Bayern Munich: Why Does The Bundesliga Look So Easy To Them?



Bayern Munich are the most dominant German football team of all time.

And it isn’t even close.

They have dominated the Bundesliga for as long as anyone can remember and it seems as though that won’t come to an end anytime soon.

But how have they done this? How have they monopolized the league and achieved such unprecedented success? Let’s find out.

Transcript and sources: https://footballiconic.com/bayern-munich-how-to-monopolize-a-league/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheOfficial_FI

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Background music:
Song 1: https://youtu.be/HDb0VVPHDBw (Prod Pink)
Song 2: https://youtu.be/52QCHkI40rg (Prod. Riddiman)
Song 3: https://youtu.be/RMxrxQWo9sI (Prod. Riddiman)

0:00 – Introduction
01:57 – Bundesliga: A brief history
05:19 – Bayern Munich: The powerhouse
06:13 – Bayern Munich: The German Cash Kings
10:25 – Bayern Munich: The Expert Poachers
11:31 – 50+1: a blessing and a curse
14:08 – How Can Bayern be stopped?

Producer: Tinashe Chipako
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This video is intended for entertainment, commentary and educational purposes.

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40 thoughts on “Bayern Munich: Why Does The Bundesliga Look So Easy To Them?”

  1. all these videos telling me their history and money and all that but my question is really rather simple. WHY are they so damn good at scoring? do they just let their players run free or is their some system that allows them to score whenever and be so F dominant? that's the question I want answered.

  2. Like him or not. But in the end its down to Uli Hoeneß. Over decades he did build Bayern to who they are. While other german clubs had alot of changes in their management. Following diferent philosophies and having sometimes competent managers and sometimes incompetent ones (Btw, in german football manager and coach are two diferent jobs).
    Bayern just had a competent manager with a plan over many years. Hoeneß made them into completely superior bullies. They either crush the other BL Clubs and if one of them dares to ruin or threaten Bayerns plans, they ll buy their best players.
    Bayerns position is still cemented. They re the only german Club you re always a big fish in the UCL. Their magnitude in Germany is unrivaled and few players can resist the offer to play for them. And most other german clubs have given in to this fact. They resigned to setting lower goals for themselves.
    But as Hoeneß is now retired, we might see a change happening. He is getting older and older. They cant always call him back when sh*t hits the fan. One day he will be too old. If Bayern wont have found a manager who can perform like Hoeneß over a long time then, things will change. I wont say they would completely drop off, they will always stay among the best in german football. But i think we ll might see title races with diferent champions in the Bundesliga again.
    Nothing lasts forever.

  3. 1. Money – the money distribution in the Bundesliga is unfair and monopolizes the first place.
    1. If a striker scores against Bayern, Germans will say, they buy him next season. A key factor in their success is buying off players, that make other teams good, even if they dont need them. Götze for example, they already had 3–5 players on this position, buy him away from BVB and ruin his career.

  4. the problem is, they could do anything they want, even if they pay refs and its getting public, the dfl will defend them because the dfl needs bayern, they have to much power

  5. Hey, if winning today means getting rich dudes from the Middle East, I'll gladly take the home grown Bundesliga, I don't really care whether people think it's boring or not.

  6. 14:45 thats a mistake. kimmich was a dm before he joined bayern. he played if i remember correctly a few games as cb under pep and later played as rb because lahm left a big hole in bayerns and germanys right back side

  7. And where Juventus that much dominant in the 8-9 years they won in a row like Bayern Munich?? In terms of wins, points, goals, gap to 2nd place… where they also like this or not that much??

  8. One big point is probably that they dont do that much risky and expensive transfers so they cant loose everything like barca , for example bvb was at the peak of powers at the end of the 90s but they threw away all their money and were bankrupt a couple years later (and got saved by uli hönes, the president of bayern münchen)

  9. Uli Hoeneß managed to "generate" income via "speacial tv deals", exluding the other bundesliga clubs.
    he became bayern president again after his time in jail, where he went after his massive tax evasion.
    also his vice president Rummenigge schmuggled some watches in the past…
    so there you go.
    they are trying to make as much money as possible for themselves and for the club, no matter how.
    the club with by far the most money will dominate the league.

  10. Bundesliga is fun from places 2 to 18. But in Germany, football is so important and it's wild how deeply engrained even smaller clubs are in our regional cultures, that 2. Bundesliga and even the 3rd division 3.Liga have phenomenal clubs with large attendances and, for being 2nd and 3rd division respectively, their level of football is pretty high quality too!
    And I'm totally not biased (wink, wink) because I'm a supporter of a currently 2nd division club.

    What you said in the end about 50+1 potentially being abolished is interesting though; the DFL and the DFB both let RatBall through already, even though technically they shouldn't have been allowed to play their 3. Liga, 2. Bundesliga and the first years of the 1. Bundesliga seasons!
    They violated statutes about what a club has to look like, tricked and faked their way up and now everybody is just nodding along because "it's important to have a club in that part of Germany playing 1st division". Get outta here, that's nonsense!
    In Hoffenheim, a village so small it can't even host its own club so they have to go to neighbouring town Sinsheim to play, SAP founder and thin-skinned Dietmar Hopp tried the same approach, brought 'his' club up with loads of money from the lower leagues up into the Bundesliga. But he at least tried to act as if he didn't play the system (which he did in a way and didn't in others, still hate that club though).

    A lot of discussion and arguments about 50+1 in Germany traditionally also come from another topic, unrelated to oil sheikhs and Russian oligarchs; there are 'Werkclubs' in Germany, currently Bayer Leverkusen and Wolfsburg as most prominent examples. Leverkusen even has the company they originally started playing for still in the name. lol
    Other clubs argue that it's unfair that these can get money infusions from their parent companies (Bayer and Volkswagen) if things go sour while other clubs don't have that luxury. But that's only half true, nowadays, as there are relatively strict rules on how and from where money can be infused into a club. VW constantly plays the system here as well and I'm glad they still didn't manage to make 'their' club the eternal powerhouse on par with Bayern, because screw that.

    Will 50+1 fall? Eventually, if everything needs to grow forever and if there's no caps on anything, then yes. But at that point, German football culture will die out quickly, it'll only take very few years. Fans constantly protest against loosening restrictions and for good measure.
    My club itself has gone through a transition where one single individual holds more rights than any other investor in the club, so naturally their word has a certain weight behind it. I don't like that at all, even if without that financial boost the club would be pretty much dead by now. But they still don't have a majority, the 50+1 still holds firm and the members of the club decide as a whole what our club's positions and directions are. This is key to our fan culture.
    If this goes away, the fans will too – and we'll just go to the lower leagues, where football is more football and less media spectacle.

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