

A quick look backward and a quick look ahead to Pokal Wednesday
By: Luke | October 27th, 2009Got caught in a time bind here, but I did want to flesh out a few thoughts related to Saturday’s match before getting into all the other news floating around. So, here are 5 quick hits from Saturday’s 2-1 victory over Frankfurt.
1) I looked at Frankfurt’s goal about 7 times on replay, and the best that I can come up with, is that it really was a freakish chance. Maybe Lahm gave up on his pursuit a little easily, maybe Van Bommel and Van Buyten were a little clumsy and slow to react, but overall, that was just a weird one.
2) I expressed a lot of frustration with Bastian Schweinsteiger in this space last week, and in the liveblog as well. I will continue to do so, until he finds some consistency in his game. His slow and sloppy play on Saturday was a major contributor to a scoreless first half. It continues to be all or nothing with Schweini, and I’m not sure what can be done to get him back to the consistent form that he has shown in the past. On the other end of the spectrum, a not quite ready for prime time Arjen Robben was ready enough. He more or less stole a goal from Gomez (ok, maybe Mario would have found a way to muff the rebound too), but his appearance changed the whole pace of the match, as we’ve come to expect.
3) As was well discussed in the liveblog, our set piece play is awful. There isn’t a lot of point in penetrating and earning frees and corners if the team doesn’t know what it wants to do with them (see Schweini and Tymo) or doesn’t execute them well (see Van Buyten, Pranjic, and to a lesser degree, Badstuber). I’m not sure what can be done to improve it, aside from Ribery scoring more amazing goals like the one in Dortmund.
4) Almost universally, those of us in the liveblog were incredibly disheartened by Louis van Gaal’s decision to sub in Demichelis for Toni. It seemed to be a “let’s not lose the 1 point” substitution. None of us realized that he was actually putting Van Buyten forward, and I watched it again to see if I had just been distracted. As it was, Daniel hardly appears on-screen in the broadcast until the 2nd goal is scored. So, this may be a case where a spectator might have had a better idea of what was going on than an international TV viewer. At any rate, LVG deserved neither praise nor scorn for the substitution. Of course, he’s a genius if it works. And he’s an idiot if it doesn’t. Not that he would ever admit the latter. So, the goal was luck, but not pure luck. Any statistical analysis bears out that Bayern had a ton of chances throughout the match, and to some degree that indicates making a lot of your own luck.
5) Strangely, it would be easy to skip over the man of the match: Thomas Müller. Of course, his skillful header set up Daniel van Buyten for the game winner, but it was his cross in to Gomez that set up the equalizer as well. When he is not the only one finishing chances, he seems to be the only one setting them up. After a rocky, foul-ridden start, he straightened out his game and was the best player on the field again for Bayern.

Pokal-Spiel live on ESPN 360
You will not be seeing a rerun! Wednesday’s German Cup match at Eintracht Frankurt will be shown live on ESPN 360, and we will be running a liveblog here at the Bayern Offside. Continental Europe is only 5 hours ahead of the Eastern time zone this week, so the match will take place at 3:30 p.m. Eastern time. There is a chance we’ll be able to pipe a feed of the match into the liveblog. So those of you without ESPN 360, please come by, and we’ll try to accommodate you! We should see the same starting 11 for Bayern.
In the news
With all the stories swirling around Schalke’s possible emergency fire sale, it was only a matter of time before the Manuel Neuer rumors started again. Günther Jauch (who made an appearance in this space as the graphic presence of the “Who Wants to be a Goal Scorer” entry), claimed he had a good source that told him that Neuer to Bayern was a done deal in the winter break. Felix Magath was quick to deny it once again. Whether Jauch, who is not exactly a Gelsenkirchen insider is on to something or not, I think the story of this transfer is not if, but when.
Reunion with Klinsmann this weekend?
With Stuttgart falling prey to Fürth in the Pokal on Tuesday, the Markus Babbel death-watch is on. Babbel still has a job as of this writing. Although Marcel Koller seems to be the most frequently-linked name to the Stuttgart job, some sources are pointing to a meeting between Klinsmann and Stuttgart President Erwin Staudt. Ok, this is probably the worst kind of rumor mongering, but maybe the only thing better than seeing the lame duck Babbel on the sideline against us on Saturday would be the confused-looking Klinsmann trying to put Alex Hleb in touch with his inner chi….or something.
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Babbels days a re certainly numbered but hopefully he gets till at least the weekend.
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I honestly think the van Buyten move was throwing the proverbial kitchen sink.
What I found a bit offensive was van Gaal’s reaction. Sure we might have been wrong about his moving van Buyten up in this case, but it’s not like the criticism of his tactics in general has been entirely unwarranted.
The other side to making one’s own luck is conceding goals. The defense is still quite shaky, and there has been virtually no change in that situation from last year. Bayern should have won with the one goal, not needing the second. I wonder how much Van Gaal will point to his brilliant mind in that regard.
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I kind of disagree with you on the defense A Kap… The defense has been worlds better… Last year any counter attack ended in the net. I have not looked at numbers, but surely last year we had conceded at least 5 more goals at the 10 game mark than this year. I’ll try and look it up later to verify.
One really bright note… With Hamburg and Leverkusen both tying, despite what all of us agree to be substandard play out of Bayern, we are now within 4 points of the lead and actually getting into very good position. Right now, for me, I’ll take 3 points over great play…
Finally, for your perusal, Ollie Kahn has chimed in with an opinion.
http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=690157&sec=europe&cc=5901
I semi agree with the piece, however, a lot of LvG’s moves have been based on player availability. There has been a rash of injuries. Also, the two players that are complaining should really look at their performance before being critical.Posted from
United States

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btw, google translate sucks, i ended up reading the articles in German.
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Ok, looked it up, this is Bundesliga numbers only… Through 10 games this year Bayern has give up 9 goals, last year it was 16 goals. I know it doesn’t sound like much but that’s almost a goal less PER GAME. This is a huge difference, A Kap. Defense is not what frustrates me. The other side is going to get chances, and is going to score sometimes, it’s inevitable. Even in 2007/2008, when Bayern set a Bundesliga record for least goals allowed in a season, they gave up 20 goals. It’s unrealistic to expect a clean sheet every game, A Kap. With the scoring prowess that Bayern SHOULD possess right now, giving up less than 1 goal a game should have them far in first place. Right now goal scoring is the problem, not the defense. Bayern not finishing is the issue, first foremost and almost exclusively.
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Roger, I’ll take those words back “virtually no change in that situation from last year” but while the number of defensive lapses have gone down, the stupidity of the lapse hasn’t. Bayern have been far more conservative this season than the last, so one would hope for a better scoreline.
Sure having a clean sheet every time is not possible, but I’d much rather see a genuine goal, than one which is the result highly correctable mistakes and constant poor positioning.
How often have teams channeled through the right before sending the cross in? The goals do not matter as much in this case, it is the simplicity with which opposing teams can plan their attacks that is more worrisome.
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