Soccer

Bayern Munich wins record-extending 11th consecutive Bundesliga title

Jamal Musiala scored in the 89th minute to fire Bayern Munich to the Bundesliga title with a 2-1 victory over 1. FC Köln in Cologne, Germany after Borussia Dortmund could only draw on the final day of the season.

Jamal Musiala scores in 89th minute of 2-1 victory over 1. FC Köln in Germany

A men's soccer team gathers on the pitch to celebrate.
FC Bayern Munich celebrate their Bundesliga title after defeating 1. FC Köln 2-1 on Saturday in Cologne, Germany. (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Jamal Musiala scored in the 89th minute to fire Bayern Munich to the Bundesliga title with a 2-1 victory over 1. FC Köln at Cologne after Borussia Dortmund could only draw on the final day of the season.

Dortmund, which was leading by two points before the last round, was held 2-2 at home by Mainz on Saturday, allowing Bayern to finish in first place because of its better goal difference.

Dortmund needed to win to be sure of ending Bayern's 10-year reign as champion.

For Canadian international Alphonso Davies, who made his Bayern debut in January 2019, it was a fifth straight league title. The 22-year-old fullback from Edmonton has been sidelined with a thigh injury since late April.

Bayern announced shortly after winning the title that it had fired chief executive Oliver Kahn and sporting director Hasan Salihamidžić.

Both were under scrutiny for their decision to fire Julian Nagelsmann as coach in March and replace him with Thomas Tuchel right before the team's Champions League and German Cup exits.

Tuchel said Friday that even a Bundesliga title win would not mask what has been an unsatisfactory season for the Bavarian powerhouse.

Chief executive comments on firing

Kahn responded to his firing on Twitter, where he congratulated the team and said he'd like to celebrate with the players "but unfortunately I can't be there today because I wasn't allowed."

It's just the third time Bayern managed to jump to first place on the last day of the season after it edged Werder Bremen to the title in 1986 and Bayer Leverkusen in 2000.

"I think anyone who's interested in soccer, particularly German soccer, will say we don't deserve it, and I understand, because our second half of the season was so chaotic, on the field, off the field," Bayern veteran Thomas Muller said. "But this moment is still unbelievable for the group, that's what will be remembered, it's crazy."

Dortmund fans were celebrating when Cologne's Dejan Ljubicic scored a penalty in the 81st minute against Bayern — which needed to win — but Musiala came on as a substitute four minutes later and scored four minutes after that to send the title Bayern's way.

Dortmund had started in pole position, but Kingsley Coman struck in the eighth minute against Cologne for Bayern to increase the pressure.

Then Sebastien Haller had a first-half penalty saved after Andreas Hanche-Olsen stunned the Dortmund fans by heading in Mainz's opening goal in the 15th minute.

Karim Onisiwo got Mainz's second goal in the 24th with another header and the visitors looked capable of scoring more against the mistake-prone Dortmund defense. There was nothing but pride at stake for Mainz.

Raphael Guerreiro pulled one back in the 69th for Dortmund, but by the time Niklas Sule equalized in the sixth minute of injury time, it was far too late for the "black and yellows."

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