Last year on this day Bayern Munich faced RB Salzburg in a friendly following the winter break. What ensued was a thumping 6-0 victory by dint of an exceptional Thomas Müller performance. This year, there may be no Müller, but the fixture is back and both sides look promising. A fantastic second-half performance with key contributions from Bayern’s controversial figure Lennart Karl resulted in a 5-0 win this year for the Bavarians.

There is perhaps no detail or facet in this fixture that isn’t heaven and earth apart.

Facet #1: Bayern vs Salzburg

There is no doubt that Bayern were clearly the better side. Salzburg were overrun, incapable of handling our press and pace. However, they did fare better than last year. Speaking of last year…

Facet #2: Bayern 2025 vs Bayern 2026

Leaving aside the squad itself, let’s talk tactics.

Though both Bayern squads were the dominant ones on the pitch respectively, there is a clear difference. The 2025 team was overwhelmingly dominant with key players like Olise, Kane and Sané pulling their weight. There was a strong theme there — individual brilliance. Every single player had an excellent outing — notably Thomas Müller and Eric Dier, both of whom scored spectacular goals.

This year, and particularly the first half, featured a squad that was certainly the better one, but could not put up anything worth speaking of. Hardly anyone barring Hiroki Itō shone in the first half and Salzburg tried their best in jamming Bayern’s creative outlets. The second half however, was testament to Bayern’s results with individual dominance. Speaking of the halves…

Facet #3: First half vs second half

Facet #3 deserved its own heading

The first half was so incredibly dull from Bayern, who despite being the better side, could not score.

What actually worked in their favor was the substitutions — the second half featured a solid mix of youth and senior team players — perhaps the best of their individual positions.

What the second half proved was:

  1. Tactics matter, but who you implement them with matters more.
  2. The bigger the better doesn’t always apply — youth players clearly deserve more chances with the senior team.

Not a single youth player was underwhelming, and while it is certainly up for argument that Salzburg may not be the most appropriate side to decide their big-game preparedness, Bayern cannot continue to sleep on this goldmine.

It is safe to say the campus has not produced this good a bunch in ages, and one can no more complain of the lack of quality. The senior team could use this mix of youth and experience and bring out magic. Hey, speaking of youth…

To touch just very briefly on the Karl saga, I just want to iterate that I, just like every other 17-year-old, was not very good with knowing what to say and when and where to say it. There needs to be a bit of grace in this situation — he is just a teenager. And let’s talk facts — given today’s game, I doubt his mind is in Madrid already.

Here are the facts — Karl is still an insanely special talent. Whether it be his dribbling, his ability to evade defenders, his first touch, or even his finishing, it is not very often one finds a 17-year-old possessing the skillsets of Franck Ribéry, Arjen Robben and even Lionel Messi.

The fact is that he may be letting his emotions enter the pitch, too. It is rather interesting that right after such backlash, not only did he provide one of his most aggressive performances of late, but also the celebration on the first goal he scored was…rather surprising.

Karl’s goals were excellent and it was clear from the start of the second half that he was the bright spot.

At the 71st minute, Karl passed to Aleksandar Pavlović, who then picked out Felipe Chávez; Chávez then passed to Karl, who took a dangerous, but beautiful shot. The finish on that goal felt almost like a statement to remind fans of who he was. Following that, at the 74th, Karl returned the favor to Chávez. Gnabry made a run, identifying Chávez who then, following a few deflections, got a pass back from Karl to finish. Finally, at the 86th, Díaz punted the ball across to Karl who then blindly but perfectly headed the ball into the net.

Karl was perhaps the man of the match with that performance. But who else was good?

Who stood out and in what way?

  • Jonas Urbig: Bayern own’s Manuel Neuer replacement had a rather quiet half barring ten minutes of chaos in between.
  • Cassiano Kiala: The youth shows in Kiala — in both his positives and his errors. His judgement certainly needs more game time to improve but Bayern have certainly struck gold with a good youth CB.
  • Hiroki Itō: Perhaps the best player of the half, Itō‘s attacking prowess is certainly one to watch out for. While he was fantastic at left-back today, it would be incredible to watch him play alongside Davies at CB.
  • David Santos Daiber: The youngster made two very crucial blocks and was the better midfielder in the pivot.
  • Michael Olise: The Frenchman looks less exhausted and is returning to his form. It looks like the break has done him good.
  • Wisdom Mike: The youngster has the ambition, the enthusiasm and the skill to start more games.
  • Harry Kane: It is rather remarkable that Harry Kane did not have a standout game.
  • Sven Ulreich: Ulreich has always been an excellent keeper and tonight was no exception as he turned sweeper-keeper.
  • Deniz Ofli: The youngster shone in attacking movements and was eager to make an impact.
  • Kim Min-Jae: Solid, reliable and error-free is how one could describe Kim’s performance.
  • Konrad Laimer: The Austrian was crucial for his side and with every passing day, it is more clear that there is perhaps no player more quietly important to Bayern than him.
  • Tom Bischof – Aleksandar Pavlović: With a well-deserved goal, Bischof alongside Pavlović put up a very good performance.
  • Luis Díaz: It is clear how starved for attacking output Bayern can be without Díaz.
  • Felipe Chávez: The attacker was excellent, with a good eye for goal.
  • Lennart Karl: A brace and an assist.
  • Serge Gnabry: Gnabry was not as impactful as usual, but one could potentially blame his hairstyle for the same.

The fans: 10/10 work with the pyrotechnics.

If you are looking for more Bayern Munich and German national team coverage, check out the latest episodes of Bavarian Podcast Works, which you can get on Acast, Spotify, Apple, or any leading podcast distributor…

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • New, improved notifications system!
  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts