Borussia Dortmund set sights on 'sweet' revenge after bitter title collapse
Needing a win for their first title in over a decade in the season's final game, Dortmund drew 2-2 at home against mid-table Mainz.
The draw allowed Bayern Munich, who won 2-1 in Cologne thanks to a last-minute Jamal Musiala goal, to sneak past and win the title on goal difference, their 11th consecutive league victory.
For Dortmund to go one better this season, they need to not only overcome their final day demons but also the loss again of their best player in the summer.
Jude Bellingham moved to Real Madrid in June, with Dortmund having lost Erling Haaland and Jadon Sancho in previous off-seasons.
Title favourites Bayern have however strengthened, breaking the 100 million euro mark for the first time to bring in England captain Harry Kane, plugging the Robert Lewandowski-shaped hole in their forward line in the process.
"Although we were close," manager Edin Terzic said on Thursday "we're not done yet."
"On Saturday, we want to pick up where we left off."
Hit by injury early last season, Dortmund lost only one of their final 19 league matches to close a nine-point gap with Bayern.
Terzic said the side, who added midfielders Marcel Sabitzer, Felix Nmecha and wing-back Ramy Bensebaini, had strengthened enough for a title fight.
"I'm very happy with the quality of the team and the quality of the newcomers.
"We're sure we're in a very good position to achieve our goals," Terzic said, explaining the team needs to keep up the "hard work".
"(Then) it might taste really sweet in the end and then we can finally bring the shield to Dortmund."
Bayern kick start the season away at Werder Bremen on Friday. Bremen have not beaten Bayern since 2008, when Mesut Ozil, Claudio Pizarro and Per Mertesacker lined up in white and green, a stunning 31 games ago.
Kane is in line to make his starting debut "unless something extraordinary happens" coach Thomas Tuchel said on Thursday.
Despite the high-profile addition, doubts remain for Bayern this season, particularly after Saturday's 3-0 Supercup drubbing at home at the hands of RB Leipzig.
Tuchel said as much on Thursday, saying his side had not yet found the solution but promised they were not far off.
"We haven't found the key to crack the lock yet, but we'll find it. We've got a couple more keys on the keyring."
The two other major hopes for this year's title, Bayern Leverkusen and Leipzig, clash on Saturday, with both having strengthened across the summer.
One to watch: Robin Gosens (Union Berlin)
On Tuesday, Union Berlin signed Germany defender Robin Gosens (29) from Inter Milan, another sign of the capital club's new lofty standing in the game.
Gosens joins Union having played his entire professional career outside his homeland, despite representing Germany 16 times, scoring twice.
The left-back has played 28 times in the Champions League, including in last season's final, valuable experience as Union embark on their maiden campaign in the competition.
Key stats:
5 - Werder Bremen were the worst home team in the Bundesliga last season, winning just five of 17 home games.
14 - Borussia Dortmund were the strongest Bundesliga home team in 2022/23, winning 14 from 17 games.
0 - Promoted Heidenheim have never before played in the top division. Fellow climbers Darmstadt have played four seasons in total in the top grade.
Fixtures (all times CET):
Friday:
Werder Bremen vs Bayern Munich (20:30)
Saturday:
Wolfsburg vs Heidenheim, Hoffenheim vs Freiburg, Augsburg vs Borussia Monchengladbach, Stuttgart vs Bochum, Bayer Leverkusen vs RB Leipzig (all 15:30), Borussia Dortmund vs Cologne (18:30)
Sunday"
Union Berlin vs Mainz (15:30), Eintracht Frankfurt vs Darmstadt (17:30)