Bayer Leverkusen and Wolfsburg manufacture ‘the wildest plastico of all time’ | Andy Brassell

6 hours ago 11

They said nobody cared enough for the stakes to be this high. If discussion over the destination of the title (and second place for that matter) has been and gone, there is plenty more in the Bundesliga tank and for Bayer Leverkusen and Wolfsburg, two clubs who will never hold universal approval despite producing teams to thrill us and break the Bayern monopoly in the last two decades, that is truer than for most.

Before RB Leipzig were around to corral all the disapproval of German supporters at large, there was El Plastico. As the two ‘factory’ teams of German football, grown from Bayer and Volkswagen respectively rather than from a fanbase, Leverkusen and Wolfsburg have endured a lifetime of rival fans looking down their noses at them, judging them as not organic or real enough.

Conversely this fixture, if derided by some, has produced a string of memorable games; the 5-4 win for Wolfsburg at the Bay Arena in 2015 during current boss Dieter Hecking’s successful first spell, sealed by Bas Dost’s four goals, or the typically later-than-late Leverkusen 4-3 in September 2024 dusted by Victor Boniface’s stoppage-time winner. So when Bild’s headline called this “the wildest plastico of all time,” they really did mean it was something special.

Tension and huge potential consequences can often make for a stilted, cautious spectacle. Not here. For Wolfsburg, there was an element of predictability in that it was a 20th successive game without a clean sheet – and they didn’t look like keeping one for an instant. Still, the record – the worst defensive run in the club’s history since a previous Dieter Hecking side did the same in 2014 – wouldn’t have mattered at all had Die Wölfe held the 3-1 lead with which they approached half-time, having seemingly found some nerve to help their desperate situation at the bottom of the table.

In that first half, Hecking would have been delighted. If there had been a thick volume of hard luck stories over recent weeks, Wolfsburg had no time to listen to them here. After Jonas Wind’s opener, they were unhappy with the penalty awarded to Leverkusen when Joakim Mæhle feathered a slight touch on Ibrahim Maza in the penalty area – converted for the hosts by Alejandro Grimaldo – but literally seconds later Maehle himself stepped up to blast Wolfsburg back in front with a rocket from long range. When Christian Eriksen converted a Wolfsburg penalty shortly after it was 3-1 and finally the strugglers were showing real fortitude. There was light, at last, at the end of the tunnel.

Instead, the inevitable Grimaldo brought Leverkusen back into the match by finishing a smart move just before half-time, enabling his coach, Kasper Hjulmand, to make the changes at the break to turn the match, and perhaps to change his own fate at the helm. For if we look at Wolfsburg’s moment of crisis, the home side were facing one at 3-1 down. “A change of coach is not a scenario we are considering,” Leverkusen sporting director Simon Rolfes had said before the game but losing at home to a team in the bottom two – to severely compromise Die Werkself’s chances of a return to the Champions League – would have sorely tested that stance. It wouldn’t have been the first time Rolfes has been forced into an abrupt pivot this season.

That, incidentally, is what Hjulmand used to really change the momentum; taking off Equi Fernández, bringing on Patrik Schick to join Christian Kofane up front and really attacking in a season where Leverkusen have often looked too tentative. Schick equalised from another spot-kick before Edmund Tapsoba put the hosts in front. The excellent Maza added another and substitute Malik Tillman made it six after a brilliant slalom along the byline by Ernest Poku.

Christian Eriksen put Wolfsburg 3-1 up from the spot but Leverkusen came back strongly.
Christian Eriksen put Wolfsburg 3-1 up from the spot but Leverkusen came back strongly. Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty Images

Hecking frothed about the “abysmal” performance of referee Martin Petersen afterwards, which has called “simply not up to Bundesliga standards,” and particularly over the decision not to dismiss Tapsoba when the score was still 3-1. Yet the Wolfsburg coach did not attempt to hide from his side’s shortcomings either. “We were immediately too deep, and too passive,” he said of the visitors’ demeanour at the beginning of the second half, perhaps understandable after the concession of Grimaldo’s second just before the break.

There were two bits of good news for Wolfsburg from this weekend; their first half display, and Andrej Ilic’s equaliser for Union Berlin against St Pauli on Sunday afternoon, which prevented the Hamburg club – directly above Hecking and co in the relegation playoff spot – moving six points clear of them.

Leverkusen could do with being more decisive in defence, especially before the trip to Dortmund next Saturday, with Hjulmand channelling his inner Sam Allardyce and calling for “no bullshit” defending going forward after the errors here that could easily have cost them. This is what it has come to. Only one outcome, respectively, will do for Leverkusen and Wolfsburg with six games to go. For two clubs who many Bundesliga fans believe lack the essence of football, their teams are doing a very good impression of being totally immersed in it.

Quick Guide

Bundesliga results

Show

Union Berlin 1-1 St Pauli

Eintracht Frankfurt 2-2 Köln

Bayer Leverkusen 6-3 Wolfsburg

Borussia Mönchengladbach 2-2 Heidenheim

Freiburg 2-3 Bayern Munich

Hamburg 1-1 Augsburg

Hoffenheim 1-2 Mainz

Werder Bremen 1-2 RB Leipzig

Stuttgart 0-2 Borussia Dortmund

Talking points

A rousing comeback from 2-0 down earned Bayern a 3-2 victory at Freiburg – the champions scored twice in stoppage time, with two long-distance efforts from Tom Bischof building the foundation for Lennart Karl’s last-gasp winner, keeping them nine points clear at the top. Yet all eyes were on Bayern’s Säbener Straße training ground, where Harry Kane worked intensively all weekend in an effort to be ready for the Champions League quarter-final with Real Madrid. If Vincent Kompany has so far been non-committal, the England captain is widely expected to start at the Bernabéu on Tuesday.

The gap between second and third is once again bigger than second to first after two more added-time goals for Dortmund improbably won them a tense Saturday Topspiel at Stuttgart, their first win over the Swabians in eight games since Sebastian Hoeness arrived. There were some afters following goals by substitutes Karim Adeyemi and Julian Brandt after what Deniz Undav called “provocative” celebrations but again the biggest story was off the field, with Nico Schlotterbeck denying reports on international duty that he had agreed a new BVB contract. He clarified further (or muddied the waters more, depending on your view) by telling Sky that he “simply wanted to hear Ole’s (Book, new sporting director) perspective on the situation.”

Leipzig are now in third on goal difference after a difficult win at a spirited Werder Bremen while Philipp Tietz’s double for another struggler, Mainz, extended Hoffenheim’s wobble and knocked them into fifth – good news for the chasing Leverkusen.

Elsewhere at the bottom, Köln’s new coach René Wagner got off to a solid start, with the strugglers netting a point after coming from 2-0 down in a blistering Sunday game at Eintracht Frankfurt; three of his substitutes, Luca Waldschmidt, Marius Bülter and Alessio Castro-Montes combined for the latter to equaliser just 34 seconds after the trio came on.

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