After an end-to-end, 5-3 thriller in the Supercup 2022 last weekend, the top tier of German football, the Bundesliga begins in earnest.
With Ole at the wheel, Sadio Mane at Bayern Munich, Karim Adeyemi at Borussia Dortmund, Christopher Nkunku at Leipzig and Daniel Farke in charge of Gladbach, there’s a lot to expect in the new 2022/23 Bundesliga season.
And what a start: reigning champions FC Bayern München visit UEFA Europa League Champions Eintracht Frankfurt on Friday night, before the first Berlin derby of the season and the first “Top Match” of the year between UEFA Champions League qualifiers Borussia Dortmund and Bayer 04 Leverkusen on Saturday evening.
Saturday afternoon will see 1. FC Union Berlin clash with Hertha Berlin, two teams which had contrasting fortunes last term. A crunch encounter will follow on Saturday evening between Dortmund and Leverkusen, who finished second and third last time out; and last season’s cup winners RB Leipzig will travel to face VfB Stuttgart on Sunday.
Bundesliga.com has five reasons why you should look forward to the new season…
The transfer market has been a hive of activity once again this summer with a raft of exciting players making moves to and within Germany’s top flight. Bayern have lured Sadio Mane away from Liverpool, snared Matthijs de Ligt, and snapped up Ryan Gravenberch, Noussair Mazraoui and Mathys Tel.
Last season’s runners-up, Borussia Dortmund haven’t held back either, bringing in centre-backs Niklas Süle and Nico Schlotterbeck from Bayern and Freiburg respectively, Salih Özcan from Cologne, and Karim Adeyemi – Europe’s top scorer under the age of 21 – back to his homeland from Red Bull Salzburg.
Bayer Leverkusen have also strengthened in attack with the signature of Czech starlet Adam Hlozek; UEFA Europa League winners Eintracht Frankfurt have bolstered their ranks with 2014 FIFA World Cup winner Mario Götze; Freiburg have brought Matthias Ginter home; and Union Berlin have landed US striker Jordan Siebatcheu.
However, it’s not just new faces in new colours on the pitch. You’ll see new figures on the touchlines. Ole Werner’s arrival with promoted Werder Bremen means Julian Nagelsmann is no longer the youngest boss in the Bundesliga.
Ex-Norwich City coach Daniel Farke also gets his chance on Germany’s biggest stage as he takes over at Borussia Mönchengladbach, while Enrico Maaßen swaps the BVB reserves for the Augsburg first team and his top-flight bow.
Niko Kovac is back in the Bundesliga as the man who guided Bayern to a domestic double and Frankfurt to the DFB Cup takes over at Wolfsburg. And he can look forward to taking on prominent opposition as Schalke and Bremen mark their top-flight return after a year down in Bundesliga 2.
Die Königsblauen and Grünweißen have spent a combined 108 seasons in the Bundesliga and are part of the German footballing landscape. The pair boasted the best attendance records in the second division last year and add yet more to the fantastic support the Bundesliga is known for with passionate fans and iconic stadiums.
This year’s historic FIFA World Cup in Qatar, being played over November and December, means a shift away from the schedule we’ve come to know in the Bundesliga.
The good thing for fans is that the summer break is a short one, with the campaign beginning on 5 August – the league’s earliest start since 2011/12. And that follows the Supercup between champions Bayern and DFB Cup holders RB Leipzig on 30 July, which is the same weekend of the first round of the cup. Bundesliga 2 kicks off on 15 July.
We do get our now traditional Englische Woche (midweek fixtures) in the week before of the winter break, but the year’s final fixtures are as early as 13 November – eight days before the World Cup starts.
The final in Qatar is on 18 December, but then we have to wait a month until the Bundesliga resumes. The action finally gets going again on 20 January with another Englische Woche. We then play through to 27 May (the following day in Bundesliga 2). The DFB Cup final is the week after on 3 June, followed by the UEFA Champions League final seven days later.
The Bundesliga has boasted the highest goals-per-game rate among Europe’s top five leagues in four of the last five seasons.
Germany was top of the pile again last year with a crowd-thrilling return of 3.12 goals every 90 minutes. Bayern (2.85) and Dortmund (2.5) were also first and third across top-flight teams in Germany, England, Spain, Italy and France for the most goals per game.
Yet even with the desire for goals and victory, fair play is at the forefront in the Bundesliga, which saw the lowest average for red cards in 2021/22. The DFL has even created a new award with partner Milka to honour those special moments of fair play.
The Bundesliga hasn’t quite been the same in recent years with government-enforced restrictions on crowds due to the pandemic. But light appeared at the end of the tunnel late last season as we once again got to enjoy the sight and sound of capacity stadiums.
With Schalke and Bremen back,the average size of the 18 top-flight grounds increases to over 46,500. And the fan experience is one of the things that makes the Bundesliga so special. We’ll get to see that in full action again from August – and hopefully never again forced to stay away.
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