Pep Guardiola celebrated a dramatic final victory as Bayern Munich coach on Saturday, as his side beat Borussia Dortmund 4-3 on penalties to win the German Cup final.
Neither side was able to find the net in 120 minutes of football, but Dortmund missed two penalties in the shootout to give Bayern victory and provide Guardiola with a seventh and final title in Germany before he heads to Manchester City.
Guardiola, so often accused of being too emotionless during his time in Munich, broke down in tears as Bayern celebrated. “Anything can happen in a penalty shootout, so we are delighted,” Guardiola told Sky after the game. “It has been an amazing three years at this club. I will miss the players so much.”
Bayern striker Thomas Mueller added: “It was an intense game.
Penalties are always a horrific way to decide a game, but I think we deserved to win today.”
It was also an emotional evening for Mats Hummels, too. The Dortmund captain will move to Bayern this summer after eight years with Borussia. Hummels’ farewell ended early, as he fell victim to cramp and was replaced by Matthias Ginter in the 79th minute.
Bayern had the better chances in the first half. Thomas Mueller fired a speculative shot over the bar early on, before doing the same with a header 20 minutes later. Both sides struggled to free themselves from a hard-fought midfield battle, however.
Several Dortmund counter-attacks came to nothing, while Bayern searched in vain for the decisive final ball. Only on the half-hour mark did the game truly spark into life.
Roman Buerki denied Douglas Costa with a smart save, before Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang fired wide as Dortmund hit back on the break. Hummels, in the spotlight all evening, will have been grateful for a relatively uneventful first half in which the Munich outfit barely got into gear.
The Germany international almost got on the scoresheet just after the break, heading the ball over the bar from a Marco Reus free-kick. Bayern hit back immediately, as Franck Ribery hit a loose ball across the face of goal on the half-volley.
Devilish crosses from Ribery and Costa followed as Bayern began to increase the pressure. Hummels and his defensive colleagues were caught flat-footed on 64 minutes, allowing Mueller too much space to set up Robert Lewandowski, who scooped the ball over the bar.
With just 15 minutes to go, Ribery forced an instinctive save from Buerki, as Bayern began to pin Dortmund back in the final third. Minutes later, Hummels was substituted off to muted applause from the Dortmund fans.
Bayern continued to push forward in vain, and two more Dortmund counter-attacks came to nothing in the final five minutes. Neither side could break the deadlock, and Guardiola’s farewell was taken to extra-time where Ribery set up Lewandowski in the penalty area. The Polish striker, hoeever, was denied only by a brilliant challenge from Erik Durm.
Dortmund’s best chance came in the 103rd minute, Henrikh Mkhitaryan firing a shot across the face of goal. David Alaba also had a chance for Bayern, but neither side could score, and the final went to penalties. After Sven Bender and Sokratis failed to score for Dortmund, Douglas Costa fired home the winning penalty to give Guardiola the perfect happy ending.

‘Twenty-one titles in seven years isn’t bad’
Pep Guardiola says his 21st title as a coach is not a bad way to sign off at Bayern Munich after his tearful farewell in the German Cup final.
Bayern won Guardiola’s final game in charge on Saturday night at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium by beating Borussia Dortmund 4-3 on penalties after neither side could score in 120 minutes. Dortmund missed two penalties in the shootout before Douglas Costa nailed the final spot-kick to seal Bayern’s league and cup double and give Guardiola his 21st title.
“Twenty-one titles in seven years, three titles per year, that’s not bad,” said Guardiola who won 14 titles in four years with Barcelona. “But I had some luck in being able to coach Barcelona and Bayern Munich, both clubs are exceptional. They have players who help you do your best, but my time here in Germany hasn’t just been about titles... it was also my life here, the Bundesliga and the stadiums which were always full.”
Guardiola will coach Manchester City next season, but the Spaniard, so often accused of being too emotionless during his time in Munich, broke down in tears as Bayern celebrated. He revealed that he has struggled to deal with criticism from the German media since it was announced at the start of the year that he would leave to coach City next season.
“The last five months haven’t been easy,” he said. “What people said to me, before I decided to join Manchester, was completely different to what they said after it was announced. I can’t understand that. But I am Pep, I always focus on the next game and that is what I will always do. Titles are titles, they make people happy, but it was a huge experience for me to be able to work with these players every day.”
Guardiola will be replaced by Carlo Ancelotti as Bayern’s head coach next season and says he leaves the Bavarian giants in rude health. “Bayern Munich, with these players, is in good hands, they have the enthusiasm and the character,” said the Spaniard.
A regret from Guardiola’s Bavarian sojourn is his three consecutive Champions League exits at the semi-final stage after losing to Barcelona (2014), Real Madrid (2015) and Atletico Madrid in this season’s last four.


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