BERLIN: Smarting after a first trophyless season in 12 years, Bayern Munich have spent big this summer in the hopes of returning to the Bundesliga summit occupied by Xabi Alonso's Bayer Leverkusen.
Leverkusen's unbeaten domestic double and an impressive turnaround from Stuttgart pushed Bayern into third place, costing coach Thomas Tuchel his job.
After a long and largely fruitless coaching search, which saw several big names including Alonso, Julian Nagelsmann, Ralf Rangnick and Oliver Glasner reject the club, Bayern chose Vincent Kompany.Despite a stellar playing career, Kompany was a surprising choice, given his one season as a Premier League manager resulted in relegation with Burnley.
With this season's Champions League final at Munich's Allianz Arena, Bayern have splashed the cash in the transfer market. A year after parting ways with 100 million euros for England captain Harry Kane, Bayern have again raided the Premier League, spending a similar sum to bring in forward Michael Olise and midfielder Joao Palhinha.
Bayern start their season at Wolfsburg tomorrow. The Wolves have not beaten Bayern in 20 matches going back to 2015.Former Bayern chairman Oliver Kahn, who was forced out of the club at the end of the 2022-23 season, promised German football's empire would strike back this campaign.
"Bayern will fight back this season. A year without a title will sharpen old reflexes," Kahn told Kicker on Monday."Bayern will do everything to become champions."
Not normally known for his reluctance to make bullish, sweeping statements, Bayern powerbroker Uli Hoeness was unusually guarded earlier in August when he tried to shed the favourites tag. "The reigning champion is always the favourite," Hoeness said of Leverkusen.
"We've taken care of that for 10 years – now it's up to them to do it."Leverkusen coach Alonso was similarly reluctant, saying on Thursday "for me, the favourites are Bayern, that's clear."
Leverkusen's title defence started late yesterday at derby rivals Borussia Moenchengladbach.While Bayern may have gone empty-handed last season, recent history shows it rarely takes them long to rebound.
Only on three occasions in the past four decades have Bayern not struck back immediately: 1991-93, 1995-96 and 2011-12.