Chapter 186: Robbery + Müller + a Classic Target Man — This Is Peak Bayern
While Heynckes was still stunned and troubled by Leon's surprise forward run and incisive attacking involvement, Mourinho wasn't nearly as contemplative.
He was simply delighted.
There was no elaborate trap or brilliant hidden move. His only clear instruction to Leon in the first half was to stay disciplined alongside Matuidi and hold the midfield line.
But within that framework, Mourinho had granted Leon plenty of tactical freedom.
So in a way, Mourinho had expected Leon to give him something special — just not this special.
From his smart mid-game defensive readjustment to his explosive, confident break past Martínez that threw Bayern's backline into disarray, Leon's performance in the first 15 minutes of the final had been nothing short of perfection.
If there was a downside, it was that Leon's individual attacking ability still had its limits — he could make the breakthrough pass, but if teammates didn't pull defenders away or open shooting lanes, his ability to score remained underdeveloped.
"If, in a season or two, Leon can refine his dribbling and shooting — gain that reliable self-finishing ability, then…"
As the thought crossed his mind, Mourinho recognized he was being greedy. But he couldn't help it.
Leon's growth curve was just that incredible.
Three seasons ago, Leon was only good for tackling and simple distribution.
Now, he was an elite two-way midfielder, controlling tempo, breaking lines, shutting down attacks, and launching counters.
And who could say where he'd be in two more years?
Mourinho couldn't wait to find out.
Beside him, Karanka wasn't thinking that far ahead.
The moment the goal went in, he and the rest of the coaching staff had already leapt from the bench, roaring with celebration.
A lifelong Madridista who had been there for the club's last golden age in the early 2000s, Karanka had every reason to celebrate.
The game was far from over, the final still hanging in the balance — but for a man who had played his part in building the new Real Madrid dynasty under Mourinho, the chance to help defend a Champions League crown felt historic.
Should they succeed, Karanka's legacy in Madrid wouldn't just be as a former player — but as a core piece of a new era.
That kind of immortality?
Irresistible.
Mourinho gently patted him on the shoulder, and Karanka slowly reined in his emotions.
On the pitch, the Real players also pulled themselves together after celebrating.
Leon was the first to calm down — tapping his temple and shouting tactical instructions to his teammates.
Cristiano followed up by motioning for the crowd and players to settle — a visual reminder: stay focused.
They'd been here before.
Since last season, Real Madrid had experienced this kind of pressure time and again.
It was part of the club's new DNA — a product of elite competition. You celebrated when it was time, and then you locked in again.
This wasn't new. This was routine.
On the other side, Bayern Munich didn't appear shaken either.
From back to front, this squad was filled with players who'd experienced bitter losses — the 2010 Champions League final, last season's semifinal collapse.
They weren't rookies. They were battle-hardened.
And that, ironically, was what made them so dangerous.
Teams that want to win are brave. Teams that have failed before? They're relentless.
Real Madrid's players, already back in position, looked across the field and saw something chilling.
They saw themselves from last season.
There was no need for extra warnings. Anyone who had played through last year's Champions League semis and final knew: this Bayern team wasn't going away.
Heynckes wasted no time.
Kroos was pushed higher, now playing just behind Mandzukic — effectively as a second striker.
Before, Kroos had been tasked with distributing the ball near the top of the midfield triangle, creating space for Robben and Ribéry.
But Madrid's tight defense had suffocated the wings.
Now, Heynckes shifted focus — time for a different kind of push.
Enter Mandzukic.
The towering Croatian striker had mostly served as a hold-up man so far.
But in truth, he was in form — this season, he'd started just 22 Bundesliga games and had already tallied 15 goals and an assist.
His heading was stronger than Mario Gómez's. His footwork, though rough, was serviceable.
Most importantly, he thrived in physical battles. He was stable, consistent, and reliable.
Heynckes had originally intended to make Mandzukic his Plan B — the hammer to turn to if things weren't going well in the second half.
But now? The adjustment had to happen now.
He didn't want to go into the break trailing.
So he flipped the switch — Mandzukic would now be the centerpiece of Bayern's attack.
The Croatian knew what was happening. And he didn't feel pressure.
He felt excitement.
With Robben and Ribéry now actively looking to whip in crosses, and Kroos feeding him from behind, he was ready.
He stared down Madrid's backline without a hint of fear.
When play resumed, Pepe immediately sensed it.
This wasn't the same Mandzukic from the first 20 minutes.
This version? Aggressive. Determined.
A tank in full charge.
On the touchline, Mourinho also caught on quickly.
He felt it — not panic, but a tightening in his chest.
It wasn't that Mandzukic was suddenly unstoppable.
It was that Heynckes' adjustment was tactically correct.
And Mourinho knew better than anyone how deadly a classic target man could be in a cup final.
Earlier, Heynckes had misused him — treating him like a decoy, a placeholder.
Now, he was a battering ram.
And a battering ram wasn't there to pass or feint.
It was there to smash through the gates.
You didn't build your game around him — but when the time came, he had to hit hard.
If he scored? Perfect.
If not? He still created chaos, and someone else cleaned up the pieces.
Just earlier, Mourinho had joked to Karanka that Heynckes had forgotten how to use a classic No. 9.
Now, he realized Heynckes had just waited to deploy him right.
And in doing so, the German manager had landed a silent slap back at Mourinho.
Back on the pitch, Mandzukic's presence began to shift the dynamic.
Using his frame and elite body positioning, he carved space for Ribéry and Robben — now cutting inside rather than hugging the sideline.
The second wave — Bayern's support runners — woke up.
They no longer had to wrestle with Madrid's compact defensive wall.
They only had to follow the gaps Mandzukic punched open.
Suddenly, Bayern's attacks were no longer being snuffed out before they could start.
They had found their rhythm. And it was only getting louder.
Seeing the situation unfold, Leon quickly called for Matuidi, retreating with him to reinforce the edge of their own penalty area.
Especially along the left-side channel, Leon personally stationed himself there.
Marcelo's defending, after all, had its limits. While he could more or less keep up with Robben in terms of top speed, when it came to explosiveness, he got left behind.
And now, facing a Robben who was clearly building momentum, Leon didn't dare get careless.
He was well aware that while he focused on defending the left, Ribéry was tearing up the right flank — and he wasn't easy to handle either.
Matuidi might not be able to cover for Arbeloa if Ribéry broke through.
But if Leon had to choose one to stop, he'd still go for Robben.
Because if Robben cut in past Marcelo and entered the box, his curling shot was lethal.
Leon wasn't about to gamble on Robben having an off night.
Still, this defensive setup was only a temporary measure.
Leon needed Mourinho to give him tactical instructions. Continuing to bunker down defensively didn't seem like a long-term solution.
He figured they could hold out for another five to six minutes, and by then Mourinho would likely signal his next adjustment.
But just as both sides were preparing for the next tactical shift, an unexpected injury caught both teams off guard.
Kroos was down.
During another hard sprint for the ball, he had barely gotten halfway when he suddenly pulled up, hopping on one leg before collapsing to the turf with a grimace.
In the commentary booth, He Wei quickly speculated:
"Could it be a recurrence of that old muscle injury?"
"In the second leg against PSG, Kroos was subbed off early due to a thigh strain. Before tonight's final, German media had asked Heynckes about his condition — he insisted it was nothing serious. But now it looks like that 'small problem' might have just wrecked Bayern's first-half plan!"
Coach Zhang, meanwhile, was already watching Bayern's bench.
"Müller's definitely coming on."
Right as he spoke, Bayern's assistant coach was already calling Müller to the sideline for a quick warm-up.
Leon took a moment to comfort Kroos. His injury didn't seem too serious — perhaps just a flare-up. Once Kroos was helped off, Leon jogged to the sideline and grabbed a water bottle.
"Coach, do you want me to man-mark Müller?" he asked Mourinho quickly.
Mourinho thought for a moment, then shook his head.
"Let Blaise (Matuidi) drop back and watch Müller. I want you to push forward in attack."
Clear as day.
If Müller was coming in, then Real Madrid was about to change their game plan too.
Just as Heynckes had thrown in Mandzukic earlier than expected, Mourinho would now advance the timeline for his attacking push.
Leon gave a simple nod and returned to the pitch.
With Kroos subbed off and Müller on with new instructions, Karanka stepped to the sideline and relayed Mourinho's tactical reshuffle.
Matuidi dropped deeper alongside Alonso to form a double pivot. Leon pushed forward, stepping into the space between Schweinsteiger and Martínez.
Cristiano advanced higher, Di María tucked further inside.
On paper, Real Madrid had officially shifted into a 4-3-3.
To Bayern, this signal was unmistakable:
"We're done holding back. Let's go blow for blow."
With Leon now playing in Bayern's half, Heynckes no longer believed Mourinho was bluffing.
His feelings were mixed — part excitement, part anxiety, but mostly invigoration.
Just as Mourinho trusted the team he had built, Heynckes trusted his own.
In their domestic league, Bayern had become untouchable, but dominance can be lonely. What better way to test their peak than by dueling the best?
And really, that one-goal lead meant little now.
Both sides knew that in this kind of slugfest, one or two goals wouldn't decide the match.
Yes, it was a bit disrespectful to the defenders and keepers.
But when both teams had historically elite attacking lines, sometimes defense just wasn't enough.
In the 33rd minute, four minutes after Müller came on, Bayern executed a brilliant combination play down Real Madrid's left.
Ribéry cut inside, took a pass from Lahm, then sent a sudden through-ball into the box for Mandzukic.
Mandzukic, receiving with his back to goal, didn't panic — he held the ball, shielded it.
Now marked by Ramos, Mandzukic couldn't turn easily.
If they were outside the box, Ramos would have fouled him to kill the play.
But inside? Ramos didn't even dare poke a leg out — one wrong move, and it was a penalty.
Meanwhile, Müller had darted in from the edge of the area.
His run pulled Matuidi out of position.
Mandzukic, still composed, played the ball back to Ribéry.
The Croatian's decision-making was razor sharp — a pass back, not forced.
Now, with Müller drawing defenders out, the top of Madrid's box was suddenly left with just Alonso and Ribéry.
Ribéry didn't even bother to trap the ball — he took a first-time shot from just outside the arc.
It was Bayern's most dangerous chance of the half.
Real Madrid's box turned into a mess.
Leon, abandoning Robben, darted inside to cover.
He was ready to intercept a potential rebound.
But he hadn't expected what came next.
The shot wasn't threatening—until someone stuck out a boot mid-flight.
Originally headed for Casillas's bottom right corner, the ball redirected mid-air toward the top left.
Casillas had already committed.
Too late.
Leon, the fastest to react, sprinted into the goal mouth and launched his body, swinging a foot out in desperation.
He got a piece of it.
But the ball had already crossed the line.
The assistant referee, perfectly positioned, immediately signaled to the head ref:
Goal.
Bayern Munich had equalized.
Leon, frustrated, tossed the ball out of the net.
He finally had time to look up and see who had made the crucial deflection.
The answer? Celebrating passionately near the corner flag, Bayern's No. 25.
Leon could only shake his head.
"Damn it… It had to be you, Müller… with your creepy ghost-like movement."
Of course.
Who else but Thomas Müller, with his infamous late runs and absurd sense of timing?
Now it was Bayern's fans who exploded into deafening cheers inside Wembley.
Leon picked himself up, roaring encouragement to his teammates.
But as he jogged back to position, his eyes lingered on the celebrating Bayern players.
Robbery on the wings. A classic No. 9. And Müller in the hole.
This was peak Bayern Munich.
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