Jupp Heynckes believes late Bayern Munich chances show Real Madrid are vulnerable
Bayern were let down by some unusually sloppy finishing that allowed defending champions Real to escape with a win
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Your support makes all the difference.Jupp Heynckes says he saw enough from his Bayern Munich side late on against Real Madrid to believe they can turn their Champions League semi-final around.
The German champions should have been several goals to the good in the first half with Thomas Muller, Robert Lewandowski, Mats Hummels and Franck Ribery all coming close.
But they were let down by some unusually sloppy finishing that allowed defending champions Real to escape with a win and left Bayern in danger of being eliminated from the competition by a Spanish club for a fifth straight season.
"We are not giving up," said Heynckes, who led Bayern to a treble of titles in 2013. "When you create so many chances against a team like Real then this is also an indication that the opponent is vulnerable.
"We have nothing to lose and we will be play freely. Maybe more so than in the first leg because our game was not as fluid as we would have liked."
Bayern suffered early setbacks with injuries to Arjen Robben and Jerome Boateng but kept penetrating the Real defence seemingly at will in the opening 45 minutes, with the Spanish fullbacks struggling with the speed of Ribery and Lewandowski.
But instead of adding to Joshua Kimmich's 28th minute opener, they conceded an equaliser a minute from halftime through Marcelo's well-taken volley.
A defensive blunder by Rafinha then allowed Real to complete the comeback and leaves Bayern needing a win in Madrid next week to advance to the final.
"I am not blaming anyone but our defensive operation in both their goals was very bad," Heynckes said. "Our finishing was also not good. We were not as efficient as usual."
Bayern had been near flawless in 2018, having scored 69 goals in their 20 matches in all competitions until Wednesday.
Heynckes had won his previous 12 consecutive Champions League matches while Bayern had lost just once in their last 22 home games in the competition going into Wednesday's encounter.
That one defeat, however, was to Real in least year's quarter-finals.
"At the end of the day it is 2-1 for Real and we did not do ourselves any favours," said Bayern captain Mueller. "How they (Real) did it is their thing but it shows that there is still a lot possible in the return leg."
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