcelona staged a spectacular exhibition here but as a contest, this had at it all.
Top of the pile: Bayern Munich are the Champions of Europe for a fifth time after beating Borussia Dortmund
Top of the pile: Bayern Munich are the Champions of Europe for a fifth time after beating Borussia Dortmund
MATCH FACTS
Borussia Dortmund: Weidenfeller, Piszczek, Subotic, Hummels, Schmelzer, Bender (Sahin 90+1), Gundogan, Blaszczykowski (Schieber 90+1), Reus, Grosskreutz, Lewandowski. Subs not used: Langerak, Kehl, Leitner, Kirch, Felipe Santana.
Booked: Grosskreutz
Goals: Gundogan 67 (pen).
Bayern Munich: Neuer, Lahm, Boateng, Dante, Alaba, Javi Martinez, Schweinsteiger, Robben, Muller, Ribery (Gustavo 90+1), Mandzukic (Gomez 90+4). Subs not used: Starke, Van Buyten, Shaqiri, Pizarro, Tymoschuk.
Booked: Date, Ribery
Goals: Mandzukic 60, Robben 89.
Referee: Nicola Rizzoli (Italy)
All around there were German lessons to absorb, from coaching development across the generations to the number of superb young German players developed through their federation’s emphasis on youth. Their clubs are owned by fans who seem to share a genuine bond with their team and it was all on show at our £750million stadium. We do the money so well in English football; shame about the substance.
At least we might claim something. The winning goal, scored in the 89th minute, was straight out of England: a hopeful long ball, dreadful confusion in defence as Franck Ribery back heeled and former Chelsea player Arjen Robben seized the loose ball to sway past two challenges and slip the ball past Roman Weidenfeller to end Bayern’s status as serial losers.
Robben stood and screamed at his own fans — a man who had missed a penalty that might have won the game in extra time last year. Some hurts were being healed.
Big chances: The first-half was the tale of two goalkeepers with Roman Weidenfeller denying Arjen Robben twice, and Munich stopper Manuel Neuer keeping Robert Lewandowski out
‘To hear the whistle at the end of a Champions League final and to know we had won was perhaps they only thing we needed in our lives,’ said Robben. ‘And when we got there, after all that disappointment last year and in 2010, at last we had done it. And I had lost the World Cup final as well – that’s three finals and you don’t want the stamp of a loser.’
It was not quite the romantic result.
Bayern are a financial juggernaut, with almost three times the income
of their opponents. They take what they don’t have: Mario Goetze,
Dortmund’s young star, was injured last night but will join Bayern this
summer. Their outstanding striker, Robert Lewandowski, is likely to follow.
The pathos of the charismatic Jurgen
Klopp leading his defeated heroes on a sad walkabout, greeted by a
standing ovation and an overwhelming gratitude, was remarkable.
‘Everything we have done this season was brilliant,’ said Klopp.
‘The atmosphere in the stadium was
brilliant, we enjoyed being in this Olympic town, the weather was great:
only the result was s**t.’ Equally, it is hard not to feel a sense of
elation for Jupp Heynckes, the 68-year-old Bayern coaching doyen.
Controversy: Franck Ribery escaped punishment when his flailing arm caught Lewandowski in the face
Once before he won this trophy, in 1998, with Real Madrid, and he lost his job. Next weekend he could win the Treble but again he will leave, replaced by the eminently more fashionable Pep Guardiola, though this time at his own behest. Still, it was some finale to win the club’s fifth European Cup.
The sheer energy of Dortmund was overwhelming — chances for Lewandowski, Jakub Blaszczykowski, Marco Reus and Sven Bender came and went — yet it couldn’t last. Eventually Bayern established a hold, Javier Martinez and Bastian Schweinsteiger recovering their poise in midfield. Weidenfeller got a great hand to Mario Mandzukic’s header after 27 minutes, and then his fingers to a Robben strike three minutes later, when the Dutchman should have scored.
Thomas Muller then glanced a header wide before Robben got the better of Mats Hummels and, from eight yards out, prodded a shot that only Weidenfeller’s jutting jaw could block. It was quite breathless, exhilarating stuff and on the hour Bayern struck. Ribery charged down the left and fed Robben, who headed for the byeline, pulled back a cross and there, at close range, was Mandzukic to direct it in.
Breakthrough: Robben finally wriggled free to set up Mario Mandzukic for the opener in the second half
Dortmund had to respond. Klopp urged them forward and on 67 minutes their moment came. Needlessly Dante, who had previously been booked, lifted his foot and kicked Reus in the stomach. The excellent Gundogan accepted responsibility for the spot kick, directing it firmly to his right to equalise.
Muller, in full flow, rounded Weidenfeller and, with an open goal but a narrow angle, rolled the ball goal-wards. Neven Subotic raced backwards and hooked it away as Robben decided not to dive in.
Still, Dortmund’s resistance was coming to an end. They survived until that 88th minute before their surrender. They could remain proud, though, as could the nation that provided the finalists.
Spot on: Dante smashed into Marco Reus to give Ilkay Gundogan the chance to level with a penalty
Winner: Robben skipped through a clutch of players before rolling the ball home and settling the match
Awash with colour: Fans - famous ones included - created a stunning atmosphere inside Wembley... and the entertainment before the match and at half-time was pretty special, too
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One of the best european finals for years but it has to be said that Bayern were aided by a gutless referee.
- Paul , MK Bucks, 26/5/2013 14:22
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