After a difficult few weeks, Bayern Munich are once again celebrating a win. Though they deserved victory over Wolfsburg, there are signs that a fair bit of work is needed to get back to where the club wants to be.
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Just as a bad run doesn't neccessarily make a bad team, a win doesn't wipe out everything that preceded it.
Bayern Munich went in to Saturday's clash with Wolfsburg in the eye of a media storm at least partly of their own making. While the rights and wrongs of the broadside from three of the club's most senior officials will continue to be discussed, the fact that Uli Hoeness, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Hasan Salihamidzic felt compelled to speak about a facet of the game that has been around for years and is experienced by all clubs, suggests a level of tetchiness about how the German champions are perceived.
Why else make the point about "disrespectful, derogatory, outrageous" reporting only when you're in the midst of a bad run?
Kimmich backs the board
Bayern's strong display on Saturday, while far from perfect, has lifted them out of their rut, and afterwards Joshua Kimmich lent his support to the men who sanction his wages.
"I think it's a great sign that the club protects the players," the right back said. "That's good for the sense of togetherness inside the team."
For long stretches of the 3-1 win, Bayern looked something close to the united team that won Kovac's first seven matches in charge. Robert Lewandowski was unplayable at times, Niklas Süle continued his rise towards being the best center back in Germany and Thiago and Javi Martinez controlled the middle of the park.
"There was a lot of pressure on this game and I want to thank the boys for a top performance," said Kovac. "It was a very concentrated display. It is the first step and showed that Bayern can fight back."
Fullback cover remains a cause for concern
The club's first win since late September came without three of the its mainstays - Thomas Müller, Franck Ribery and Jerome Boateng, none of whom got off the bench. Though all have had their struggles this term, few sides in Europe can afford the luxury of benching three players with such top-level experience.
Yet, while Bayern's strength in depth is generally impressive, the fullback positions remain a serious area of concern. Hoeness was keen to point out the failings of Juan Bernat while singing the praises of Rafinha on Friday but, at 33 and with time catching up with him, the Brazilian now looks as unconvincing a top level fullback as the Spaniard.
Rafinha came on for David Alaba at half time (with Alaba - not for the first time this season - struggling with injury) and was caught the wrong side of Wolfsburg's Wout Weghorst almost straight away. The referee awarded a penalty only for Rafinha to be spared by the linesman's flag, raised for an earlier offside.
Indeed, while Bernat almost "single-handedly" lost Bayern the Champions League, according to Hoeness, mistakes by Rafinha and fellow understudy Sven Ulreich against Real Madrid in the semifinal actually did end Bayern's hopes in last year's competition.
Much has been made of Bayern's lack of transfer activity in the summer, with even Kovac admitting he'd like more depth at fullback - Rafinha is now the cover for both sides of the pitch. New arrivals Leon Goretzka and Serge Gnabry have both had injury problems but neither have yet taken Bayern up a notch.
For them, for Kovac and for the season, it's early days. But the Croatian coach would be negligent not to be aware of the ways in which his team could regress, just as the media would be negligent not to report bad news as well as good.
Bayern's flaws are significantly smaller than most, but so is the margin for error at the very top. With a favorable run of fixtures between now and the meeting with top of the table Borussia Dortmund on November 10, Kovac has time to iron one or two out. Others may require a little help from the men above him.
Bundesliga matchday 8 in pictures
There were crushing wins for Eintracht Frankfurt, Borussia Mönchengladbach and Borussia Dortmund, while Bayern Munich got back to winning ways in Wolfsburg. Werder Bremen also impressed while RB Leipzig were frustrated.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Becker
Borussia Mönchengladbach 4 - 0 Mainz
Dieter Hecking's men moved up to second with a clinical dismantling of Mainz. Jonas Hofmann finished off Thorgan Hazard passes either side of the break then completed his hat-trick after Hazard scored himself. That's 10 points from the last 12 for The Foals. Things couldn't be much more different for Mainz. The Zerofivers have two points from their last five and haven't scored in 450 minutes.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Becker
Stuttgart 0-4 Borussia Dortmund
Borussia Dortmund are the only remaining unbeaten team in the Bundesliga, and that never looked like changing away at struggling Stuttgart under new coach Markus Weinzierl. Jadon Sancho (pictured) gave the visitors the lead inside three minutes before Marco Reus and Paco Alcacer made it 3-0 after just 25 minutes. Max Philipp added a fourth as full-time approached to cap off a comfortable day.
Image: Imago/kolbert-press
Hertha Berlin 1 - 1 Freiburg
The hosts started strongly on Sunday, with Ondrej Duda's sixth of the season (pictured) completing a great move to give them an early lead. Pal Dardai's side were pegged back by a deflected Robin Koch strike just before the break. Freiburg had their chances but Hertha almost won it late on when Dardai's son Palko was fouled in the box, only for the penalty decision to be overturned by VAR.
Image: imago/Camera 4/T. Wiedensohler
Wolfsburg 1-3 Bayern Munich
Robert Lewandowski (second from left) scored twice as Bayern Munich ended a run of four games without a win. The champions were reduced to ten men in the second half when Arjen Robben was shown a second yellow card (the first for diving) before Wolfsburg pulled one back through Wout Weghorst. But James Rodriguez restored the two-goal cushion to relieve the pressure on coach Niko Kovac.
Image: Reuters/F. Bimmer
Schalke 0-2 Werder Bremen
Werder Bremen inflicted a sixth defeat in eight games on Schalke and moved up to second in the Bundesliga, behind Borussia Dortmund. Maximilian Eggestein struck twice for the Green and Whites either side of half-time against a wasteful Schalke side. Mark Uth saw a header cannon back off the crossbar in the closing minutes, but it was the closest the Royal Blues came.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/G. Kirchner
Nuremberg 1-3 Hoffenheim
Hoffenheim came from behind to inflict a first home defeat of the season on newly-promoted Nuremberg. Captain Hanno Behrens gave the "Club" the lead from the spot in an even first half but a quick-fire brace from English teenager Reiss Nelson (number 9, pictured) turned the game in the visitors' favor. Adam Szalai made it three for Julian Nagelsmann's side who moved up to eighth.
Image: Getty Images/Bongarts/A. Pretty
Bayer Leverkusen 2-2 Hannover
Bayer Leverkusen left it late to come from behind for the second time in the match and rescue a point at home to struggling Hannover. Lars Bender cancelled out Florent Muslija's opener before the break but Felipe Martins restored the visitors' lead in the second half. The home fans had to wait until the 94th minute for Karim Bellerabi's equalizer but there were still boos at full-time.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Vennenbernd
Augsburg 0-0 RB Leipzig
In a match characterized by fouls and regular interruptions, both Augsburg and RB Leipzig settled for a point. The visitors thought they should have had a penalty when Jeffrey Gouweleeuw brought down Timo Werner in the box but the video assistant referee decided - four minutes later - that it wasn't a foul. RB captain Willi Orban came close in stoppage time but the match ended goalless.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Puchner
Eintracht Frankfurt 7-1 Fortuna Düsseldorf
Luka Jovic was the star of the show for Eintracht Frankfurt, who ruthlessly disposed of Fortuna Düsseldorf to move above Bayern into sixth in the Bundesliga. But this game was all about Luka Jovic, who scored five goals in a devastating attacking display. Jovic becomes the Bundesliga's top scorer with a total of seven, and the first Frankfurt player to ever score five goals in a Bundesliga game.