Soccer: Bayern look to raise game after Arsenal demolition
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[March 08, 2017]
BERLIN (Reuters) - Bayern Munich
may well have dumped Arsenal out of the Champions League, but the
German club admitted they were off the pace for part of Wednesday's
clash and will need to raise their game to stand a realistic chance
of lifting the trophy.
The Bundesliga champions were trailing 1-0 in the round of 16 return
tie at the Emirates when Arsenal captain Laurent Koscielny was sent
off.
They then equalized with a Robert Lewandowski penalty early in the
second half before firing in four more goals to complete a 10-2
aggregate drubbing.
"We were sluggish up until the penalty (Koscielny red card) and our
equalizer," said Bayern defender Mats Hummels. "We were basically in
maintenance mode. You had the feeling we were not 100 percent there.
That was not good."
The Bavarians are eyeing a repeat of their treble-winning 2013
season and Wednesday's victory delivered an ominous warning to their
rivals.
Despite their sixth straight last eight appearance, however, club
CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge also urged the players to remain grounded.
"We would be well advised not to crown ourselves Champions League
favorites," Rummenigge said. "We were close to letting in a second
goal. We have merely advanced to the last eight..."
"We should not be dreaming but instead remain calm and see who we
will face in the quarter-finals," he said. "...This should be a
lesson for us to remain concentrated and focused. The Champions
League does not forgive any weak matches or weak halves."
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Bayern Munich's Arturo
Vidal scores their fourth goal Reuters / Stefan Wermuth Livepic
But after a run of narrow wins in the league, Carlo Ancelotti's team
could be starting to peak at just the right time.
On top of the 10 goals against Arsenal, Bayern have added 11 in
their last two league games and three in a German Cup win over
Schalke 04 last week.
"It is difficult to stay focused when you are 5-1 ahead," said coach
Ancelotti. "We should have controlled the game better than we did."
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; editing by John Stonestreet) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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