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Bundesliga: Bayern rout Leverkusen while Dortmund and Hertha take knee | Football

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Bayern Munich edged closer to an eighth straight Bundesliga title as Hansi Flick’s men came from behind to win in style at Bayer Leverkusen.

The perennial German champions already had one hand on the trophy but tightened their grip as the season enters the closing stages by overcoming Peter Bosz’s Champions League hopefuls. Leverkusen failed to build on Lucas Alario’s early opener as Bayern put their foot on the gas, with Kingsley Coman, Leon Goretzka, Serge Gnabry and Robert Lewandowski netting in a 4-2 win.

The hosts were without star turn Kai Havertz and failed to build on Alario’s smart stabbed finish as Flick’s men took control at the BayArena. Coman raced through to coolly level, with Goretzka firing home a fine left-footed shot before Gnabry rubbed salt into the wounds on the stroke of half-time.

Lewandowski’s 44th goal of the season in all competitions ended the tie as a contest, although 17-year-old Florian Wirtz will not forget his late stunner on an afternoon when players wore ‘Black Lives Matter’ armbands. Wirtz became the Bundesliga’s youngest scorer when he cut inside from the right and curled a left-footed finish beyond Manuel Neuer in the 89th minute.

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What a way to score your first Bundesliga goal!

17-year-old Florian Wirtz beats Manuel Neuer to find the corner with a lovely finish ?

Remember the name… pic.twitter.com/hj1L9mDftB


June 6, 2020

Lewandowski and Thomas Müller picked up bookings which will rule them out of their next league match agains Borussia Mönchengladbach.

Players of Borussia Dortmund and Hertha Berlin went down on one knee before their game in tribute to George Floyd, whose death in US police custody has triggered protests around the world. Both teams gathered around the centre circle and knelt while the coaches and their staff on the benches also joined in. Lucien Favre’s side won 1-0 thanks to Emre Can’s second-half goal. Jadon Sancho showed some dazzling footwork throughout but two glaring misses almost cost Dortmund.

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Borussia Dortmund and Hertha Berlin players and staff take a knee before kick-off in a show of support for the #BlackLivesMatter movement ? pic.twitter.com/Bhcg4GQka3


June 6, 2020

Earlier this week the German Football Association (DFB) ruled that players were free to show their support for protests over the death of Floyd. Several players last week lifted their shirts to show messages in support of the protests.

Christian Strohdiek netted a stoppage-time equaliser to earn last-placed Paderborn a 1-1 draw away at high-flying RB Leipzig and keep alive their faint hopes of avoiding relegation. Patrik Schick’s 27th-minute goal gave Leipzig the lead but their fortunes turned after Dayot Upamecano was sent off two minutes from the end of the first half when he petulantly kicked away the ball for his second yellow card.

A goal in each half by Rouwen Hennings gave Fortuna Düsseldorf a 2-2 draw at home to 10-man Hoffenheim but Uwe Rösler’s side, who are third from bottom, will see it as two points dropped rather than one gained.

Mainz scored once in each half to beat Eintracht Frankfurt 2-0 and move three points above the relegation play-off spot with four games left. The visitors went ahead two minutes before half-time thanks to Moussa Niakhate’s header from a corner for his first goal of the season. Eintracht, who are unlikely now to qualify for Europe, rarely threatened after an early Filip Kostic effort.



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