TURIN, ITALY - SEPTEMBER 16: (L-R) Ramy Bensebaini of Borussia Dortmund, Julian Brandt of Borussia Dortmund and Serhou Guirassy of Borussia Dortmund react during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 group stage matchday 1 between Juventus FC and Borussia Dortmund at Juventus Stadium on September 16, 2025 in Turin, Italy.

Dortmund derailment threat as familiar cracks emerge

Agence France-Presse
Alexandre Simoes / Borussia Dortmund / Getty

Borussia Dortmund's early promise is already being eroded by familiar failings in crucial moments just three games into the Bundesliga season. 

Dortmund, who host Wolfsburg on Sunday, have already shown a worrying tendency of fading late this season. 

Leading 3-1 in their season opener at St Pauli with five minutes remaining, Dortmund conceded twice in three minutes and lost rookie centre-back Filippo Mane to a red card. 

In the Champions League on Tuesday, Dortmund led three times away at Juventus -- including 4-2 in the third minute of stoppage time -- before allowing the Italians to snatch a 4-4 draw with two late goals. 

Dortmund's lack of leadership was also evident when striker Serhou Guirassy and defender Ramy Bensebaini openly tussled when both wanted to take a late penalty, forcing coach Niko Kovac to intervene. 

Many of the same criticisms have been levelled at Dortmund in recent seasons: a team with talent and promise undermined by a lack of maturity. 

Dortmund were united in identifying the root of the problem in the aftermath of Tuesday's game. 

Sporting director Sebastian Kehl said his side were "a bit naive in the last minutes," adding "to give away a sure victory right at the end is a bitter result."

Dortmund goalkeeper Gregor Kobel told reporters: "We need to finish the game cooly and with composure -- we have to play more maturely."

If Dortmund are to respond, there is probably no better opponent than their bunnies, Wolfsburg, a team they have had the better of for a decade. 

Dortmund have a remarkable recent record against the Wolves, particularly at home, where they have not lost since 2012. 

In their past four home games against Wolfsburg, Dortmund have won 4-0, 1-0, 6-0 and 6-1. 

Wolfsburg's hopes of overturning the recent record could be boosted by the likely debut of Christian Eriksen.

The 33-year-old former Tottenham and Manchester United midfielder said Thursday he was "fit and ready," to play on Sunday. 

"If you ask me, then yes. The coach picks the team and decides who's ready for the game -- but I'm all set."

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