Ancelotti plays down Robben spat Bayern were denied a sixth straight win on Saturday by third-placed Hoffenheim, who preserved their unbeaten record this season
Bayern Munich boss
Carlo Ancelotti dismissed Arjen Robben's sideline spat as just something
"from the media" after the Dutchman was substituted in the Bundesliga
leaders' 1-1 draw with Hoffenheim.
Bayern
were denied a sixth straight win on Saturday by third-placed
Hoffenheim, who preserved their unbeaten record this season under coach
Julian Nagelsmann, 29, the youngest in Bundesliga history.
The
visitors took the lead when Hoffenheim's Kerem Demirbay beautifully
timed his arrival in the box to smash Nadiem Amiri's pass into the
top-left corner on 16 minutes.
The lead
did not last and when Douglas Costa fired in a cross, Hoffenheim
midfielder Steven Zuber deflected the ball between his own goalkeeper's
legs for an own goal on 34 minutes.
Robben
was replaced by French winger Kingsley Coman on 78 minutes and the
Dutch winger stormed past Ancelotti when he was taken off, without
making eye contact.
The 32-year-old is
renowned for sulking when substituted and Ancelotti said there was
nothing to be read from Robben's body language.
"He played really well for 70 minutes and then I used a fresh player," explained Ancelotti.
"Every
time that I substitute Arjen Robben, a lot of people seem to think that
there is a problem, but there isn't one -- at most, it's from the
media."
Bayern were unlucky to finish with a draw after both Mats Hummels and Thomas Mueller hit the woodwork in the last five minutes.
Mueller
has scored four goals in his last three games for Germany, but
curiously he has yet to score in any of his ten German league games this
season.
"The dirt is sticking to my boots a bit," he joked when asked about his near-miss which clattered the crossbar.
Hoffenheim
have so far claimed the scalps of Bayer Leverkusen, Schalke and Hertha
Berlin in Germany's top flight and Ancelotti admitted his side were
given a first-half fright.
"We knew
before the game that Hoffenheim are a good team, but we were still given
a surprise in the first-half," said the Italian.
"We played well after that and had our chances to score.
"At end of the day, we deserved to win, but football's sometimes like that."
Nagelsmann,
who took over in February and kept his side up last season, has turned
Hoffenheim into title contenders and is happy to go into the
international break unbeaten.
"We have
made good progress and now we have the chance to get a bit of energy
back," said Nagelsmann, whose side next face Hamburg and Borussia
Moenchengladbach, who are both struggling for form.
But goal-scorer Demirbay, who was signed from second-division Fortuna Duesseldorf in the off-season, said the draw was deserved.
"We proved that we can play football against one of the best teams in Europe," said the midfielder.