Bayern Munich thrashed Borussia Dortmund 4-0 in ‘Der Klassiker’ yesterday as Robert Lewandowski continued his phenomenal scoring run with two goals at the Allianz Arena. Lewandowski’s first-half header and 76th-minute tap-in mean he has scored in all of Bayern’s Bundesliga and Champions League games this season for a tally of 23 goals.
Serge Gnabry claimed Bayern’s second, while visiting captain Mats Hummels scored a late own goal for his former club as Dortmund suffered another heavy defeat in Munich, where they also lost 5-0 in April.
Bayern’s moved up to third, level on points with second-placed RB Leipzig and one behind leaders Borussia Moenchengladbach, who host Werder Bremen today. Interim coach Hansi Flick enjoyed his second win in charge since Niko Kovac was sacked last Sunday. However, Bayern are having difficulties finding a new coach, with Arsene Wenger yesterday contradicting their claims they turned him down as Kovac’s successor and slammed the club for a lack of discretion.
Bayern chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, who spoke to Wenger last week, cancelled a pre-match interview with Sky. Ajax coach Erik ten Hag and Paris Saint-Germain boss Thomas Tuchel have already made it clear they will not join Bayern this season.
Despite their off-field troubles, Bayern bounced back from last weekend’s 5-1 drubbing at Eintracht Frankfurt as Lewandowski scored with a superb header from a Benjamin Pavard cross on 17 minutes. Dortmund winger Jadon Sancho was hooked off on 36 minutes after failing to make an impact on proceedings.
Gnabry had a goal ruled out for offside as Bayern went in 1-0 up at the break, but the Germany winger struck two minutes into the second half. When Lewandowski stumbled with the goal at his mercy, Gnabry fired home.
With an hour gone and his side 2-0 down, Dortmund coach Lucien Favre brought on forwards Marco Reus and Paco Alcacer, who have only just recovered from foot and calf injuries respectively. Alcacer had his head in his hands after failing to connect with an Achraf Hakimi cross with 20 minutes left as Dortmund’s best chance went begging. Bayern’s third came as Lewandowski finished another counter-attack by the hosts, just before Hummels’ own goal.
Earlier, Timo Werner netted twice as Leipzig went second with a 4-2 win at Hertha Berlin in the capital, where the Berlin Wall fell on November 9, 1989. To mark the 30th anniversary, a replica of the Wall, which divided Germany’s capital from 1961, separated Hertha and Leipzig before being knocked down prior to kick-off.
Midfielder Maximilian Mittelstaedt gave Hertha a first-half lead which lasted six minutes before Werner converted a penalty after his hat-trick in last weekend’s 8-0 thrashing of Mainz. Marcel Sabitzer added Leipzig’s second on the stroke of half-time before three goals came in the final five minutes.
Kevin Kampl netted Leipzig’s third with a superb left-footed strike before Werner grabbed his second for his 11th league goal in as many games, before Hertha striker Davie Selke scored against his former club.
Striker Rouwen Hennings completed his hat-trick five minutes from time as Fortuna Duesseldorf held Schalke to a 3-3 draw. The Royal Blues squandered the lead three times as goals by Daniel Caligiuri, Ozan Kabak and Suat Serdar in Gelsenkirchen were cancelled out by Hennings. 




Bundesliga results
Hertha Berlin 2 (Mittelstaedt 32, Selke 90) RB Leipzig 4 (Werner 38-pen, 90, Sabitzer 45+1, Kampl 86); Mainz 2 (Onisiwo 81, Brosinski 90) Union Berlin 3 (Brosinski 30-og, Andersson 45, 51); Schalke 04 3 (Caligiuri 33, Kabak 67, Serdar 79) Fortuna Duesseldorf 3 (Hennings 62, 74, 85); Paderborn 0 Augsburg 1 (Max 41); Bayern Munich 4 (Lewandowski 17, 76, Gnabry 47, Hummels 80-og) Borussia Dortmund 0
Playing today (all times GMT): Borussia Moenchengladbach v Werder Bremen (1230 GMT), VfL Wolfsburg v Bayer Leverkusen (1430), Freiburg v Eintracht Frankfurt (1700)
Played Friday: Cologne 1 (Cordoba 34) Hoffenheim 2 (Adamyan 48, Locadia 90+7-pen)