Harry Kane netted his 21st Bundesliga goal of the season as Bayern Munich recovered from an early setback to secure an emphatic 5-1 away victory over RB Leipzig on Saturday.
The result re-established Bayern’s commanding 11-point cushion at the top of the table ahead of Borussia Dortmund and kept their historic campaign firmly on track.

Still unbeaten, Bayern have surrendered only four points so far and now sit on a record-equalling 50 points after 18 matches. Their attacking output has been equally remarkable, with 71 goals scored, the highest tally ever recorded at this stage of a Bundesliga season.
Leipzig struck first through Romulo in the opening half, but Bayern transformed the contest after the interval. Serge Gnabry, Kane, Jonathan Tah, Aleksandar Pavlovic and Michael Olise all found the net as the visitors overwhelmed the hosts.
Bayern head coach Vincent Kompany admitted his side struggled before the break, saying Leipzig were “twice as good as we were” in the first half, before adding “but in the second-half — my god, the boys delivered.

“We weren’t afraid and we really went for it.”
Romulo, who had given Leipzig the lead, reflected on his side’s collapse, saying “we played 75 minutes really on top, then I don’t know what happened, we turned off our minds. We have to learn something out of that.”
Leipzig began confidently and broke the deadlock after 20 minutes when Romulo slipped past Tah to turn in Antonio Nusa’s pass from close range. However, their advantage quickly evaporated after the restart. Dayot Upamecano dispossessed Christoph Baumgartner and released Gnabry, who calmly steered the ball into the bottom corner to level the score.

Bayern moved ahead in the 67th minute following another defensive lapse. Olise’s floated delivery appeared harmless until Ridle Baku lost his balance, gifting Kane the space to smash home from close range. With Leipzig’s resistance fading, Tah, Pavlovic and Olise added further goals in the closing stages, while Jamal Musiala made a long-awaited return from the bench after six months out injured.
Earlier in the day, Borussia Dortmund were forced to rely on a dramatic late penalty from Emre Can to edge struggling St Pauli 3-2 at home. The decisive moment came in the fifth minute of stoppage time after VAR ruled that Maximilian Beier had been fouled.
“What a rollercoaster ride,” Can told Sky Germany.
“We need to do much better to settle things down and to convert our chances,” he added.

Dortmund had recovered from a sluggish first half when Julian Brandt tapped in shortly before the break. Karim Adeyemi then doubled the advantage early in the second period, finishing off a Fabio Silva assist.
Despite sitting bottom of the table and having won only once since September, St Pauli stunned the hosts by drawing level through James Sands and Ricky-Jade Jones within a frantic 10-minute spell. Jones’ late challenge on Beier eventually proved costly, allowing Can to convert from the spot.
Elsewhere, Hoffenheim continued their impressive rise with a 1-0 home victory over Bayer Leverkusen, courtesy of Wouter Burger’s expertly struck free-kick after nine minutes. “That was an important one,” Burger said. “I was practising them a bit this morning.” Hoffenheim’s surge has put them on course for a rare Champions League qualification, while Leverkusen’s poor run continued as they slipped further away from the top four. Cologne edged Mainz 2-1, Wolfsburg shared a 1-1 draw with Heidenheim, and Hamburg were held to a goalless stalemate by Borussia Moenchengladbach.
What you should know
Bayern Munich’s dominant second-half display against Leipzig reinforced their grip on the Bundesliga title race, with Harry Kane once again central to their success.
The champions-in-waiting are pairing ruthless finishing with growing depth, highlighted by Jamal Musiala’s return from injury. Borussia Dortmund remain in pursuit but continue to show vulnerability against lower-ranked sides, relying on late drama to secure points.
Meanwhile, Hoffenheim’s steady rise has emerged as one of the season’s surprises, keeping pressure on traditional heavyweights as the battle for European places intensifies.























