Borussia Dortmund celebrate with absent fans after dominant Schalke win
When you beat your local rivals 4-0, there's absolutely no excuse for not celebrating with the fans – even if they're not allowed inside the stadium!
Following their comprehensive rout of Schalke in the Revierderby on Matchday 26, Borussia Dortmund players paid tribute to the 80,000 supporters who would usually be roaring in delight from the stands of the Signal Iduna Park – especially the iconic Südtribüne, the Yellow Wall, home to 25,000 hardcore fans who bleed black and yellow.
"It was for the fans," emphasised Erling Haaland, who had the distinction of becoming the first goalscorer of the Bundesliga restart when he turned in Thorgan Hazard's cross on the half-hour mark.
Watch: Dortmund players celebrate in front of empty Yellow Wall!
"The team deserves a big compliment," admitted Sebastian Kehl, the head of Dortmund's licensed player division. "It felt strange, for the lads too, you could see it in their celebrations. They went over to the Südtribüne after the game to give a round of applause to all of our supporters watching on television."
Bundesliga football may have returned this weekend following a two-month hiatus brought on by the coronavirus outbreak, but fans will be unable to enter stadiums again until next season to prevent the spread of the disease. Yet even if world football's most loyal followers are absent in body, they are very much present in spirit.
"It was spontaneous," Julian Brandt admitted to Sky, of the players' decision to applaud the empty Yellow Wall. "When the Südtribüne celebrates it's completely different, of course. It's also difficult not to celebrate our goals, but we're trying to stick to the rules as best we can."
Had they been present, the Dortmund faithful would no doubt have reserved some of their loudest cheers for Germany international Brandt, who was involved in all four of his side's goals, causing Schalke innumerable headaches and providing assists for Raphael Guerriero and Hazard. It was BVB's first home victory over the Royal Blues since November 2015, and keeps them within touching distance of leaders Bayern Munich, whom they meet on 26 May.
Lucien Favre's side have now won eight of their last nine Bundesliga games and boast the division's only unbeaten home record in 2019/20, having won 10 and drawn three of their 13 outings at the Signal Iduna Park. Next week sees them travel to European hopefuls Wolfsburg, who claimed a last-gasp win over Augsburg on Saturday to go sixth.
Related news
Leverkusen and Stuttgart renew rivalry
After three fabulous tussles last season, two of the Bundesliga's most attack-minded sides meet again this weekend.
Matchday 9 probable teams
Ryerson out, Anton doubtful: Dortmund hope to avoid a defensive injury crisis against Leipzig.
5 reasons Leipzig can win the Bundesliga
Leipzig are level on points with Bundesliga leaders Bayern eight matches into the new campaign. Is this going to be their season?