Bosch WW Besser Bosch

Dortmund threw everything forward in stoppage time. Neuer punched away a last-ditch header from Mats Hummels. Then the whistle.

And high above the pitch, the great clock ticked to 90+3. Wembley fell quiet for a heartbeat. Then the yellow wall started to sing—not in anger, but in pride. You'll Never Walk Alone drifted through the London rain.

Bayern Munich 2–1 Borussia Dortmund (Mandžukić 60', Robben 89' – Gündogan 26')

In the tunnel, Klopp congratulated Heynckes with genuine warmth. "The better team won," he said, and meant it. Götze stood apart, watching Bayern celebrate—his future teammates—with hollow eyes.

Ribéry, who had been anonymous for long stretches, found a sliver of space on the left touchline. He didn't try to beat his man. Instead, he contorted his body and back-heeled the ball—an absurd, balletic flick—into the path of . The Austrian crossed first-time, low and fizzed across the six-yard box.

Robben slid on his knees, arms spread wide, tears mixing with rain and turf. Schweinsteiger, the 2012 penalty misser, fell on top of him. Müller screamed into the sky. For one perfect, frozen moment, every ghost of the past dissolved.

2-1.

On 60 minutes, the moment came from an unlikely source. A corner, half-cleared. The ball bobbled to —the big Croatian who had unseated Mario Gomez not through flair, but sheer relentless work. As Dante’s header looped across goal, Mandžukić threw his body at it. The ball squirmed past Roman Weidenfeller.