Last week, Germany and Italy lined up against each other for a friendly, but the atmosphere was everything but. The reason is that, apart from Brazil, there is no one country against whom Germany has a worse record than Italy: over the last 30 games, they have only booked seven wins against the Italians, whilst drawing nine and losing a disastrous fourteen games. To make matters worse, their last win was 16 years ago, and one of the many defeats they have suffered fell at just the wrong time and in just the wrong competition.
Of course, the Germany-Italy statistics are by no means the only set of important numbers in football. Just look at the record for games between 1899 Hoffenheim and Bayern München: since entering the top league, the villagers of Hoffenheim have not one a single game against their big-city rivals, and the most recent clash this weekend on the 22nd match day of the season was no trend-buster, with Bayern winning 4:0. For the first time in a long time, the Arjen Robben-Franck Ribery duet was back firing on all cylinders and the Bayern motor started ticking over nicely.
Meanwhile, Bayern’s northern rivals in Hamburg had some engine difficulty against VfL Wolfsburg. Whilst they may have actually won, the 1:0 was a narrow victory which clearly cost the team no small effort; nevertheless, despite looking a bit ropey, HSV improved their balance sheet and spoiled the début of Wolfsburg’s new coach, Pierre Littbarski. His position is a precarious one, what with him being little more than an emergency replacement for Steve McClaren, and unless he gets wins soon, he’ll probably follow the Englishman’s inauspicious course to the dole queue.
Eintracht Frankfurt would loved to done like HSV and finally scored a victory, however slim. Thus far, they are the weakest team in the second half of the season, with just one point and not even one goal in five games. The match against Leverkusen was not going to help them with that, since “the ‘Kusen” was on top form, and then there was that unfortunate disagreement between coach Michael Skibbe and striker Ioannis Amanatidis. Skibbe had said that Amanatidis was too unfit to be in regular rotation, but Amanatidis sees himself as the leading player in the squad and blasted Skibbe very publically. All of a sudden, he was out of a job: but it remains to be seen whether this will help Skibbe.
Meanwhile, Mönchengladbach too are hoping for some better-looking match statistics: but under the mantle of “no pain, no gain”, the management had to ruin another delicate set of numbers – the number of coaches fired this season, with Michael Frontzeck having to clear out his locker immediately following the game yesterday. Which just goes to show you: whether big international games or the lower reaches of the Bundesliga – the numbers speak for themselves.
Results matchday 22:
Bayern München – 1899 Hoffenheim 4:0
FC Schalke 04 – SC Freiburg 1:0
VfB Stuttgart – 1. FC Nürnberg 1:4
VfL Wolfsburg – Hamburger SV 0:1
Eintracht Frankfurt – Bayer Leverkusen 0:3
FC St. Pauli – Borussia Mönchengladbach 3:1
1. FC Kaiserslautern – Borussia Dortmund 1:1
1. FC Köln – 1. FSV Mainz 05 4:2
Werder Bremen – Hannover 96 1:1
Table:
1 Borussia Dortmund 52 P
2 Bayer Leverkusen 42 P
3 Bayern München 39 P
4 Hannover 96 38 P
5 1. FSV Mainz 05 37 P
6 SC Freiburg 34 P
7 Hamburger SV 33 P
8 1899 Hoffenheim 32 P
9 1. FC Nürnberg 32 P
10 FC Schalke 04 29 P
11 Eintracht Frankfurt 27 P
12 FC St. Pauli 25 P
13 1. FC Köln 25 P
14 Werder Bremen 24 P
15 VfL Wolfsburg 23 P
16 1. FC Kaiserslautern 23 P
17 VfB Stuttgart 19 P
18 Borussia Mönchengladbach 16 P






