'Playing well doesn't count' - Leverkusen happy to win ugly
Leverkusen coach Xabi Alonso gestures on the sidelines during the German Bundesliga soccer match between FC Heidenheim and Bayer Leverkusen at Voith-Arena. Harry Langer/dpa
Bayer Leverkusen have a full week to refocus after a shock exit in the German Cup and a modest Bundesliga showing, and must then give an indication that they can still fight for the league title.
Defending champions Leverkusen trail leaders Bayern Munich by six points with six games left. The gap could have well been eight points had not Emiliano Buendia scored a stoppage time winner at lowly Heidenheim.
Advertisement
Leverkusen performed poorly again but at least won on Saturday, not like on Tuesday when they crashed out of the German Cup at third division Arminia Bielefeld.
"We had similar problems as in the last game, but after Tuesday it was important to be able to celebrate another success today," coach Xabi Alonso said defiantly.
"We are in an important phase of the season, so today it wasn't a question of how, but of what, and that's crucial."
Playmaker Granit Xhaka agreed, saying: "All that counts are victories. Playing well doesn't count. We are still in the game."
Advertisement
Leverkusen next face Union Berlin and St Pauli and could have influential playmaker Florian Wirtz back from injury.
Bayern meanwhile have lost playmaker Jamal Musiala and several defenders to injury, and have the heavier schedule as they are still in the Champions League.
"We are slowly running of games. Bayern are not stumbling at the moment, we simply have to kick their heels," goalkeeper Lukas Hradecky said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Frenchman Nolan Traoré among second group of prospects invited to NBA draft green room
Frenchman Nolan Traoré among second group of prospects invited to NBA draft green room Frenchman Nolan Traoré is among the second group of prospects invited to attend the 2025 NBA draft from the green room at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Traoré was named the Champions League Best Young Player after averaging 12.2 points, 4.7 assists and 1.9 rebounds in 44 games with Saint-Quentin in France. He registered seven 20-point games, including a 25-point effort on May 9. Joining Traoré in the green room are Noa Essengue (ratiopharm Ulm), Liam McNeeley (UConn), Collin Murray-Boyles (South Carolina), Will Riley (Illinois) and Thomas Sorber (Georgetown), according to Jonathan Givony of ESPN. Teams with first-round picks each year vote on the players they believe will be drafted early, typically the top 20-25 prospects. Last year, 25 prospects were invited to the green room, and only two weren't selected in the first round (Kyle Filipowski, Johnny Furphy). Last week, the first batch of invitations was reportedly sent out to the top players, including Cooper Flagg (Duke), Dylan Harper (Rutgers), Ace Bailey (Rutgers), VJ Edgecombe (Baylor) and Tre Johnson (Texas). The league is expected to invite at least five more prospects. The 2025 NBA draft will feature a two-night format for the second consecutive year, with the first round scheduled for June 25 and the second round for June 26.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Chelsea defeat LAFC in poorly-attended Club World Cup opener
Enzo Fernandez celebrates after scoring Chelsea's second goal against Los Angeles FC on Monday (Paul ELLIS) Chelsea kicked off their Club World Cup campaign with a solid 2-0 victory over Los Angeles FC on Monday in Group D, although there were nearly 50,000 empty seats in the stadium in Atlanta. Pedro Neto and Enzo Fernandez's goals got the Blues off to a good start in a competitive clash against one of the three qualified MLS teams. Advertisement New signing Liam Delap made his debut as a substitute and helped set up Fernandez's strike, with Chelsea hoping to go far after their UEFA Conference League triumph and Champions League qualification, looking to re-establish themselves among the elite. After a solid start to the tournament regarding attendance numbers over the opening weekend, a sparse crowd of just over 22,000 settled in at the stylish 71,000 capacity Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Behind former Tottenham Hotspur stopper Hugo Lloris' goal in the first half, a couple of hundred LAFC 'ultras' helped provide an atmosphere with a drum beat and constant song. Although the closed stadium roof offered refuge from the Georgia humidity and mid-afternoon summer sun which Paris Saint-Germain and Atletico Madrid stars roasted under on Sunday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, the attendance suffered badly because of the 3:00 pm local time kick-off. Advertisement Despite regular strong crowds for MLS side Atlanta United, the best supported US team, few locals decided to take a Monday off work for the tournament's first weekday afternoon game, seemingly chosen to suit a British television audience. After beating Club America in a play-off to qualify for the competition as late as May, LAFC took the place of the banned Mexican side Club Leon, and play none of their three group games in California. The top ring of the stadium was entirely shut and other levels were only partly filled, despite ticket prices dropping in the days ahead of the game. Lloris rated his team's chances against Chelsea as "really thin" on the eve of the game and was called into action several times as the Blues took control from the start. Advertisement The French stopper saved from Nicolas Jackson and then Noni Madueke after the Senegalese forward set him up, while Cole Palmer whistled a strike narrowly over. With new signing Delap looking on from the bench, Jackson played like a man determined to keep his starting spot. The striker was instrumental in Neto's opener, releasing the Portuguese winger with an excellent through ball. Neto chopped in the box to leave LA defender Ryan Hollingshead stumbling helplessly out of sight and then buried a powerful strike past Lloris low at the near post. - Delap debut - Former Chelsea striker Olivier Giroud came on at half-time for the Americans, hoping to threaten Robert Sanchez's goal more than Steve Cherundolo's team managed in the first half. Advertisement Jackson came close with a header and LA almost levelled but Sanchez made a fine save with his outstretched leg to thwart 2023 MLS golden boot winner Denis Bouanga after he shook off Neto. Maresca brought on 22-year-old striker Delap for his Chelsea debut after the hour mark, having begun the game with all of the club's new faces on the bench. The forward drove into space and tried to tee up Fernandez with a promising first move in a Chelsea shirt since his arrival from relegated Ipswich Town. Chelsea star Palmer, who had shown occasional flashes of brilliance, hammered over. LA threatened increasingly, with Marc Cucurella blocking well from David Martinez, before Fernandez grabbed Chelsea's second. Advertisement Running into the six-yard box the Argentine midfielder controlled Delap's cross from the right and beat Lloris to put the game to bed. Elsewhere in Group D Esperance Tunis face Brazil's Flamengo later on Monday. rbs/as
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Chelsea defeat LAFC in poorly-attended Club World Cup opener
Enzo Fernandez celebrates after scoring Chelsea's second goal against Los Angeles FC on Monday (Paul ELLIS) Chelsea kicked off their Club World Cup campaign with a solid 2-0 victory over Los Angeles FC on Monday in Group D, although there were nearly 50,000 empty seats in the stadium in Atlanta. Pedro Neto and Enzo Fernandez's goals got the Blues off to a good start in a competitive clash against one of the three qualified MLS teams. Advertisement New signing Liam Delap made his debut as a substitute and helped set up Fernandez's strike, with Chelsea hoping to go far after their UEFA Conference League triumph and Champions League qualification, looking to re-establish themselves among the elite. After a solid start to the tournament regarding attendance numbers over the opening weekend, a sparse crowd of just over 22,000 settled in at the stylish 71,000 capacity Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Behind former Tottenham Hotspur stopper Hugo Lloris' goal in the first half, a couple of hundred LAFC 'ultras' helped provide an atmosphere with a drum beat and constant song. Although the closed stadium roof offered refuge from the Georgia humidity and mid-afternoon summer sun which Paris Saint-Germain and Atletico Madrid stars roasted under on Sunday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, the attendance suffered badly because of the 3:00 pm local time kick-off. Advertisement Despite regular strong crowds for MLS side Atlanta United, the best supported US team, few locals decided to take a Monday off work for the tournament's first weekday afternoon game, seemingly chosen to suit a British television audience. After beating Club America in a play-off to qualify for the competition as late as May, LAFC took the place of the banned Mexican side Club Leon, and play none of their three group games in California. The top ring of the stadium was entirely shut and other levels were only partly filled, despite ticket prices dropping in the days ahead of the game. Lloris rated his team's chances against Chelsea as "really thin" on the eve of the game and was called into action several times as the Blues took control from the start. Advertisement The French stopper saved from Nicolas Jackson and then Noni Madueke after the Senegalese forward set him up, while Cole Palmer whistled a strike narrowly over. With new signing Delap looking on from the bench, Jackson played like a man determined to keep his starting spot. The striker was instrumental in Neto's opener, releasing the Portuguese winger with an excellent through ball. Neto chopped in the box to leave LA defender Ryan Hollingshead stumbling helplessly out of sight and then buried a powerful strike past Lloris low at the near post. - Delap debut - Former Chelsea striker Olivier Giroud came on at half-time for the Americans, hoping to threaten Robert Sanchez's goal more than Steve Cherundolo's team managed in the first half. Advertisement Jackson came close with a header and LA almost levelled but Sanchez made a fine save with his outstretched leg to thwart 2023 MLS golden boot winner Denis Bouanga after he shook off Neto. Maresca brought on 22-year-old striker Delap for his Chelsea debut after the hour mark, having begun the game with all of the club's new faces on the bench. The forward drove into space and tried to tee up Fernandez with a promising first move in a Chelsea shirt since his arrival from relegated Ipswich Town. Chelsea star Palmer, who had shown occasional flashes of brilliance, hammered over. LA threatened increasingly, with Marc Cucurella blocking well from David Martinez, before Fernandez grabbed Chelsea's second. Advertisement Running into the six-yard box the Argentine midfielder controlled Delap's cross from the right and beat Lloris to put the game to bed. Elsewhere in Group D Esperance Tunis face Brazil's Flamengo later on Monday. rbs/as