RB Leipzig end Leverkusen's unbeaten run – that may not be where their achievements end

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The longest unbeaten run in Bundesliga history is over.

For the first time since May 2023, after 44 domestic matches across 463 days, Bayer Leverkusen were defeated, losing 3-2 at home to RB Leipzig.

Leverkusen have made many miracles. This time, the late goals that have been their specialty could not be found. Xabi Alonso’s side had moved into a 2-0 first half lead at the BayArena, but eventually fell to a Leipzig team full of pace and penetration.

It was the strange game played in an odd mood. Leipzig coach Marco Rose spent the match watching from the press box, after two yellow cards for dissent in the space of 30 seconds. Leverkusen, who have been purring along smoothly for as long as anyone can remember, were flat and vulnerable, at the end of a week blighted by unhelpful news stories. And Leipzig took advantage.

That strange energy around Leverkusen built in the 24 hours before kick-off. For much of the summer, it had been expected that Jonathan Tah, the centrepiece of their defence, would leave the club and head for Bayern Munich. That never happened, but the saga was still attritional enough to affect the relationship between the two clubs.

Speaking at a supporters’ event in the middle of August, Fernando Carro, Leverkusen’s CEO, made disparaging remarks about Max Eberl, Bayern’s board member for sport. Carro said that he thought “nothing, absolutely nothing” of Eberl and would not be negotiating with him further over Tah. It earned him a public rebuke from Jan-Christian Dreesen, Bayern’s CEO, and Carro quickly apologised, admitting that he had been over-emotional.

But the situation flared again on Friday night, in the hours after Germany’s transfer window closed. In an interview with Sky Deutschland, Tah’s agent, Max Bielefeld, blamed Carro for the transfer’s failure, criticising his conduct and suggesting that his client was still carrying a grievance.

“There is one thing that really complicated the negotiations,” he said. “That was the public statements made by Fernando Carro. This shifted the situation away from negotiations into a personal matter, and after that, the discussions were poisoned.

“We all, including Jonathan, would have wished that Fernando Carro had handled it a bit more professionally. From our perspective, that was not professional.”

Leverkusen declined to comment on Bielefeld’s remarks when asked by The Athletic. But Tah, a dressing room leader and a German international centre-back, is now into the final year of contract and showing no indication that he will extend.


It had been expected that Jonathan Tah would leave Leverkusen for Bayern (Rene Nijhuis/Getty Images)

The context was hardly helpful. The cameras lingered on Carro as he sheepishly took his seat before kick-off on Saturday night. They dwelt on Tah, too, as he warmed-up in the media’s glare.

It was melodrama — the kind that may habitually exist around Bayern Munich, but Leverkusen rarely experience. The more games they won last season, the more gushing the praise became; they were the antidote to Bayern’s 11-straight Bundesliga titles.

“I would be lying if I said it wasn’t exhausting, with so much back and forth,” Tah told Sky before the game, before insisting that he was happy at the club. Nobody quite believes that and because Leverkusen lost and Tah was not at his best, this story still has life.

That is not necessarily fair. Leverkusen had chances to equalise and Peter Gulacsi, the visiting goalkeeper, was outstanding. In addition to which, they suffered downturns in games last season, only to find the goals that meant that it never mattered. So, while this may have been a defeat, it was hardly an implosion or cause to worry about where Leverkusen may be headed. They created good chances, but they did not take them.

But it still felt like a waypoint for Rose’s Leipzig. Since joining the club in 2022, his team has been capricious and while talented, have been a side that just cannot be trusted.

But, quietly, that has become out-of-date. While Leverkusen were building their recording-breaking run, Leipzig were assembling their own impressive sequence. Heading into the game on Saturday, Rose’s team had not actually lost since February, when they suffered a narrow loss to Bayern at the Allianz Arena.

That has been missed partly because of the Leverkusen story, which consumed everyone’s attention, but also because of the role RB Leipzig occupy in German football. Constructed in a way that allows them to artificially conform to the 50+1 rule, they are deeply resented by most fans across the country. Unpopular and unloved, they garner little media attention, and tend to be ignored unless there is no choice.

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Lois Openda (right) celebrates scoring the goal that ended Leverkusen’s run (Oliver Kaelke/DeFodi/Getty Images)

Internally Leipzig feel good about this season and positive about the transfer window that has just closed. Xavi Simons, who was excellent against Leverkusen, was convinced to spend another year at the club on loan. Antonio Nusa, the fabulously-gifted Norwegian forward, has joined for a low fee. Benjamin Sesko and Lois Openda, their jewels in attack, have been retained, and El Chadaille Bitshiabu (19) and Castello Lukeba (21), a pair of supremely talented young defenders, are a year older and into their second seasons.

And while there have been departures, each has been mitigated by circumstances. Dani Olmo was sold to Barcelona, but €60m for a player who was so often unavailable is tolerable. Mohamed Simakan, the talented French defender, was allowed to leave after he received a decadent offer from Al-Nassr in the Saudi Pro League, but Feyenoord’s Lutsharel Getruida, an Eredivisie champions with Arne Slot in 2023, has already arrived as a replacement.

It is worth remembering that Leipzig ran Leverkusen close in both Bundesliga games last season, losing 3-2 twice. Alonso’s defence was troubled in many of the same ways, too — by Openda’s wicked speed and dead-eyed finishing, and by Simon’s roaming runs and bewitching technique. Both were hugely influential again — Openda might have given the best performance of his Bundesliga career to date, scoring twice, but also withstanding a physical battering at the hands of Leverkusen’s centre-backs. Openda is gifted, but he can handle himself, too, and typified Leipzig’s combative mood.

And there does tend to be a legacy to this sort of win. When the full-time whistle blew, Leipzig’s substitutes spilled out across the pitch, as they would to mark a major achievement. Was this that? Maybe. Rose was without his captain, the suspended Willi Orban. He lost lynchpin midfielder Amadou Haidara after a clash of heads in the first half and midfielders Christoph Baumgartner and Xaver Schlager were both injured and unavailable. He also, of course, had to watch the last hour of the game from the top of the main stand, after a ludicrous display of dissent towards the referee and a strange loss of control.

But still Leipzig got across the line. Yes, for now, two games into the season, this is just the bookend of a magnificent Leverkusen achievement. In time, though, you wonder what that belief might be worth to Marco Rose and his players, and how it might make them more than theory.

(Top photo: Federico Gambarini/Getty Images)



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Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

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