Bundesliga season review

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 When the new season starts, FC Bayern Munich will set out — like every campaign — with the firm intention of strengthening their grip on German football’s premium silverware. As the Bavarian juggernaut powered to an unprecedented sixth successive Meisterschale— and a 27th Bundesliga title in all — it was easy to forget the bumps in the road in the early stages of the campaign. Exit Carlo Ancelotti, enter Jupp Heynckes in early October for a fourth term in the Bayern dugout, and normal, relentlessly successful service was resumed as they cantered home. His successor, Niko Kovac, has quite an act to follow.

 

Robert Lewandowski’s uncanny ability to put the ball in the back of the net with metronomic regularity was untainted by Bayern’s early season troubles. The Poland international’s goals fuelled his club’s title win as he became the first non-German to top the Bundesliga’s goalscoring charts three times, ending on 29 strikes for the season, the second-best tally of his career.

The Bayern forward does have the top supporting cast in Germany. While Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben were as influential as ever in their mid-30s and Thomas Müller recaptured his match-turning form under Heynckes, it was James Rodriguez who stood out as orchestrator-in-chief in the first year of his two-season loan from Real Madrid. Invention and industry combined — “That’s how he got the respect of the dressing room,” explained Heynckes — to quickly make the former AS Monaco and Real Madrid man a key cog in the Bayern machine.

Notwithstanding that, the Bavarians will be odds on favorites with the bookies. Coral for example prefers B. Munich as the winner in upcoming matches. If you want to place a bet, the best way is to use the Free Bet Calculator to calculate your sports betting returns.

While the Colombia international was reborn, Naldo enjoyed an Indian — or should that be ‘Brazilian’? — summer. Thirty-five years young, the rangy centre-back is no stranger to German football, but he still surprised many as 2017/18 was arguably the best of his 13 seasons in the Bundesliga. The Brazilian bedrock to FC Schalke 04’s best finish since also finishing second to Bayern in 2009/10 was stone-solid, while his two goals in derbies against Borussia Dortmund only cemented his iconic standing with Schalke fans.

Three years younger than his stand-out performer, Schalke boss Domenico Tedesco carved out his own place in Royal Blue hearts in his debut top-flight season. A fresh-faced school-leaver when Naldo made his Bundsliga debut — and a toddler when Heynckes lifted his first league title with Bayern in 88/89 — the 32-year-old even out-performed his former coaching academy classmate, Julian Nagelsmann, who guided TSG 1899 Hoffenheim to third, their best-ever finish. Both will now take their first steps in the UEFA Champions League next season.

The duo’s success underlined the Bundesliga’s penchant for a punt on youthful talent in the dugout while its deserved reputation as the playground in which kids are given the chance to test themselves against the big boys was further enhanced.

While USA internationals Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie established themselves as first-teamers at Borussia Dortmund and Schalke respsectively, Pulisic’s teenage team-mate Jadon Sancho, who was just 17 when he swapped Manchester City for Borussia Dortmund last summer, gave more than a mouthwatering suggestion of the skills we might see from him next season. Reece Oxford at Borussia Mönchengladbach, Ryan Kent at SC Freiburg and Ademola Lookman at RB Leipzig left West Ham United, Liverpool and Everton on a temporary basis to cut their teeth at the top level of the game in the Bundesliga. Pablo Maffeo has already — like Sancho — opted to switch to Germany permanently, leaving City to join VfB Stuttgart for the new season. How many more to come?

Next season will have some new, unfamiliar faces, but some household names will be missing. RB Leipzig’s emblematic captain Dominik Kaiser will be wearing another shirt, Roman Weidenfeller will leave a big hole in the Dortmund squad as he heads for retirement after more than 300 Bundesliga matches, and Heynckes, who turned 73 this month, will finally — finally! — retire. “I have lots of hobbies, I’ll keep myself busy,” said Germany’s most famous pensioner. And will his friend Uli Hoeness, the Bayern president, be on the phone again looking for another season-saving favour? “God willing, no.”

So the understated ex-Bayern boss may now get to enjoy the “little bit of peace” he craves after decades in the spotlight. But as his title-winning beer shower dries while he sits at home in Mönchengladbach, Heynckes — like the rest of us — will be desperate for the action to start up all over again.

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About Author

Steve is the founder and owner of Prost Amerika. He covered the expansion of MLS soccer in Cascadia at first hand. As Editor in Chief of soccerly.com, he was accredited at the 2014 World Cup Final. He is the former President of the North American Soccer Reporters Association.

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