The king transfer was not on the field in the fourth league game of the season. No wonder, Borussia Mönchengladbach’s most important entry is the 7.5 million euro coach Adi Hütter from Eintracht Frankfurt. Judging by the first three results (1: 1 against Bayern, 0: 4 in Leverkusen, 1: 2 at Union Berlin), this transfer had not yet caused exuberance. It was Hütter himself who said shortly before the home game against Arminia Bielefeld: “Today is an absolute key game.” That sounded threatening.
Two hours later, the situation was statistically a little better, because Gladbach climbed to eleventh place in the table with a 3: 1 (1: 1) win in the first season – but the performance did not seem that liberating. If the Bielefeld had used their better chances as ice-cold as the Gladbachers their worse, then this game would have turned out differently. Gladbach’s next game on Saturday in Augsburg will also be a key game and the next but one against Dortmund anyway.
In the fifth competitive game, Hütter formed a five-man chain for the first time, in which the right central defender Louis Jordan Bayer was only the third youngest at the age of 21. The full-backs Joe Scally and Luca Netz are only 18. It was not only because of them that Gladbach did not get into the game for a quarter of an hour. Bielefeld pressed up, played cheekily, finished confidently. This Arminia lived up to her name of a great Germanic general.
And yet a bad passport would have almost ruined everything after 20 minutes. Gladbach’s Jonas Hofmann ran into the ball, pulled alone towards Bielefeld’s goalkeeper Stefan Ortega and shortly before played across Alassane Plea – offside.
Borussia had more success in the 35th minute. In the absence of an alternative, captain Lars Stindl simply pulled away from 20 meters and used the Bielefeld left-back Jacob Laursen as a ramp, because he deflected the ball to a high arc lamp, which flew over Ortega to 1-0 into the goal. Brilliant? No: luck!
The flighty Borussia did not manage to save the lead in the break. A bad pass from Florian Neuhaus in stoppage time landed at Manuel Prietl, who staged Masaya Okugawa and saw him push in to make it 1-1 – albeit only in the second attempt after goalkeeper Yann Sommer had ricocheted off the first.