Leipzig lose ground on Bayern, Dortmund and Leverkusen win

Leipzig lose ground on Bayern, Dortmund and Leverkusen win
Dortmund players celebrate after a goal during their Bundesliga match against SC Freiburg at the Signal-Iduna Park in Dortmund, on Nov. 23, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 23 November 2024

Leipzig lose ground on Bayern, Dortmund and Leverkusen win

Leipzig lose ground on Bayern, Dortmund and Leverkusen win
  • Hoffenheim came from a goal down to equalize three times and hit the lead with four minutes remaining on a wild debut for new manager Christian Ilzer
  • In Dortmund, the home side won 4-0 over Freiburg thanks to goals from Maximilian Beier, Felix Nmecha, Julian Brandt and Jamie Gittens

DORTMUND: RB Leipzig continued to lose ground on Bundesliga league leaders Bayern Munich with a 4-3 defeat at lowly Hoffenheim on Saturday, while Borussia Dortmund and Bayer Leverkusen registered big wins.
Hoffenheim came from a goal down to equalize three times and hit the lead with four minutes remaining on a wild debut for new manager Christian Ilzer.
Hoffenheim’s Adam Hlozek collected a brace while Tom Bischof scored a clever free kick and Jakob Bruun Larsen was responsible for the winner in the 86th minute.
Leipzig’s efforts came through Willi Orban, Antonio Nusa and an own goal from Hoffenheim’s Stanley Nsoki.
Equal on points with Bayern just three matchdays ago, Leipzig have lost two and drawn one and now sit eight behind the league leaders.
Leipzig had only conceded five goals in the league season before Saturday’s outing.
Eintracht Frankfurt can leapfrog Leipzig into second place and close the gap on Bayern to six points when they host Werder Bremen later on Saturday.
In Dortmund, the home side won 4-0 over Freiburg thanks to goals from Maximilian Beier, Felix Nmecha, Julian Brandt and Jamie Gittens, while the visitors finished with nine men.
Under fire and sitting outside the European placings coming into the match, Dortmund’s one saving grace this league campaign has been their home form, with five wins from five.
The hosts got on track early, when Beier, who scored a double for Germany’s under-21s against France this week, opening the scoring seven minutes in.
Midfielder Nmecha, who scored for Germany’s senior side in their 1-1 draw in Hungary midweek, added a second with a superb long-range effort on the 40th-minute mark.
Freiburg’s hopes of a comeback were snuffed out after 63 minutes when Patrick Osterhage picked up a second yellow card for a rough tussle with Marcel Sabitzer.
From the ensuing free kick, Dortmund’s Brandt curled the ball home and England winger Gittens curled in a fourth to seal the match with 13 minutes remaining.
Freiburg’s Junior Adamu saw straight red for striking Dortmund’s Waldemar Anton in stoppage time, reducing his side to nine men.
Dortmund have now won their past six against Freiburg, scoring 24 and conceding five.
Defending champions Leverkusen came from two goals down to win 5-2 at home against Heidenheim thanks to a hat-trick from Patrick Schick.
Heidenheim, who host Chelsea in the Conference League on Thursday, were two goals up within 21 minutes, with Niklas Dorsch and Mathias Honsak taking advantage of some sleepy defense.
World Cup winner Exequiel Palacios pulled one back on the half-hour mark before Schick, in for the injured Victor Boniface, scored three unanswered goals to wrestle back control of the match before Granit Xhaka added a fifth with eight minutes remaining.
Last season’s runners-up Stuttgart scored two second-half goals through Chris Fuehrich and Justin Diehl to win 2-0 at home over last-placed Bochum, who have just one point from 11 games this season.
Elsewhere, Wolfsburg’s Ridle Baku scored the only goal as his side defeated Union Berlin 1-0 at home.


Sabalenka dumps Gauff as semi-final lineup is set for WTA Finals in Riyadh

Sabalenka dumps Gauff as semi-final lineup is set for WTA Finals in Riyadh
Updated 07 November 2025

Sabalenka dumps Gauff as semi-final lineup is set for WTA Finals in Riyadh

Sabalenka dumps Gauff as semi-final lineup is set for WTA Finals in Riyadh
  • Top seed Aryna Sabalenka will face 4th seed Amanda Anisimova for a place in the final
  • 5th seed Jessica Pegula will take on 6th seed Elena Rybakina in the other semi

RIYADH: The lineup for the semi-finals of the 2025 WTA Finals Riyadh was decided on Thursday during a thrilling finale to the group stage in which world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka eliminated defending champion Coco Gauff.

There was everything to play for ahead of the third and final round of matches in the Stefanie Graf Group at the King Saud University Indoor Arena, with three of the four players still in contention for a place in the last four.

Fifth seed Jessica Pegula gave herself the best possible chance of advancing by sealing a comfortable 6-2, 6-3 victory over eighth seed Jasmine Paolini. However, the American’s progression still hinged on the outcome of a blockbuster showdown between top seed Sabalenka and third seed Gauff.

Various permutations were in play regarding which two of the three would qualify, but Gauff knew that anything short of a victory would mean elimination and the end of her title defense.

In the clash of two of the biggest superstars in tennis, Gauff claimed an early lead, but in the end it would be a dramatic tiebreak that decided the opening set, with Sabalenka edging it to put herself on the brink of the semi-finals. She then claimed the second set by a more comfortable 6-2 margin to seal the victory.

Sabalenka, 27, said she was “super happy to get this win in straight sets. I’m staying hungry and staying aggressive in the game. Sometimes I need to throw emotions out just to be able to compete, and I think I’m balancing it pretty well.”

She will now face fellow American, and fourth seed, Amanda Anisimova on Friday. The pair have already faced each other in three huge matches this year, not least their most recent clash in the final of the US Open in September, which Sabalenka won 6-3, 7-6. However, Anisimova leads their career head-to-head record with six wins to Sabalenka’s four.

Gauff made history last year when she won the 2024 WTA Finals in Riyadh, the first ever professional women’s tennis tournament staged in . Just 20 years old at the time, she was also the youngest winner in two decades.

After her loss to Sabalenka on Thursday she said: “I had a lot of chances in the first set. It was a bit disappointing not to get that one. She stepped her level up and I just couldn’t find it after that.

“Overall, I think I was playing a high level. Couple points in the tiebreaker, I had on my racket. It was a tough one.”

In the other semi-final, also on Friday, Pegula will face sixth seed Elena Rybakina.