Bundesliga back with a bang as Wolfsburg and Köln burst into life | Andy Brassell

There were over 40 goals across the weekend as the league returned from its winter break in brilliant but chaotic fashion

You know when a driver, frustrated in traffic, finally sees a stretch of open road and blazes off with inappropriate and unwarranted speed into the middle distance? Welcome back, the Bundesliga. German football’s first domestic action in nearly 10 weeks was a dizzying assault on the senses, a torrent of copper from an arcade coin pusher machine, a stream of consciousness from a chatterbox that has been starved of company and has stayed silent all day.

It all started on Friday night in Leipzig, where fireworks were expected in a face off between the league’s two best teams. Instead, the visit of Bayern was more about measure and respectful distances. After a bleak midwinter of fretting over a replacement for the injured Manuel Neuer, the champions bedded in Yann Sommer, signed on Thursday and making his debut, characteristically unruffled, the day after. It was an alarm-free first game for the Swiss goalkeeper, though he could do little about Marcel Halstenberg’s second-half equaliser.

Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting had picked up the campaign where he left it, smartly putting Bayern in front before the break. Bayern’s projected defensive issues didn’t surface here, with their other (surprise) new arrival, Daley Blind, safely tucked away on the bench. The teams mustered a relatively tame 17 efforts on goal between them.

Even the major flashpoint of the night found its zen quickly enough. As the halfway point of the second half approached Dayot Upamecano flattened Dominik Szoboszlai as he began to burst clear from halfway, with Daniel Siebert showing the France defender a yellow card. Leipzig’s players surrounded the referee, expecting more, and coach Marco Rose’s touchline ire was enough to earn him a caution. Yet after full time, Siebert stepped in front of the television cameras to give his reasoning; Szoboszlai’s distance from goal, wide position and possible cover from Matthijs de Ligt all factored in. Rose stood beside the official as he gave his explanation, listened, accepted it, apologised and shook Siebert’s hand. It was all inherently balanced and reasonable.

Wolfsburg revel in their 6-0 victory over Freiburg
Wolfsburg demolished Freiburg at the Volkswagen Arena. Photograph: Ronny Hartmann/AFP/Getty Images

So it was up to others to really turn up the volume on Saturday – and how they took their opportunity. Freiburg, who started 2023 occupying second place in the Bundesliga, were steamrollered 6-0 at Wolfsburg. “It wasn’t even a contest,” rued Christian Streich, for whom it wasn’t much of a celebration of 11 years in charge. Patrick Wimmer had given Die Wölfe the lead 59 seconds in, with pyro smoke still lingering over the field. By the end, everybody was getting involved. Luca Waldschmidt scored his first goal in 476 days from the penalty spot with the last kick of the game.

FC Köln, who spent much of the break fending off questions about coach Steffen Baumgart’s future having scored eight goals in the eight games preceding the hiatus, rattled seven past Werder Bremen – they had five by half-time with Steffen Tigges (three Bundesliga goals before Christmas) scoring twice, including one chipped over a stranded Jiri Pavlenka from the centre circle. “Zieht den Bayern die Lederhosen aus” – “take Bayern’s lederhosen off” – was the chant from the delirious home fans ahead of next week’s trip south to Bavaria.

This columnist got the abacus out to count 36 goals in total by the end of Borussia Dortmund’s seven-goal mindbender with Augsburg on Sunday afternoon, a game that ended with a home side in dire need of defensive solidity throwing up two of their number – Mats Hummels and Raphaël Guerreiro – to try to score a goal in the dying embers of stoppage time.

“I don’t know if I’m really happy or if I should just be quiet because we got the three points,” Hummels’ accident-prone centre-back partner, Nico Schlotterbeck, told DAZN, having been at the heart of the chaos. His overplaying presented Arne Maier with Augsburg’s first equaliser before he instantly gave BVB the lead back with a header. He was again implicated for the visitors’ third leveller via David Colina, while chipping in to the build-up to his team’s third and fourth goals, wonderful finishes by substitutes Jamie Bynoe-Gittins and Gio Reyna, which sandwiched it.

Gio Reyna is congratulated by his teammates after netting the decider against Augsburg
Gio Reyna is congratulated by his teammates after netting the decider against Augsburg. Photograph: Lars Baron/Getty Images

Schlotterbeck described the match as “quality up front and no quality at the back” with laudable candour and, despite being defended by his coach Edin Terzic, he could have been describing himself in this instance. In the midst of this there was also a stylish opener from the irrepressible Jude Bellingham, who appears to be as exhilarated and infuriated as anyone in the stands at Signal Iduna Park.

It was up to Borussia Mönchengladbach and Bayer Leverkusen to finish the first weekend back in relatively sensible fashion on Sunday afternoon, with the visitors winning by the odd goal in five and confirming Xabi Alonso’s excellent early efforts with Die Werkself. That took the weekend’s collective goal tally past the 40 mark. The scoreline flattered the home side, giving Jonas Omlin a first game since arriving from Montpellier to replace his compatriot Sommer.

Leverkusen continued as if their last game had been last week; direct, dangerous and deadly, showing perhaps the greatest poise of any of the resuming teams in racing into a 3-0 lead – at least until the concession of two artfully finished but ultimately meaningless late goals to Lars Stindl for a depleted Gladbach. “The speed we have is really extraordinary,” noted Nadiem Amiri, reintegrated by Alonso and the scorer of his team’s delicious third, with the return of teenage star Florian Wirtz after 10 months out an added bonus.

In the weeks before the resumption it felt as if all the question marks at Bayern might be the best chance we had of Bundesliga fireworks in the new year. Yet, as always, it’s the supporting cast that have the power to light our fires – even when fluffing their lines.

RB Leipzig 1-1 Bayern Munich

Eintracht Frankfurt 3-0 Schalke

Bochum 3-1 Hertha Berlin

Union Berlin 3-1 Hoffenheim

Wolfsburg 6-0 Freiburg

VfB Stuttgart 1-1 Mainz  

Köln 7-1 Werder Bremen 

Borussia Dortmund 4-3 Augsburg

Borussia Mönchengladbach 2-3 Bayer Leverkusen  

Talking points

• Despite the absorbing spectacle on offer at Westfalen, the real highlight was the appearance of Sebastien Haller as a second-half substitute for Youssoufa Moukoko, having recovered from two surgeries and chemotherapy. The former Ajax striker took the field to a rousing and emotional ovation with the message “Fuck Cancer” on his boots, calling the reception “incredible and unforgettable.” It is already clear that he will add a lot to the frontline even as he regains optimum fitness, at the end of a week in which Moukoko finally signed a contract extension to 2026.

• Eintracht Frankfurt bagged second place after Freiburg’s implosion with a 3-0 win over rock-bottom Schalke. It wasn’t quite as easy as it may look on paper, though Jesper Lindstrøm’s fantastic opener after slaloming through the visiting defence was a worthy addition to their mounting heap of season highlights.

Sebastien Haller's boot had a simple but powerful message.
Sebastien Haller's boot had a simple but powerful message. Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty Images

• Union tuck behind them in third after coming from a goal down to beat Hoffenheim late on, mainly thanks to a brace of Danilho Doekhi headers. There was more good news for Unioner as Josip Juranovic, arguably the outstanding right-back at the World Cup, was confirmed as their new club record signing on Sunday morning, arriving from Celtic.

• Bochum’s great escape is on, with Philipp Hofmann’s double vanquishing Hertha, helping them to a fourth successive win and lifting them out of the relegation places after their abysmal start to the season. They leapt above their floundering opponents, who are now in the bottom two.

Contributor

Andy Brassell

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
From the Revierderby to Kai Havertz: a guide to the Bundesliga return | Andy Brassell
As the German top flight becomes the first of Europe’s major leagues to resume on Saturday, here is the lowdown on all nine games

Andy Brassell

15, May, 2020 @9:03 AM

Article image
Woe of Cologne continues amid latest video replay stink | Andy Brassell
A 5-0 thrashing at Dortmund could have been worse, even with a dubious VAR decision, and there are already fears of a situation spinning out of control

Andy Brassell

18, Sep, 2017 @1:13 PM

Article image
Ademola Lookman slips and slides from Everton into Leipzig’s affections | Andy Brassell
Ralph Hasenhüttl has belief in the match-winning debutant who ‘only brought one pair of boots with him from England’

Andy Brassell

05, Feb, 2018 @11:05 AM

Article image
Bayern Munich changes on and off pitch offer hope to Bundesliga rivals | Andy Brassell
Managerial merry-go-round has taken Julian Nagelsmann to the champions while Dortmund will rely on Erling Haaland

Andy Brassell

12, Aug, 2021 @7:00 AM

Article image
Tayfun Korkut the unlikely architect of Stuttgart's revival | Andy Brassell
Less than a month after what seemed a deeply underwhelming appointment, it has begun to seem a brighter future is possible

Andy Brassell

19, Feb, 2018 @2:09 PM

Article image
Englishmen, crowds and a 'greedy piranha': welcome back Bundesliga | Andy Brassell
Bayern and Dortmund loom large over the rest after Leipzig and Leverkusen adjust after some high-profile departures

Andy Brassell

16, Sep, 2020 @9:25 AM

Article image
Selfish Messiah Magath brings first title to Wolfsburg

Raphael Honigstein: Felix Magath's irrepressible Wolfsburg won the title with a 5-1 demolition of Werder – but now he is off to Schalke

Raphael Honigstein

25, May, 2009 @5:05 PM

Article image
Bochum celebrate their Bundesliga return by beating Mainz in style | Andy Brassell
They had been away for 11 years, but the forgotten club of Germany’s football heartlands fully enjoyed their gala day

Andy Brassell

23, Aug, 2021 @1:15 PM

Article image
Bundesliga 2011-12 season preview | Raphael Honigstein
Raphael Honigstein: Most German teams are following Dortmund's lead and putting their faith in youth, but can anyone stop big-spending Bayern?

Raphael Honigstein

05, Aug, 2011 @8:18 AM

Article image
A Bundesliga battle royal beckons | Raphael Honigstein

Raphael Honigstein: After a summer of signings, sackings and club fatwas, among other things, the wait for the new German season is almost over

Raphael Honigstein

06, Aug, 2009 @10:40 AM