2010–11 FC Bayern Munich season

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Bayern Munich
2010–11 season
Chairman Uli Hoeneß
Manager Louis van Gaal (to April)
Andries Jonker (from April)
Bundesliga 3rd
DFB-Pokal Semi-finals
DFL-Supercup Winners
UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Top goalscorer League:
Mario Gómez (28)
All:
Mario Gómez (39)
Highest home attendance 69,000
Lowest home attendance 69,000
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2010–11 season of FC Bayern Munich began on 21 June with their first training session.

Off-season

Bayern already made a few squad changes. They released the previously loaned out Luca Toni from his contract and sold Christian Lell to Hertha Berlin.[1][2] The contracts of a few players expired and were not extended. Michael Rensing eventually ended up at 1. FC Köln, while Andreas Görlitz joined FC Ingolstadt 04. Jose Ernesto Sosa was sold to Napoli.

Breno and Andreas Ottl returned from 1. FC Nürnberg, where they had been on loan since the winter break, Toni Kroos came back from an 18-month loan to Leverkusen, and Edson Braafheid returned from a six-month spell at Celtic. Beside Rouven Sattelmaier, Bayern opted in the end to make no new signings in the summer transfer window ending at 31 August.

Pre-season

Head coach Louis van Gaal divided the pre-season into two phases, as many of his players participated in the World Cup and were only later available for the club. The initial phase began with the first training on 21 June. In this phase, which lasted until 4 July, the first squad trained with the second team and a friendly at the fanclub "Lohner Bayern Union" was held. On 30 June, the club announced that 18-year-old David Alaba had signed his first professional contract at Bayern.[3]

The second phase began on 15 July. As 13 players participated in the 2010 World Cup, Van Gaal had only 11 first teamers at his disposal. His training squad was thus complemented with the second team.[4] Franck Ribéry and Martín Demichelis were the first players from World Cup squads that resumed training, but only after the training camp in Riva del Garda from 19–24 July. The remaining nine players from the German and Dutch squads returned on 2 August. While Van Gaal was proud to have the most players of any club in the final games of the World Cup, he lamented that "this is not a good pre-season." But he was even more displeased with the FIFA scheduling an international matchday on 11 August, in between the Super Cup and the first round of the DFB-Pokal. The coach actually advised his players to ask the German Football Association (DFB) to be excused for the game: "If eight Bayern players said they'd withdraw, the DFB would listen, I believe."[5] The warning ended in a healthy compromise, where most of the players with substantial playing time at the World Cup were not picked by German coach Joachim Löw. For Bayern, this meant losing only Toni Kroos and Mario Gómez to the international date. The pre-season ended on 16 August with the first round of the DFB-Pokal, where Bayern played Germania Windeck and advanced to the second round.[6]

There was unfortunate news at the return of the last internationals for Bayern, after medical tests confirmed that Arjen Robben's sustained injury in a pre-World cup friendly had not properly healed and that he would be out for a further two months.[7] Bayern Chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge stated, "Of course, Bayern Munich are very angry" with the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB), and would be seeking compensation from them, continuing, "Once again we must pay the bill as a club after a player is seriously injured playing for a national team."[7] At the end of August, new tests showed slower than anticipated healing in Robben's muscle, leading to fears that Robben might not play again before 2011.

Season

Bayern were involved during the winter transfer, with Bayern adding Luiz Gustavo from 1899 Hoffenheim and David Alaba moving the other way in a loan deal. Martín Demichelis was sold to Málaga, and one week before the end of the winter transfer period, captain Mark van Bommel requested to be released from his contract and moved to Milan.[8] Edson Braafheid also signed for 1899 Hoffenheim on a permanent basis, while Maximilian Haas also left the club, signing for English team Middlesbrough on the last day of the winter transfer window.

Competitions

Bundesliga

The Bundesliga campaign began on 20 August when Bayern played in the opening game of the season against Wolfsburg.[9]

Match
Date
Ground
Opponent
Score1
Pos.
Pts.
GD
Report
1 20 August H VfL Wolfsburg 2 – 1 6 3 1
2 28 August A 1. FC Kaiserslautern 0 – 2 12 3 -1
3 11 September H Werder Bremen 0 – 0 11 4 -1
4 18 September H 1. FC Köln 0 – 0 9 5 -1
5 21 September A 1899 Hoffenheim 2 – 1 8 8 0
6 25 September H Mainz 05Germany 1 – 2 9 8 -1
7 3 October A Borussia Dortmund 0 – 2 12 8 -3
8 16 October H Hannover 96 3 – 0 10 11 0
9 22 October A Hamburger SV 0 – 0 11 12 0
10 30 October H SC FreiburgGermany 4 – 2 7 15 2
11 6 November A Borussia Mönchengladbach 3 – 3 9 16 2
12 14 November H 1. FC Nürnberg 3 – 0 6 19 5
13 20 November A Bayer LeverkusenGermany 1 – 1 8 20 5
14 27 November H Eintracht Frankfurt 4 – 1 5 23 8
15 4 December A Schalke 04Germany 0 – 2 7 23 6
16 11 December H FC St. Pauli 3 – 0 6 26 9
17 19 December A VfB Stuttgart 5 – 3 5 29 11
18 15 January A VfL Wolfsburg 1 – 1 5 30 11
19 22 January H 1. FC Kaiserslautern 5 – 1 4 33 15
20 29 January A Werder Bremen 3 – 1 3 36 17
21 5 February A 1. FC Köln 2 – 3 5 36 16
22 12 February H 1899 Hoffenheim 4 – 0 3 39 20
23 19 February A Mainz 05Germany 3 – 1 3 42 22
24 26 February H Borussia Dortmund 1 – 3 4 42 20
25 5 March A Hannover 96 1 – 3 5 42 18
26 12 March H Hamburger SV 6 – 0 4 45 24
27 19 March A SC FreiburgGermany 2 – 1 4 48 25
28 2 April H Borussia Mönchengladbach 1 – 0 3 51 26
29 9 April A 1. FC Nürnberg 1 – 1 4 52 26
30 16 April H Bayer LeverkusenGermany 5 – 1 3 55 30
31 23 April A Eintracht Frankfurt 1 – 1 4 56 30
32 30 April H Schalke 04Germany 4 – 1 3 59 33
33 7 May A FC St. Pauli 8 – 1 3 62 40
34 14 May H VfB Stuttgart 2 – 1 3 65 41

Last updated: 14 May 2011
Source: DFB.de
1Bayern Munich goals come first.
Ground's country's flag and opponent's country's flag shown when from a different country of Bayern Munich.
Pos. = Position in league, Pts. = Points, GD = Goal difference, Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.

DFB-Pokal

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UEFA Champions League

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Bayern Munich qualified for the group stage of the 2010–11 UEFA Champions League by winning the Bundesliga in 2009–10. There they were drawn into Group E with Italian runners-up Roma, Swiss double champions Basel and Romanian champions CFR Cluj. Bayern finished the group in first place with a club record of 15 points. In the Round of 16 they were drawn against their opponent from the previous Champions League final, Internazionale.

Group stage

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Group E
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Germany Bayern Munich 6 5 0 1 16 6 +10 15
Italy Roma 6 3 1 2 10 11 −1 10
Switzerland Basel 6 2 0 4 8 11 −3 6
Romania CFR Cluj 6 1 1 4 6 12 −6 4

Knockout phase

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Round of 16

DFL-Supercup

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Bayern faced Schalke 04 in the first official DFL-Supercup in 14 years. Normally, the league champions would play the cup winners, but as Bayern won both titles, they faced the league's runners-up, Schalke 04.

Friendlies

LIGA total! Cup 2010

Bayern played in the 2010 LIGA total! Cup. The tournament was held in the Veltins-Arena and organized by Bayern's prime sponsor, Deutsche Telekom. In this tournament matches consisted of two 30 minutes halves each. The Reds faced Köln in the first game and Schalke 04 in the second game.[10]

Other friendlies

The fanclub "Fanclub Lohner Bayern Union" won the right to host the annual Dream Game, a game Bayern contests against one of its fanclubs with the earnings going to charity.[11]


On the final day of their training camp in Riva del Garda Bayern faced a selection of players from Trentino in a friendly.[12]


Bayern hosted a team selected by their sponsor, the Fitness First company, on 8 August. The Fitness First Winterstars team consisted of several Winter Olympic Games gold medal winners and four fans. The money raised in the match will be used to support Munich's candidacy for the 2018 Winter Olympics.[13]


In the final friendly of the 2010 pre-season, Bayern hosted Real Madrid. The game has been called the Beckenbauer testimonial match as Franz Beckenbauer did not receive a proper farewell game when he left the club in 1977 for New York Cosmos. Incidentally, José Mourinho, the coach who bested Bayern in the previous Champions League final with Internazionale, led Madrid.[14]


On 17 November, Bayern arranged a friendly against Unterhaching on short notice with several of the players were away with their national sides. The primary aim was to give previously injured players Franck Ribéry, Breno and Diego Contento some match practice.[15]


Bayern attends three post-season friendlies before the summer break.

Players

Squad information

As of 14 May 2011[16]

Squad Season 2010-11
No. Player Nat. Birthday at FCB since previous club BL matches BL goals Cup matches Cup goals CL matches CL goals
Goalkeepers
1 Hans-Jörg Butt Germany 28 May 1974 2008 Benfica 22(1) 0 3 0 4 0
22 Rouven Sattelmaier Germany 7 Aug 1987 2010 Regensburg 0 0 0 0 0 0
35 Thomas Kraft Germany 22 Jul 1988 2004 Junior Team 12 0 2 0 4 0
Defenders
2 Breno Brazil 13 Oct 1989 2008 São Paulo 7(6) 0 2 0 2(1) 0
5 Daniel Van Buyten Belgium 7 Feb 1978 2006 Hamburg 18(3) 2 0(3) 0 6 0
21 Philipp Lahm (captain) Germany 11 Nov 1983 1995 Junior Team 34 3 5 0 8 0
26 Diego Contento Germany 1 May 1990 1995 Junior Team 12(2) 0 1 0 2(1) 0
28 Holger Badstuber Germany 13 Mar 1989 2002 Junior Team 21(2) 0 3 0 4(1) 0
Midfielders
7 Franck Ribéry France 7 Apr 1983 2007 Marseille 22(3) 7 3 2 4 2
8 Hamit Altıntop Turkey 8 Dec 1982 2007 Schalke 04 8(6) 2 2(1) 0 4(3) 0
10 Arjen Robben Netherlands 23 Jan 1984 2009 Real Madrid 13(1) 12 1(1) 1 2 0
16 Andreas Ottl Germany 1 Mar 1985 1996 Junior Team 9(6) 0 3 1 3 0
23 Danijel Pranjić Croatia 2 Dec 1981 2009 Heerenveen 22(6) 0 4 0 6(1) 0
30 Luiz Gustavo Brazil 23 Jul 1987 2011 1899 Hoffenheim 14(1) 1 2 0 2 0
31 Bastian Schweinsteiger (vice-captain) Germany 1 Aug 1984 1998 Junior Team 31(1) 4 4 2 8 2
39 Toni Kroos Germany 4 Jan 1990 2006 Junior Team 19(8) 1 2(1) 1 5(1) 0
44 Anatoliy Tymoshchuk Ukraine 30 Mar 1979 2009 Zenit Saint Petersburg 23(3) 3 5 0 5(1) 1
Strikers
11 Ivica Olić Croatia 14 Sep 1979 2009 Hamburg 3(3) 0 0(1) 0 1(1) 0
18 Miroslav Klose Germany 9 Jun 1978 2007 Werder Bremen 9(11) 1 3(1) 3 1(1) 1
25 Thomas Müller Germany 13 Sep 1989 2000 Junior Team 23(2) 12 5 3 7(1) 3
33 Mario Gómez Germany 10 Jul 1985 2009 Stuttgart 27(5) 28 2(1) 3 6(2) 8
Players transferred after the start of the season
4 Edson Braafheid Netherlands 8 Apr 1983 2009 Twente 2(1) 0 0(1) 0 0(1) 0
6 Martín Demichelis Argentina 20 Dec 1980 2003 River Plate 3(3) 1 1 0 2 0
17 Mark van Bommel (captain) Netherlands 22 Apr 1977 2006 Barcelona 12(1) 0 2 0 3 0
27 David Alaba Austria 24 Jun 1992 2008 Junior Team 0(2) 0 0(1) 0 0 0
Last updated: 14 May 2011

Goal scorers

Information current as of end of 14 May 2011

Transfers and loans

Transfers in

N
P
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Moving from
Type
Transfer
window
Ends
Transfer
fee
Ref.
2 DF Brazil Breno 20 Non-EU 1. FC Nürnberg Loan return Summer 2012 n/a
16 MF Germany Andreas Ottl 25 EU 1. FC Nürnberg Loan return Summer 2011 n/a
39 MF Germany Toni Kroos 20 EU Bayer LeverkusenGermany Loan return Summer 2012 n/a
4 DF Netherlands Edson Braafheid 27 EU CelticScotland Loan return Summer 2013 n/a
22 GK Germany Rouven Sattelmaier 22 EU Jahn Regensburg Transfer Summer 2012 Free
30 MF Brazil Luiz Gustavo 23 Non-EU 1899 Hoffenheim Transfer Winter 2015 €15M

Total spending: Decrease €15.0 million

Transfers out

N
P
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Moving to
Type
Transfer
window
Transfer
fee
Source
1 GK Germany Michael Rensing 26 EU 1. FC Köln End of contract Summer n/a
13 DF Germany Andreas Görlitz 28 EU FC Ingolstadt End of contract Summer n/a
9 FW Italy Luca Toni 32 EU GenoaItaly Released Summer n/a
30 DF Germany Christian Lell 25 EU Hertha BSCGermany Sold Summer €0.5 M
32 MF Turkey Mehmet Ekici 20 EU 1. FC Nürnberg Loaned out Summer n/a
20 MF Argentina José Sosa 25 Non-EU NapoliItaly Sold Summer €3 M
6 DF Argentina Martín Demichelis 29 Non-EU MálagaSpain Sold Winter undisclosed, reported €3-4 M
27 MF Austria David Alaba 18 EU 1899 Hoffenheim Loaned out Winter n/a
17 MF Netherlands Mark van Bommel 33 EU MilanItaly Released Winter €1.5M
4 DF Netherlands Edson Braafheid 27 EU 1899 Hoffenheim Released Winter Released

Last updated: 3 January

Total income: Increase €8.0-9.0 million

Management and coaching staff

Since the beginning of the 2009–10 season, Louis van Gaal is the manager of Bayern Munich. He brought some personnel of his own to the club.[17]

Position Staff
Manager Louis van Gaal
Assistant manager Andries Jonker
Assistant manager Hermann Gerland
Goalkeeping coach Frans Hoek
Sports psychologist Philipp Laux
Fitness and rehab coach Thomas Wilhelmi
Fitness coach Marcelo Martins
Fitness coach Andreas Kornmayer
Leading physician Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Wohlfahrt
Physician Lutz Hänsel
Physician Peter Ueblacker
Physiotherapist Fredi Binder
Physiotherapist Gerry Hoffmann
Physiotherapist Stephan Weickert
Physiotherapist Gianni Bianchi
Match analyst Marcel Bout
Video analyst Max Reckers
Training physiologist Jos van Dijk

Team kit

Home
Home Alternate
Away
Away Alternate
Away Alt. 2
Third
Type Shirt Shorts Socks First appearance / Info
Home Red / White stripes Red Black
Home Alt. Red / White stripes Red Red 2010 DFL-Supercup
Away White / Light grey hoops Navy White
Away Alt. White / Light grey hoops White White LIGA total! Cup, Final, 1 August against Schalke 04
Away Alt. 2 White / Light grey hoops White Navy Bundesliga, Match 25, 5 March against Hannover 96
Third Navy Navy Navy European Kit

Reserve team

Bayern's reserve team finished in last place in the 3rd Liga, resulting in relegation to the Regionalliga Süd, and ending a run of 38 years in the third tier of German football (the highest possible for a reserve team). They were coached by Hermann Gerland until the 33rd matchday, and Rainer Ulrich thereafter.

Squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Germany GK Rouven Sattelmaier
2 Sweden DF Oscar Lewicki
3 Germany MF Nicolas Jüllich
4 Germany DF Julian Leist
5 Ghana DF Christian Saba
6 Germany MF Danny Schwarz
7 France FW Saër Sène
8 Netherlands Antilles MF Boy Deul
9 Germany FW Thomas Kurz
10 Turkey FW Deniz Yılmaz
11 Italy FW Nicola Sansone
12 Austria DF Marcel Holzmann (on loan from Red Bull Salzburg until January)
13 Croatia DF Ivan Ćosić
14 Germany MF Maximilian Haas (joined Middlesbrough in January)
15 Germany DF Mario Erb
16 Turkey DF Cüneyt Köz
17 Austria MF Christoph Knasmüllner (joined Internazionale in January)
No. Position Player
23 Germany MF Taygun Kuru
24 Germany DF Stefan Schürf
25 Germany GK Maximilian Riedmüller
26 United States MF Fabian Hürzeler
27 Germany DF Max Dombrowka
28 Austria MF Deniz Mujić
29 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Nazif Hajdarović
31 Austria MF David Alaba (loaned to 1899 Hoffenheim from January)
32 Germany DF Florian Pflügler
33 Germany GK Ferdinand Oswald
35 Germany GK Thomas Kraft
37 Germany MF Dejan Janjatović
38 Germany DF Antonio Pangallo (from SSV Ulm 1846 in January)
39 Germany MF Bastian Müller (from SC Verl in January)
40 Germany FW Marcos Alvarez (from Eintracht Frankfurt II in January)
41 Germany FW Steffen Wohlfarth (from Ingolstadt 04 in January)

References

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External links

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