Dortmund's Gotze to miss Champions League final against future employers
After both German teams
booked their place in the final, supporters, journalists and former
players had asked how the 20-year-old would handle a situation whereby
he had the chance to shatter Bayern's Champions League dream but such
thoughts now lie idle.
Last month, it was
announced the midfielder was joining Dortmund's biggest Bundesliga
rivals after the recently-crowned German champions activated his release
clause with a bid of $47 million.
The move was criticized
by many Dortmund fans, disappointed that a player who had been developed
by the club's academy since the age of 8 was being lost so readily and
by the timing of the news.
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The announcement came on
the eve of the opening leg of Dortmund's Champions League semifinal with
Real Madrid, which the 2012 Bundesliga champions ultimately won 4-3 on
aggregate to reach their first final in 16 years.
Gotze was highly
influential in the first leg but tore his hamstring 14 minutes into
Dortmund's 2-0 defeat in the return fixture at the Bernabeu on April 30
-- a game that has proved to be his last for the club.
"It was my big aim to
play in the final and I have been working hard to reach that in the last
few weeks," Dortmund's website quoted the German international as
saying on Wednesday.
"I am incredibly sorry
that I can't help the team in this really important game. I have full
confidence in the team and will of course be going to London to support
the boys from the sidelines."
The attacking midfielder
had maintained hopes of playing in London until Tuesday, when he
managed an hour of training in his first full session since April until
an adverse reaction curtailed his dream -- and so perhaps his chances of
repairing his damaged relationship with some fans.
For while the absence of
Dortmund's main playmaker represents a major tactical blow for coach
Jurgen Klopp, it has been welcomed by a section of the club's
supporters.
The intensity of feeling
following the April announcement found some fans burning a replica of
his Dortmund jersey in online videos and others labeling him 'Judas'
among other protests.
When hosting Bayern in a
league match on May 4 that ended 1-1, Dortmund fans unveiled a massive
banner reading 'The quest for cash reveals how much heart you really
have, get lost Goetze'.
"What you find on the
internet is that some Dortmund fans are not that disappointed that Gotze
cannot play," said Peter Penders, a sports journalist with German
newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine.
"A lot of them never
wanted to see him in a Dortmund jersey again as they no longer saw him
as the club's player after he signed for Bayern."
"He had grown up at
Borussia Dortmund and was seen as a player wholly created by Borussia
Dortmund, which is why they were so disappointed."
When the transfer was
announced, the charismatic Klopp revealed that Gotze's departure had
hinged on the fact that former Barcelona Pep Guardiola, who will take
charge of Bayern after this season, had identified him as a key player.
"The reason Gotze is
leaving? He is the favorite transfer of Guardiola," Klopp told
reporters. "So if it's anyone's fault, it's mine. I cannot make myself
15 centimeters smaller and learn Spanish. Gotze wants to work with this
extraordinary coach that is Guardiola."
Despite the apathy of
some supporters, Dortmund - who finished runner-up to Bayern in this
season's German championship -- will miss the creativity of a player
with 12 league goals and 13 assists in both the Bundesliga and Champions
League this season.
"Gotze's absence is a major problem in attack because they have to change some other things," added Penders.
"Perhaps Marco Reus will
take his position behind striker Robert Lewandowski, with Kevin
Grosskreutz filling Reus' usual position on the wing."
Dortmund are also
waiting on the fitness of defender Mats Hummels, who is receiving
intense treatment on the ankle he damaged in Saturday's surprise home
defeat by Hoffenheim.
Meanwhile, one of the
players Gotze will link up with next season says Bayern must atone for
final defeats to Inter Milan in 2010 and to Chelsea in their own stadium
last year.
"We have to win for the fans, the club and the whole team," said Franck Ribery, who joined the Bavarian club six years ago.
"This is our third time,
we have more experience, know what it means to play in a final, so it's
nothing new for us, everyone knows what they have to do and how we have
to play against Dortmund.
"The defeat to Inter was hard, but the loss to Chelsea really hurt, it was a huge shock for everyone," added the French winger.
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