Dahmen the wall: Augsburg stun Leverkusen late in a dramatic comeback win
| Finn Dahmen for Augsburg. | Photo: Sebastian Widmann / Getty Images. |
What looked like a routine afternoon for Bayer Leverkusen turned into a lesson in frustration, resilience, and late-game drama, as FC Augsburg fought back to claim a remarkable result at the BayArena.
First half:
It had all the makings of a classic “David vs. Goliath” encounter, and the opening 45 minutes between Bayer Leverkusen and FC Augsburg delivered exactly that narrative in an entertaining first half at the BayArena.
Coming into the match, Kasper Hjulmand’s Leverkusen were riding a wave of confidence, unbeaten in their last seven league matches - including an impressive victory over Borussia Dortmund and a hard-fought draw against Bayern Munich. In contrast, Manuel Baum’s Augsburg arrived under pressure, winless in their last five outings after a promising start to the calendar year.
Leverkusen wasted no time asserting their dominance. The hosts controlled possession from the outset and found an early breakthrough in the 12th minute. A pinpoint delivery from Edmond Tapsoba met the head of Patrik Schick, who made no mistake in guiding the ball past Finn Dahmen to give Leverkusen a deserved lead.
But Augsburg responded almost immediately, very much against the run of play. Just three minutes later, with Leverkusen seemingly growing complacent, Fabian Rieder took matters into his own hands. His speculative long-range effort took a crucial deflection off Loïc Badé, looping over Mark Flekken and into the net to level the score at 1-1 after just 15 minutes.
The equalizer sparked Leverkusen back into life. The hosts quickly regained control and dictated the tempo for the remainder of the half, piling up possession and creating a series of chances. However, Augsburg’s disciplined defensive structure and aggressive counterattacks kept them in the contest.
There was a brief moment of controversy when Nathan Tella went down in the penalty area, prompting appeals from the home crowd. On closer inspection, though, it appeared the Leverkusen winger initiated the contact, and the referee waved play on.
1-1 going into half-time.
Second half:
If the first half set the stage, the second half turned into a one-man show - courtesy of Finn Dahmen.
The FC Augsburg goalkeeper delivered a sensational performance after the break, singlehandedly keeping his side in the game against relentless pressure from Bayer Leverkusen. Time and time again, Dahmen denied the hosts with a string of outstanding saves, turning what could easily have been a heavy defeat into a hard-earned draw for the time being.
Leverkusen threw everything forward. Ibrahim Maza, Alejandro Grimaldo, Patrik Schick and Nathan Tella all found themselves with multiple opportunities to score - but none could find a way past Dahmen, who seemed unbeatable on the day, at least in the second half.
The numbers underline just how dominant Leverkusen were: 29 shots to Augsburg’s 9 after 80 minutes. Yet despite the overwhelming imbalance, the scoreline stubbornly refused to change.
Controversy arrived in the 84th minute: a cross into the Augsburg box struck the arm of Kristijan Jakić, prompting the referee to initially award a penalty to Leverkusen. However, after a VAR review, the decision was overturned, with officials judging that Jakić’s arm position - held in front of his body - did not constitute a punishable offense.
Leverkusen continued to push relentlessly in the closing stages, laying siege to the Augsburg goal. But despite their dominance and urgency, the decisive breakthrough never came.
The guests were actually the ones to get one of the best chances in extra-time: Mert Kömür was suddenly played through on goal with just one defender chasing him, but his shot was brilliantly saved by Mark Flekken - how funny and cruel it would have been, if Augsburg went home with all three points!
And then the football good felt inspired by the irony, as Augsburg were awarded a penalty in the 97th minute! Augsburg were awarded a penalty after substitute Uchenna Ogundu was brought down by Montrell Culbreath. Up stepped Fabian Rieder - and the first-half scorer held his nerve, firing home to complete a stunning turnaround.
In the end, football delivered one of its cruelest scripts. Bayer Leverkusen dominated nearly every metric and phase of play, yet were left empty-handed, undone by inefficiency, VAR drama, and a heroic goalkeeping performance. Meanwhile, FC Augsburg walked away with a result that felt as improbable as it was hard-earned - a testament to resilience, belief, and the unpredictable magic of the Bundesliga.
The old tale rang true once again: David didn’t just challenge Goliath - he brought him down.
