Bayern aim to clinch title against Dortmund in ‘Klassiker’

This combination of pictures created on April 21, 2022 shows Dortmund's Norwegian forward Erling Braut Haaland and Bayern Munich's Polish forward Robert Lewandowski. (AFP)
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Updated 22 April 2022
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Bayern aim to clinch title against Dortmund in ‘Klassiker’

  • Ten titles in a row would be a historic achievement for Bayern but less helpful for the Bundesliga

DUSSELDORF, Germany: Bayern Munich are used to winning the Bundesliga title. Even so, this one is special.

Not only would it be Bayern’s 10th in a row — a feat never achieved in any of Europe’s top five leagues — but the club can clinch the title at home on Saturday with a win in the “Klassiker” against Borussia Dortmund.

Bayern’s stadium will be packed for the match, making a difference from twice celebrating titles in empty arenas amid the pandemic.

The mood in Munich on Thursday was relaxed, with Bayern coach Julian Nagelsmann already discussing his players’ tradition of celebrating league wins by pouring beer over the coach.

“Beer is supposed to be quite good for your hair,” he joked.

Still, Nagelsmann admitted that winning the Bundesliga again has “perhaps a little bit less meaning in Munich” than the Champions League, where Bayern was eliminated in the quarterfinals with a surprise loss to Villarreal.

“On Saturday, it’s still a special situation to do it against Dortmund, to do it against your direct competitor in your own stadium with a full house,” he said.

Ten titles in a row would be a historic achievement for Bayern but less helpful for the Bundesliga. Stagnation at the top makes it a harder sell to international audiences.

Winning the league is just meeting minimum expectations for Nagelsmann in the first year of a five-year contract.

“I think that if I didn’t win it with the team, then I wouldn’t be the coach here any more,” he said.

Dortmund trail Bayern by nine points with four games remaining and would need a big win Saturday and a dramatic Bayern collapse to have any hope for the title. Still, they would love to spoil Bayern’s party.

Bayern have won their last seven meetings against Dortmund, though the last encounter was a hard-fought game which ended amid bitter recriminations. Bayern won 3-2 with two goals from Robert Lewandowski but all the focus was on referee Felix Zwayer after Dortmund midfielder Jude Bellingham used a post-game interview to recall Zwayer’s links to a 2005 match-fixing case. Bellingham later was fined.

It could be the last “Klassiker” for Dortmund striker Erling Haaland, with the Norwegian linked with a move to Manchester City at the end of the season. He is coming off a period of poor form after missing February with muscle problems — a worrying repeat occurrence for the 21-year-old striker — though he ended a scoring drought with two goals in last week’s 6-1 rout of struggling Wolfsburg.

Outside of the top two, there’s still a fight for the other Champions League places. Leipzig are in third place and Bayer Leverkusen are fourth, and both are under pressure from fifth-place Freiburg.

Freiburg, which have also reached the German Cup final, takes on Borussia Mönchengladbach on Saturday in a game which could make or break their Champions League chances.


Premier League ready? Wrexham takes on world champion Chelsea in the FA Cup

Updated 05 March 2026
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Premier League ready? Wrexham takes on world champion Chelsea in the FA Cup

  • The prospect of playing the likes of Chelsea every week is not just the hope for Wrexham’s owners but the mission
  • “They said that from day one and everyone laughed at them,” Williamson said

LONDON: Next up for Wrexham are world champion Chelsea.
While a place in the quarterfinals of the FA Cup is at stake when the teams face off at the Racecourse Ground on Saturday, for Wrexham it will be a timely gauge of just how “Premier League-ready” it is.
Speaking to industry experts last week, Wrexham CEO Michael Williamson said the Welsh club — owned by actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney — would be ready for the topflight of English soccer when the time comes. Even as soon as next season, just three years after they were playing non-league.
“What we’ve proven is that with our culture we’re pretty damn good at being ready,” Williamson told the FT Business of Football Summit.
Even with celebrity owners, huge financial backing and a global reach through the fly-on-the-wall documentary series “Welcome to Wrexham,” it cannot be overstated just how remarkable the club’s rise has been.
Back-to-back promotions have taken them from playing non-league games in a crumbling stadium to the second-tier Championship and in contention for the playoffs to the Premier League.
The prospect of playing the likes of Chelsea every week is not just the hope for Wrexham’s owners but the mission.
“They said that from day one and everyone laughed at them,” Williamson said. “We know what we have to do. It’ll be really difficult but we can do it because we’ve proven that we can, not just survive when we get promoted, but that we can actually thrive.”
Wrexham’s meteoric rise has meant they have constantly played catchup to try to keep pace with their on-field success. More than 60 players have been signed since the takeover was completed in 2021, with 16 joining last summer to build a squad capable of competing in a division with former Premier League champion Leicester and a host of clubs with very recent topflight experience.
Even still, the spending is nothing like that of England’s topflight. Nathan Broadhead became Wrexham’s record signing in August for a reported $10 million. Before him, Sam Smith cost a reported $2.7 million.
Compare that to Chelsea, which have spent close to $2 billion under American owners Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital since buying the club in 2022. That money helped Chelsea win the Club World Cup last year — but they have not come close to winning the Premier League and they could miss out on qualification to the Champions League this season.
Strive to survive
Wrexham’s spending is likely to have to increase significantly again to bridge the widening gap between the Premier League and the Championship, with promoted teams increasingly struggling to make the step up.
Last season, all three promoted teams — Leicester, Ipswich, Southampton — were relegated. The year before, Sheffield United, Burnley and Luton all failed to survive in their first season in the topflight.
“We’d have to look at a squad change and we’re definitely planning that,” Williamson said in the event of Wrexham securing a fourth straight promotion.
While player changes have been frequent, manager Phil Parkinson has been a constant and was recently told by McElhenney that he has a job for life.
His immediate focus is on an FA Cup upset against Chelsea.
“We’ll be going all out to produce a really good performance, and we’ll see where that takes us on the night,” he told the North Wales Chronicle. “But we know we’ve got to respect Chelsea. What a squad of players they’ve got. They’ve spent billions over the last 10 years.
“They are Club World Cup champions — I don’t think we should forget that — so statistically we are playing the best club in the world.”