BVB Beats Gladbach: Dortmund’s Relief Win

Borussia Dortmund ensures a conciliatory end to the year. BVB can work its way back up the table in the prestigious duel against Borussia Mönchengladbach and secure a narrow victory. This was urgently needed after the impressions of the previous games.

Borussia Dortmund won the explosive West duel against Borussia Mönchengladbach without any shine and is in second place in the table, at least for the time being. Coach Niko Kovac’s team defeated the team from Lower Rhine 2-0 (1-0) on the 116th day the Dortmund club was founded, even without any major game highlights.

The victory should calm the previously tense situation at BVB just in time for Christmas. Dortmund had only won three of the previous nine competitive games. Critics of the team’s style of play are unlikely to be silenced.

In front of 81,365 spectators in the local football temple, Julian Brandt scored the goal for the Revierclub in the 10th minute. Maximilian Beier (90+7) scored the final score in stoppage time. Gladbach, on the other hand, appeared harmless in attack. Coach Eugen Polanski’s team wintered in mid-table with 16 points.

For Dortmund, 32 points after 15 games are the best result in seven years. However, the gap to leaders FC Bayern Munich can grow to nine points again on Sunday.

BVB shocks Borussia Mönchengladbach with an early goal

Kovac changed his team to five positions compared to the 1-1 draw in Freiburg last Sunday – also because of personnel problems. Brandt and Niklas Süle, among others, were new to the starting line-up.

That quickly paid off. In co-production, the two gave Dortmund the early lead. Süle crossed from the right to the second post, where Brandt scored with the first chance to make it 1-0 with a remarkable direct shot.

A tussle between Serhou Guirassy and Gladbach’s Philipp Sander immediately in front of the goal caused excitement. It wasn’t just the Gladbach team who complained about an unfair action by the BVB striker. “This is clearly a foul,” said former international Shkodran Mustafi on Sky. Referee Sven Jablonski saw it differently.

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Dortmund didn’t shine afterwards, but despite some astonishing passivity, they kept the action away from their own goal for a long time. This was also because the guests did not take advantage of promising transition situations.

The Gladbachers showed commitment, but played far too imprecisely to put Kovac’s team in trouble. If Gladbach’s keeper Moritz Nicolas hadn’t reacted brilliantly to a huge chance from Karim Adeyemi, it would have been 2-0 after half an hour. When Gladbach had its first chance to score shortly before half-time, Dortmund goalkeeper Gregor Kobel was there to beat Rocco Reitz.

Shortly after the break, the BVB fans celebrated the supposed preliminary decision. A header goal by Guirassy did not count because the 29-year-old was previously offside.

The game now became more hectic. Referee Jablonski showed yellow cards and was repeatedly involved in discussions by the players. Adeyemi became very upset after his substitution and had to be calmed down by BVB sports director Sebastian Kehl.

The Gladbachers struggled on the pitch, but continued to make the wrong decisions too often in the opponent’s half. BVB failed to calm the nerves of their own fans with another goal. Wael Mohya, who had just been substituted, narrowly missed the equalizer out of nowhere. The 16-year-old failed because of Kobel. This is how Dortmund got the narrow lead over time.

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Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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