Bayern Munich were crowned
Bundesliga champions for the sixth consecutive season on Saturday as
James Rodriguez helped turn the game in their 4-1 comeback victory at
Augsburg.
The result means Bayern are champions for
the 28th time in their history, and it was the sixth year in a row they
have won the Bundesliga since their treble-winning season in 2013.
Augsburg
took a shock lead through an own goal by Niklas Suele, but the
Bavarians roared back as Corentin Tolisso, James — who then assisted
Arjen Robben — and Sandro Wagner all scored.
The result leaves Bayern 20 points clear with five league games left and underlined their absolute dominance of the Bundesliga.
“It’s
always good (to win a title) — we knew it was going to happen, but we
still had to confirm it,” said Robben, who has now won the Bundesliga
title seven times since joining Bayern in 2009. “Nothing is given away
in the Bundesliga.”
Bayern were five points adrift when Carlo
Ancelotti was sacked as head coach last September, but 72-year-old Jupp
Heynckes who replaced him credited the players with turning Bayern’s
fortunes around.
“The coach is responsible for the big picture,
but first and foremost the players are the protagonists, they have done
an outstanding job,” said Heynckes.
With one eye on Wednesday’s
Champions League quarter-final second leg against Sevilla, in which
Bayern hold a slender 2-1 lead, Heynckes gambled by resting his stars.
Top
scorer Robert Lewandowski, plus Thomas Mueller, Thiago Alcantara, Mats
Hummels and Javi Martinez all started on the bench in Augsburg.
Sevilla would have been encouraged by the comedy of errors in Bayern’s defence that led to Augsburg’s opening goal.
Jerome
Boateng lingered over a back pass and Colombian forward Sergio Cordova
robbed him of possession, sending Boateng tumbling to the turf.
Outstanding James
Cordova’s
shot was blocked by Bayern goalkeeper Sven Ulreich, but the ball
ricocheted up into Suele’s face and into Bayern’s goal to stun the
visitors on 18 minutes.
However, Munich hit back to lead 2-1 by
half-time. Joshua Kimmich picked out the unmarked Tolisso to head them
level on 32 minutes and Bayern then laid on a top-class goal to take the
lead at the WWK Arena.
Kimmich was again involved, firing a pass
across goal after combining with Robben for Juan Bernat, who backheeled
the ball which James fired home seven minutes before the break.
The
Colombian then ensured the title was heading to Munich, hooking the
ball back into play at the far post for Robben to drill his shot inside
the near post on 62 minutes.
Ribery celebrated his 35th birthday with a cameo appearance for the final eight minutes before Wagner headed in Bayern’s fourth.
The Bavarian giants will formally lift the Bundesliga shield after the final matches on May 12.
Elsewhere,
Hamburg climbed off the bottom of the table as Aaron Hunt curled in an
85th-minute winner from outside the area in a shock 3-2 home win against
second-placed Schalke.
It was Hamburg’s first win in 16 games dating back to last November.
Their shock win meant Cologne are bottom again having earlier been held to a 1-1 draw at home by Mainz.
An
early goal by Cologne’s Germany defender Jonas Hector was cancelled out
as Pablo De Blasis headed an equaliser for Mainz five minutes into the
second half.
With five games left, Hamburg are five points behind
Mainz, who are 16th, the position which carries a relegation play-off
berth against the third-best team in the second tier at the end of the
season.
Wolfsburg won 2-0 at Freiburg in a match between two sides just above the bottom three and fighting to stay up.
Wolves
striker Daniel Didavi held off his marker and fired past despairing
Freiburg goalkeeper Alexander Schwolow with two minutes gone, then added
a second with seven minutes remaining.
Thorgan Hazard, the
younger brother of Chelsea’s Eden, came off the bench to score twice as
Borussia Moenchengladbach climbed to eighth with a 2-1 win at home to
Hertha Berlin.
Salomon Kalou gave Hertha an early lead, but Hazard equalised on 75 minutes, then net a late penalty.
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