Bayern Munich bring a one-goal lead back to the Allianz Arena on Wednesday night, with Real Madrid arriving for the second leg of this Champions League knockout tie knowing exactly what the job is. Vincent Kompany’s side won 2-1 in Madrid on 7 April, so the equation is simple enough on paper: Bayern are 90 minutes from finishing the work, while Real need to chase the game at some point unless they can strike first and turn the mood of the tie.
That’s where this gets dangerous. A one-goal lead against Madrid never feels safe, and Bayern won’t treat it like one. This is still a heavyweight European night, still a tie balanced on moments, still a stage where both clubs measure seasons by whether they survive it. Bayern have built serious momentum over the last month, while Real arrive with a wobble in domestic form and no clean sheet in six matches. Even so, they remain Real Madrid in this competition. Nobody in Munich will forget that.
The route to this second leg is already giving us the shape of the contest. Bayern beat Real 2-1 away in the first meeting, and before that they handled Atalanta 4-1 at home in the previous knockout round listed here, another display full of attacking thrust and front-foot pressure. Real, for their part, had already shown they can win on elite away grounds when they beat Manchester City 2-1 on the road on 17 March. So this isn’t a tie between one side in command and another out of their depth. It’s a tie between two clubs who expect to score, attack and swing momentum.
FC Bayern München Form & Analysis
Right now, Bayern look like a side playing with conviction. They’ve won five of their last six and are unbeaten in 15 matches, which is no small thing at this stage of the season. The latest outing was emphatic: a 5-0 win away at St. Pauli on Saturday, and it wasn’t one of those flattering scorelines either. Bayern generated 3.39 xG, allowed just 0.49, had 20 shots to six, and created eight big chances without giving one up. Jamal Musiala opened the scoring early, Leon Goretzka and Michael Olise struck in quick succession after the break, Nicolas Jackson added another, and Raphaël Guerreiro capped it late. Brutal stuff.
That followed the most important result of the run, the 2-1 victory away to Real Madrid in the first leg. Before that came another high-scoring away win, 3-2 at Freiburg, then a 4-0 home dismantling of Union Berlin, and a 4-1 home success against Atalanta in Europe. There was also a 1-1 draw at Bayer Leverkusen, which in context looks like a solid enough result rather than a slip. Look at the pattern and one thing jumps out: Bayern are not creeping past sides. They’re forcing games open, scoring early, and sustaining pressure. Five straight wins, and each of those wins has featured at least three goals.
At home, the broad season numbers are strong and aggressive. Their home average profile sits at 1.86 goals per match, 1.92 xG, 15.46 shots, 5.75 on target and 3.30 big chances per game. That tells you what Bayern matches in Munich tend to look like — sustained territory, plenty of entries into the box, and enough shot volume that opponents rarely get a quiet night. The flipside is that they don’t always shut games down. Bayern have gone without a clean sheet in nine straight meetings with Real, and in general they’ve seen both teams score in eight of their last 10. Great for neutrals. Less relaxing for Kompany.
There’s a clear strength here: chance creation. Bayern are producing big openings consistently, and the St. Pauli game underlined how ruthless they can be once they smell weakness. Musiala, Goretzka, Olise and Jackson all got on the scoresheet there, which matters because it hints at a spread of attacking threat rather than dependence on one finisher. The weakness is the obvious one in this tie. Because they play on the front foot, they can leave space. Against Real Madrid, that space doesn’t go unpunished very often.
Real Madrid Form & Analysis
Real’s recent results are messier. They haven’t won in three games and the first leg defeat has left them with work to do, but they’re still carrying enough attacking threat to make this a live second leg. The concern for Álvaro Arbeloa is that Madrid’s last two domestic outings haven’t sharpened them for a rescue mission. They lost 2-1 away at Mallorca on 4 April, then followed the Bayern defeat with a 1-1 home draw against Girona on Friday.
That Girona result will irritate them. Real posted 2.22 xG to Girona’s 0.52, had 22 shots to 10 and nine on target to two, yet still didn’t win. Federico Valverde put them ahead just after the break from a Brahim Díaz assist, but they allowed Girona back in through Thomas Lemar just past the hour and couldn’t restore control on the scoreboard despite all the pressure. A few weeks earlier they had beaten Atlético Madrid 3-2 at home and won 2-1 away at Manchester City in Europe, plus a 4-1 league victory over Elche. So the ceiling is high. The issue is consistency, and at the moment their defensive level is making life harder than it should be.
The away profile is decent enough in attacking areas. Their season average on the road sits at 1.29 goals per match, 1.36 xG, 11.51 shots, 4.41 on target and 2.36 big chances. Those are healthy numbers for a team asked to travel in knockout football, and they support the obvious expectation that Madrid won’t arrive just hoping to contain Bayern. They need goals. They usually find chances. The problem is at the other end. Real are without a clean sheet in six straight matches, and both teams have scored in each of those six. That’s the streak that really frames the tie. If you keep conceding, the margin for error vanishes.
Can they still make this chaotic? Absolutely. The 2-1 win at Manchester City showed they can absorb pressure and strike with quality away from home against elite opposition. The 3-2 win over Atlético showed they can survive a punch-for-punch game. Yet this second leg demands both bravery and discipline, and right now Real look far more convincing in the first category than the second. They should score. Keeping Bayern out is the harder part. Much harder.
Head-to-Head
There’s no shortage of history between these clubs, and most of it points in one direction for goals. The first leg finished Real Madrid 1-2 Bayern Munich last week, and last season’s Champions League meetings ended 2-2 in Munich and 2-1 to Real in Madrid. Go back a bit further and the same theme holds: 2-2 in 2018, 2-1 to Real in Munich, 4-2 to Real in Madrid. Open games, both teams involved, very few shutouts.
One head-to-head angle says plenty on its own: the last eight meetings have all gone over 2.5 goals. For a market this high, that matters because this fixture rarely settles into something cagey for long. These clubs trade punches. That’s usually how it goes.
We Predict: Over 3.5 Goals
Over 3.5 Goals at 1.73 is the standout play here. The tie state demands ambition from Real Madrid, Bayern arrive in flying attacking form, and neither defence comes into the night looking watertight enough to trust in a tense, low-event game. Bayern have seen over 2.5 goals land in each of their last five matches, while Real have gone six straight without a clean sheet. Add the first-leg scoreline and the whole thing points toward another open contest.
The projected xG — 1.58 for Bayern and 1.41 for Real — doesn’t scream a wild total on its own, so there is some tension there. Fair enough. But knockout context matters, and this is the kind of second leg that can break wide open if either side scores before half-time. We’re backing goals rather than control, with a 3-2 Bayern win the call. If you want a slightly safer side angle, both teams to score has a very strong look as well, especially given how often Real games are landing that way right now.