THERE WERE 70,000 people at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday, but you could have heard a pin drop among home Bayern Munich fans when Villarreal equalised with two minutes left to dump the Germans out of the Champions League.
When they were paired with Spanish side Villarreal in last month’s quarter-finals draw, Bayern sports director Hasan Salihamidzic chuckled gleefully, “It’s very manageable”.
Yet it was Villarreal coach Unai Emery left leaping with joy on the sidelines in Munich after Samuel Chukwueze chipped in with two minutes left to snatch a 1-1 second leg draw and seal a 2-1 aggregate win.
The Villarreal squad celebrated in front of their delirious travelling fans, while stunned Bayern supporters trudged home leaving their team to process a shock elimination.
The Germans dominated for long stretches of Tuesday’s home leg and were rewarded when Robert Lewandowski gave them a second-half lead before Villarreal converted their only clear chance.
Thomas Mueller, usually a bubbly chatterbox, struggled to find the words to sum up the disappointment.
“It’s extreme,” he admitted, having blown a golden chance after heading agonisingly wide with 19 minutes left.
“Maybe we must blame ourselves for needing to get one more goal.”
Chukwueze’s equaliser put the over-joyed Spaniards in the Champions League semi-finals for the first time in 16 years.
“It’s very bitter. The semi-finals are always the minimum goal for Bayern Munich,” said head coach Julian Nagelsmann.
“The first leg was the key,” where Bayern lost 1-0. “We didn’t play well there and that’s where we lost the tie.”
The 34-year-old was blunt – “it’s not good enough” – when asked to rate his first season in charge.
He refused to blame their exit on uncertainty within the squad with key stars waiting to be offered extended contracts.
Mueller, Lewandowski, Serge Gnabry and club captain Manuel Neuer are out of contract in 2023.
The lack of urgency among Bayern’s bosses to secure their commitment sparked speculation of a clean out.
It also fuelled rumours that Lewandowski, who chalked up his 13th Champions League goal this season, could leave with Barcelona touted as one possible destination.
Bowing out in last year’s quarter-finals to French giants Paris Saint Germain was unfortunate, but failing to beat Villarreal, presently seventh in the Spanish league, is well short of their expectations.
Missing out on the semi-finals costs Bayern a bonus of €12.5 million but hurts their pride as much as their finances.
They are poised to claim a tenth straight Bundesliga title, holding a nine-point lead with five games left, but it’s a consolation prize by Bayern’s lofty standards.
It is the only silverware they can win having exited the German Cup last October after a freak 5-0 mauling at Moenchengladbach.
Bayern paid RB Leipzig €20 million to sign Nagelsmann, one of Germany’s brightest coaching talents.
Yet the 34-year-old knows Tuesday’s Champions League exit means his future at the club is not guaranteed.
“I don’t know what’s in store for me, besides we have Bielefeld to worry about next in the league,” he said glumly.
“I’m not afraid, there are worse things.”
His boss, Bayern CEO Oliver Khan, wore a steely expression while insisting “we won’t burst into tears, we’ll attack again next year in the Champions League”.
As much as I wanted Bayern to win it (simply because I thought they’d beat Villarreal as well) this will be really interesting come the end of the season. They’ll only win the Bundesliga and the cat will be firmly amongst the pigeons in a club that prides itself on winning everything almost. They should stick with Nagelsmann… doesn’t deserve the chop so soon. Bayern have been beatable for a good 3 or 4 years now tho… could there be a big overhaul ahead for the squad you’d wonder.
@Ultan Corcoran: The German league needs more competitive teams. The league is now a stroll for Bayern, it’s not good for the fans, nor is it good for Bayern.
@Mister Gooey: While I fully agree with you in a competitive sense, I’d rather continue to lose to them every year because the only way to beat them is sell out like Leipzig or Hoffenheim, or create a generational team to beat them. The longer the majority of clubs in Germany stay fan owned for me the better it is for the integrity of the game. Dortmund should have won it in 18/19 and Bayern look weak year upon year so hopefully someone can strike while the iron is hot (except RB).
This isn’t the first time Bayern Munich got cocking. I remembered the 1987 final against Porto. They where planning celebration’s even though a ball wasn’t kicked. Nothing has chosen over the year’s