FC Bayern München
·5 luglio 2025
'Now more than ever' – Bayern defiant after unfortunate Club World Cup exit

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Yahoo sportsFC Bayern München
·5 luglio 2025
When referee Anthony Taylor blew his whistle for the last time in this quarter-final, calling time on the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 for FC Bayern, this intense, emotional and, in many ways, sad afternoon in Atlanta left a huge Bavarian void. The narrow 2-0 defeat to Paris Saint-Germain, with all its surrounding circumstances, hurt so much because, on the one hand, the German champions lost a hugely important player in Jamal Musiala to injury in a harrowing way, and on the other hand, it also left behind a sense of defiant anger. Head coach Vincent Kompany revealed that he’d never been so annoyed – not because his team played badly. No, on the contrary: “Because we weren’t rewarded for a performance that was exactly what was required against PSG.”
For almost the entire game, a brave, aggressive and highly concentrated Bayern threw everything they had against the defending Champions League winners, French champions and cup winners. Bayern pushed and pressed, Bayern battled and toiled, ran and tackled – so much, so massively, so passionately that Paris were seriously shaken. Sure, the French side frequently countered and created chances with their outstanding quality, but Manuel Neuer responded brilliantly in two one-v-one situations. In stoppage time, they hit the bar just before the goal to make it 2-0.
Unlucky: Michael Olise also had no joy with his efforts.
“Our team played well, we really held our own in the first half – also in terms of our tackling and pressing,” analysed Thomas Müller. “That’s why they actually took less risk in the second half. They played a lot more long balls and were deliberately no longer trying to play out from the back.”
The tactical return to basics, the scaling back of their own playing philosophy after Desire Doué's opening goal was tantamount to an admission that Bayern couldn’t be contained by Paris, couldn’t be stopped. The Munich men kept coming, producing endless crosses – and even finding the opposition net twice. But both Dayot Upamecano (45’+2) and Harry Kane (87’) were just offside. After that, for PSG it was just a case of holding on to the narrow lead until full time and maybe carving out one more lucky counter.
Bayern fell behind in the closing stages. They then fought with all their might to stave off the defeat – in vain.
“The ending was a bit crazy and there were a lot of intense situations,” commented Paris head coach Luis Enrique. “And both players who got sent off made it even harder for us to hang on.” First Willian Pacho was dismissed for an outstreched leg against Leon Goretzka in the 81st minute, followed by ex-Bayern man Lucas Hernandez after an elbow on Raphaël Guerreiro in the 92nd minute. It's hard enough to compete against 11 Bayern players, said Enrique, “so it became a lottery for us”. One in which Paris won the first prize, as Ousmane Dembélé broke Bavarian hearts with the second goal in the sixth minute of added time.
Read about the main moments in the match report:
And on top of the crushing elimination, Musiala was left lying on the ground in agonising pain following a collision with goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma just before half-time and had to be carried off the field on a stretcher. Alongside well wishes from all sides – including Paris – there was nothing left for board member for sport Max Eberl to say than to bid farewell to this tournament in the USA. “The team have had a great tournament,” said Eberl. “We’ve shown in an incredibly active and attractive way what this club can and wants to do.” Captain Neuer also had a final say before the imminent holiday: “This match in particular is an example, to say: now more than ever, we want to go for it in Europe again, and also be up there in the Bundesliga and DFB Cup again. We need to take this motivation from games like this, to say: this time we’re on it.”
All the post-match reaction:
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