Soccer-Rivals desperate to break Bayern's Bundesliga stranglehold


FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - DFL Super Cup - RB Leipzig v Bayern Munich - Red Bull Arena, Leipzig, Germany - July 30, 2022 Bayern Munich's Marcel Sabitzer celebrates with teammates and the trophy after winning the DFL Super Cup REUTERS/Annegret Hilse

BERLIN (Reuters) - Bayern Munich have dominated the Bundesliga for a decade and when the champions open their new season against Eintracht Frankfurt on Friday few will be betting against them winning a record-extending 11th consecutive league crown.

Despite the departure of striker Robert Lewandowski, Bayern do not look weaker than last year having brought in French forward Mathys Tel, Dutch defender Matthijs de Ligt, striker Sadio Mane and Ajax Amsterdam duo Ryan Gravenberch and Noussair Mazraoui.

They have already won their first piece of silverware, beating RB Leipzig 5-3 on Saturday in the German Super Cup, and will go into the opener against Europa League champions Eintracht with their confidence high.

"I was in Leipzig and saw Bayern's performance. One has to say that their attack was impressive," said Hans-Joachim Watzke, CEO of Borussia Dortmund.

"They have an unusually good team, invested immense amounts of money and so they are the top favourites. Everyone apart from Bayern fans want to see Bayern not win the title," Watzke told ARD television.

Runners-up last season, Dortmund's own title hopes have suffered a major setback after Sebastien Haller, their replacement for elite striker Erling Haaland, was ruled out for months.

Haller joined last month but two weeks later the Ivory Coast international was sidelined following the discovery of a testicular malignant tumour that required surgery and now will need chemotherapy.

The Ruhr valley club, who also signed talented Germany forward Karim Adeyemi, will be looking for a replacement for Haller but that will not happen before their season-opener on Saturday against fellow Champions League club Bayer Leverkusen.

RB Leipzig coach Domenico Tedesco hopes his players will kick off the season against VfB Stuttgart on Sunday in the same manner they finished the second half of the last campaign.

Tedesco took over with Leipzig in the lower part of the table and led them to a fourth-place finish, as well as steering them to the German Cup, the club's first major trophy.

Leipzig have also managed to hold on to Bundesliga Player of the Season Christopher Nkunku, despite several top European clubs interested in signing the France midfielder.

Leipzig have moved to tighten up at the back with the addition of Germany international David Raum.

"I can play in the Champions League here. You can win titles with this club as the German Cup showed last season," Raum said.

"RB Leipzig is a big club with enormous prospects and a big future."

(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Football

Soccer-Havertz coming good at perfect time for Arsenal
Soccer-Late Milik strike sends Juventus into Coppa Italia final
Soccer-Arsenal hammer Chelsea to move three points clear at the top
Soccer-Al-Ain seal Asian Champions League final berth despite Al-Hilal loss
Soccer-Canadian women to host Mexico twice before title defence at Paris Olympics
Soccer-US women's soccer team to play Olympic send-off match against Costa Rica
Soccer agent 'threatened' Chelsea director over Zouma fee, UK court hears
Soccer-Roma's Ndicka fit to resume sports activity after on-field collapse
Soccer-Title-chasing PSG ready for tough game at Lorient, says boss Enrique
Soccer-Villa extend Emery's contract until 2027 after steady improvement

Others Also Read