Schweinsteiger: Gotze absence weakens Dortmund

The 20-year-old was ruled out of the European showpiece on Wednesday with a thigh problem and the midfielder feels his side’s opponents will suffer as a result

Bayern Munich star Bastian Schweinsteiger believes that Borussia Dortmund will struggle without Mario Gotze in Saturday’s Champions League final.

The 20-year-old – who will join the Bavarians at the end of the season – picked up a thigh injury during BVB’s semi-final clash with Real Madrid and suffered a setback on Tuesday when he pulled up just an hour after returning to training.

“If a player like Gotze is missing, that could weaken the team,” Schweinsteiger told reporters.

“But Dortmund will have 11 players on pitch who will give their all.”

After missing out in the final in both 2010 and 2012, Schweinsteiger went on to say that he was determined to win the final this time out.

“I want to win this match. This is why I play for Bayern. We want to win, no matter who stands in our way. And I hope that [coach] Jupp Heynckes will write more history.

“We have to concentrate on our game. If we live up to our potential, it is very difficult to beat us. Whether we win or not is up to us.

“We know what we can do. But I’m not thinking about this match 24/7. You need to be a little relaxed.”

Schweinsteiger has enjoyed a fantastic season, scoring nine goals in all competitions and the 28-year-old feels that maintaining his fitness has been key to his form.

“For me it was very important to playe throughout the season healthily,” he continued.

“Also, our new players were very important. We went a little further than last year. We made a big step towards perfection.”

Official: Petersen leaves Bayern for Werder

The former Germany Under-21 international has completed his move away from the Bundesliga champions

Werder Bremen have announced that they have secured the services of Nils Petersen from Bayern Munich on a permanent basis for an undisclosed transfer fee.

The 24-year-old spent the 2012-13 campaign on loan at Werder and he has now signed a four-year deal with the Weserstadion side to bring an end to his time with Bayern.

“I have been waiting for this message for quite a while,” Petersen was quoted as saying on the official Werder Bremen website.

“I am very pleased that everything’s panned out like I wanted to. I am very motivated for next season. I want to help the team make a step forward again.”

Petersen started his professional career at Carl Zeiss Jena and also wore the jersey of Energie Cottbus before joining Bayern Munich in the summer of 2011.

The striker failed to secure regular first team action at the Bavarians, though, and was consequently shipped out on loan to Bremen.

He netted 11 goals in 35 appearances for Werder this season.

Dante: Lewandowski best striker in the world

The Brazil international is wary of the Poland international and is full of respect for Jurgen Klopp’s men ahead of Saturday’s showpiece

Bayern Munich defender Dante has nothing but praise for Robert Lewandowski ahead of Saturday’s Champions League final and has warned his team-mates not to underestimate Borussia Dortmund.

The Bundesliga champions have won two of their four games versus Dortmund so far this season, while drawing the other two matches, but Dante has stressed that Jurgen Klopp’s men represent a formidable opponent due to the speed at which they operate.

“Lewandowski is the best striker in the world at the moment and it will not be easy to play against him. But we can cope with him if we play compact and remain focused,” Dante said at a press conference.

“There’s more to Dortmund than Lewandowski, though. They’re an excellent team and they’re very combative, no matter whether they’re in possession or hitting you on the counter, when they can be very fast and dangerous. Dortmund really deserve to have got this far,” the defender added in an interview with the official Fifa website.

“I don’t think it matters who you’re up against because it’s a Champions League final. Obviously neutrals would see it as more of a European final if Real Madrid or Barcelona were in it, but for the players it doesn’t make any difference.”

Saturday’s encounter at Wembley, the first all-German Champions League final, is scheduled to kick off at 20:45CET.

Van Marwijk: Bayern are the new benchmark

The 61-year-old believes the Allianz Arena side are now the team to beat in Europe and thinks Borussia Dortmund will struggle to contain them on Saturday

Former Borussia Dortmund and Netherlands coach Bert van Marwijk feels Bayern Munich have established themselves as the new benchmark for football in Europe.

The Dutchman, who coached Dortmund from 2004 until 2006, feels the Bavarians’ Champions League semi-final dismantling of Barcelona saw them surplant the Catalan giants as the continent’s finest side, and feels Jurgen Klopp’s men will struggle to contain them in Satuday’s final at Wembley.

“Bayern Munich are the new benchmark in European football in my opinion,” he told Voetbal International.

“It’s a shame, but I don’t think that we will see Barcelona’s style of play again. They were able to hide their vulnerability over the years, until they were exposed when their form dropped a bit.

“Bayern’s players are at an age where the current team can go on for two or three more seasons. And what’s really impressive is that they have plenty of cash in the bank. They could easily spend €100 million on new players if they wanted.

“I really believed that Dortmund could win the final and that it would be 50-50. But I’m having second thoughts after last weekend. I was in Dortmund for the game against Hoffenheim and they disappointed me. They looked complacent and their defence gave away too much space.

“Bayern have length, speed, physical power, creativity and score a lot. They’re like a machine that’s able to use several different styles of play.”

Saturday’s match at Wembley kicks off at 20:45CET.

Dortmund's remarkable journey from the abyss to the brink of Champions League glory

BVB have recovered from teetering on the edge of bankruptcy to take their place on Europe’s grandest stage, humbling their opponents on Saturday, Bayern Munich, along the way

COMMENT
By Peter Staunton

“That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” That Nietzsche quote may have passed into cliché, but it nonetheless retains its truth. For Borussia Dortmund, it is appropriate following their self-inflicted exile in the footballing wilderness on the back of chaotic financial meltdown. In the case of Bayern Munich though, the recent, vigorous challenges posed by the Yellow-and-Blacks in the Bundesliga have provoked fortification and a renewed, awe-inspiring quest for domination.

Their announcement of the capture of Mario Gotze represents just that. It intends to demean and to degrade Dortmund while simultaneously safeguarding their own positions as top dogs in Germany. Coming as it did on the eve of Dortmund’s biggest game in 15 years, the Champions League semi-final against Real Madrid, it could not have been more symbolic or, indeed, more characteristic of the modus operandi of Bayern Munich.

It brought with it scorn and disrespect from the Bavarians’ sporting director, Matthias Sammer, the only man to win the Bundesliga as a player and a coach with Dortmund. “We haven’t been in touch with Borussia Dortmund over it,” he spat. “Why should we? Mario Gotze has got a contract release clause and he is making use of it.”

Every club would be loath to lose the jewel in their crown, Gotze in this case, to a direct domestic rival. But under the prudent financial management of CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke, sporting director Michael Zorc and coach Jurgen Klopp, Dortmund have come to regard high-profile sales as a pragmatic necessity, as part of the strategy. Consecutively, they lost Nuri Sahin and Shinji Kagawa. Now Gotze’s departure will bank a massive profit.

Fans accept this reality now and trust the club’s judgement.

         Gotze gone | But BVB fans are accustomed to seeing players moved on for healthy profit

For they tracked the stock market flotation of 2000 and watched an economic battering of 2002 unfold as funds from the listing were frittered away. They expressed their anger when the grand old Westfalenstadion had to be sold to a real estate trust to stave off catastrophe.

They winced through the expensive and near-fatal purchase of Marcio Amoroso. They lamented the sales of players like Tomas Rosicky, Alexander Frei and David Odonkor to cover debt and wages. They witnessed bankruptcy being countenanced in 2005 as stock plunged to 20 per cent of its original value.

They fretted as Watzke kept the wolves from the door after taking control and, somehow, kept the creditors at bay. “Pure chaos and anarchy,” is how he described it.

They saw managers come and go and stood with the club as relegation on the field was threatened in 2008.

And they were part of the “We are Dortmund” projects across the region which helped safeguard the club’s future. For all of that, they are blessed with perspective.

The sales of Sahin and Kagawa, in any case, barely knocked Dortmund out of their stride. Replacements Ilkay Gundogan and Marco Reus have been improvements on their predecessors.

But Gotze is different.

He heads the BVB academy project; a finishing school for elite young talent. To examine the various batches of players inculcated at the facility is to regard key components of a hugely-driven and united Dortmund team. Kevin Grosskreutz, Marcel Schmelzer and more are all testament to the new ethos.

But Bayern flexed their muscle as they are always liable to do and spirited Gotze away after being in Dortmund’s system from the age of nine. From that display of power it is clear that Dortmund’s rise and consistency has riled the Rekordmeister. Germany’s only superclub, they expect things their own way. But the gladflies will not be easily swatted.

Dortmund have transformed from charity cases to rivals since hitting rock bottom. Progress under the inspirational Klopp in the eyes of Europe at large seems sudden and dramatic, but in truth it is anything but. After finishing 13th in the Bundesliga in 2008, Dortmund were sixth under Klopp in 2009, fifth in 2010 and champions in 2011 and 2012. In that sense, it has taken him five years to become an overnight success. Recently they have not only taken to beating Bayern but to humiliating them: last season’s DFB-Pokal final, a 5-2 trashing, helped portray this Bayern squad as a bunch of preening bottlers to Dortmund’s swaggering, virile gang of overachievers.

What Bayern could not do on a wage budget of €160-odd million, Dortmund could do on less than half. And they could do it with style, with verve and panache.

Not that Bayern president Uli Hoeness would believe it. “The fairytale that Mr Hans-Joachim Watzke is telling, with his €45 million wage bill, he can tell to anybody who doesn’t have a clue about our business,” Hoeness told Sky television. “We will see when their balance sheet is produced.”

But Dortmund have indeed come a hell of a way. They have been all the way to the brink.

They have not come to Wembley by ‘living the dream’ as occurred at Leeds United, recklessly spending and jeopardising the very existence of the club. They themselves tried that before. The experience did not kill them, though it very nearly did, and they are all the stronger for it now. This is Dortmund doing things properly. And it is getting right up Bayern’s noses, for they, in part, facilitated the resurrection.

The Bavarian heavyweights like to exert patient pastoral control over the rest of the clubs in Germany. The consistent bailing out of neighbours 1860 and poor relations like St Pauli conveys a sense of benign munificence; an impression of Bayern being benefactors first, competitors second.

Dortmund know all about Bayern’s charitable giving: in 2003 Bayern lent €2 million so BVB could pay their wage bill. “When they were aware that they could no longer pay their salaries, we gave them €2m without collateral for a few months,” Hoeness told reporters in November.

Champions League winners in 1997, they came cap-in-hand begging for scraps. How times change and change again. While Bayern are and will always be in the financial front seat in the Bundesliga, Dortmund have become the most credible challengers to their sporting dominance in decades.

Two Bundesliga titles on the trot, and the double claimed last year at Bayern’s expense, have fostered sporting sang-froid between the two. The enmity, in truth, stems from Bavaria. “I have always spoken with a lot of respect and admiration for Bayern,” Watzke said in April. “But that has cooled. There are a few irritations now.”

Aggressive and brash, Bayern have sauntered intimidatingly to the league crown, 25 points clear of BVB, and passed serenely to the final of the Champions League. They are still top dogs, and proud of it. “[Dortmund] may have hungrier players, but they don’t have any world class players,” Hoeness said last season. “When they show that they can compete in Europe, then I will take my hat off to them.”

Nothing, in that regard, has yet been won. But the financial storm has been weathered, war on and off the field parried and battles won and lost. The ill-tempered barbs, now, count for very little.

Borussia Dortmund have done what Bayern never have had to do, despite their 23 titles in 50 years. They have regrouped and risen again.

Their crowning glory would be not only winning the Champions League, but beating Bayern Munich to it.

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