
It began long before the first whistle. As soon as you entered SAP Garden, you noticed how much this place was charged with expectations and memories. People stopped in the corridors, pointed at jerseys, smiled, chatted. Shirts from every decade hang on the shoulders of fans, some with faded names on the back, others in bright colours – a sea of fabric that made the club's history visible. And that is precisely where its power lies. On this evening, the past was not something that is over and done with. It was present, tangible, right in the here and now.
The arena in Munich’s Olympic Park was filled with 11,000 fans. Conversations in the stands turned to Wembley, the World Cup summer, Champions League nights. There was a constant thought of: “Do you remember?”
On the indoor pitch, players gathered whose careers wrote entire chapters of football history. Klaus Augenthaler and Lothar Matthäus, Jürgen Klinsmann and Giovane Élber. And alongside them Arjen Robben and Franck Ribéry, whose images are still fresh in our minds – because they have left a lasting impression. Different eras, one shared moment.
The FC Bayern Legends Cup brought together former players from FC Bayern and other top European clubs. Borussia Dortmund, Real Madrid, Juventus, Celtic and Eintracht Frankfurt were the guests. It was played in an indoor, five-a-side format – fast, direct and intense. But far more important than the format is the idea behind it.

“The Franz Beckenbauer Cup last year was such a success that we decided to revive the Legends Cup,” explained CEO Jan-Christian Dreesen. “This is living history today.” The motto of ‘Making history present’ permeated through the whole tournament. It wasn’t just about nostalgia and looking back. It was about bringing history back to life; not telling it but letting it play. What emerged here is not a look back from distance, but a conscious retrieval of the past in the present.
Robben & Ribéry: When movements carry memories
The players also prepared for this day. The participating teams got in the mood for Sunday’s sporting event with an evening together on Saturday. In the end, it wasn’t the results that defined this tournament. it was the patterns. Arjen Robben cutting in from the right, looking to shoot with his left. A sequence that is ingrained. Franck Ribéry demands the ball, runs with it, accelerates – that mix of easiness and determination that you immediately recognise.

I always enjoy seeing my old friends. We chat, go onto the pitch and have fun. I am very grateful for the appreciation I receive in Munich. It's my second home and it always feels special when I come here.Arjen Robben
In the middle, Mark van Bommel organises with his familiar presence: loud, clear, uncomprimising. In goal, too, there’s proof that experience never leaves. Hans-Jörg Butt and Tom Starke anticipate more than they have to react. Holger Badstuber brings composure to the play, reading situations early. Mario Mandžukić works off the ball, opening spaces wide – just like we know from crucial matches.
The first match against Juventus set the tone early. No cagey opening, no wait and see. The game was direct, intense. Then that moment: Robben drives down the right, quickly lifts his head up, plays into the path of Ribéry, and he finds the net. A moment that’s more than a goal, because it awakens memories. Because it shows that habits remain – even after years. The hall reacted immediately with applause, a collective murmur. “There’s no messing about, there’s a lot quality on the pitch,” said van Bommel after the 4-3 opening win.
Fans in the thick of it – voices and emotions
The game was played in a compact indoor format: there was hardly any space, every touch of the ball counted, and every movement needed to be precise. Decisions were made at lightning speed, the tempo was high, the actions creative and surprising – like a game that retold the past in a small space. Perhaps it is precisely this setting that made ‘Making history present’ so palpable: familiar patterns and movements reappeared, not as copies but as a living continuation. Old strengths appeared condensed, new moments arose from the interplay of experience and enthusiasm for the game.

Daniel Braun from Nuremberg was standing in the middle of the stands today. He said that he plays football himself and has been a Bayern fan since childhood – a passion that has been passed down from generation to generation. For him, history was coming to life today: the players he used to only know from television were live on the pitch, and with every move they made, memories of great moments came flooding back. “All the players who are here today are associated with certain moments, stories and titles that have been collected,” he said. Encountering the legends evoked a strong sense of the past that connects with the here and now.
Tobias Rietzler and Krissi Seibel from the Allgäu told a similar story: they feel the aura of the legends, not just those on the Bayern team but all the sides. Rietzler described how the combined presence of former top players filled the hall and carried the audience, while Seibel added that the combination of former stars and the intimate experience of SAP Garden created a kind of concentrated recollection, which has a more powerful effect than any television experience. They were impressed by the fitness of the players and the intensity they still play at in their more advanced years.
The fans' enthusiasm was evident at every moment: cheers when Robben and Ribéry combined, quiet murmurs when they performed beautiful tricks, satisfied smiles when they made successful passes. They watched closely, marvelling at moves they remember from the past, and let themselves be carried away by the atmosphere. For many, it was a day when the past and present came together in a magical way.
After two narrow wins against Juventus (4-3) and Eintracht Frankfurt (2-1), Bayern progressed to the semi-finals as group winners. Here the tournament took on a special dimension. Bayern versus Real Madrid – two names that have shaped decades of European football history. The tempo increased, the intensity was palpable. Every tackle, every pass, every chance was watched on with anticipation by the crowd. Even though the battling Bavarians lost 2-0, everyone inside SAP Garden felt: history wasn’t just being remembered, it was being performed. “It’s always a joy to look around the hall,” said Robben. “It’s just nice for the fans and for us. I enjoy seeing old friends and having fun together. Munich is my second home, it always feels special here.”
Fun until the end
No sooner had the match ended than the hall floor was filled with energy once again. In the third-place match against Juventus, FC Bayern Legends were out to make amends – and showed once again why their stories have remained unforgettable over the years. Robben cut inside like in the old days, Ribéry sprinted tirelessly into space, Klinsmann moved around the penalty area with that goalscorer’s instinct. Backheel goals, precise scissor kicks, clever one-two passes – every touch of the ball was celebrated by the crowd, who made the hall shake with their cheers. Children and adults stood up, shouted names and pointed to the players in jerseys from decades past.

It finished in a thrilling 9-4 win for FCB, which embodied the evening: a game that evoked memories, expressed love of the game and showed how the past lives in the present. “I enjoyed it a lot – all the generations coming together here and getting on really well,” commented Klinsmann. “You see children wearing shirts that we had in the 90s. That shows the appeal that FC Bayern has.”
The final between Borussia Dortmund and Real Madrid (3-2) was also marked by tension and intensity. Mladen Petrić was the outstanding player for Dortmund in the tournament with five goals, but it was Sokratis and Mats Hummels who fired BVB to glory in the final. But it wasn’t just the goals that made it a special day. President Hainer stressed the significance of the tournament: “The participants played great football today, we were all thrilled. With this tournament we try to unite generations. The fans have made the whole day into a unique experience.” To underline that it goes beyond the sporting aspect, Hainer presented a cheque of €100,000 to Munich homeless charity ‘Haus an der Pilgersheimer Straße’ before the presentation ceremony.
‘Making history present’ – that was more than a motto on this evening. In every sprint, every touch of the ball, in the eyes of the fans and the laughter of the players, you could feel that history had not passed. It was back, on the pitch, in the hall, right here among us.
The round-up of the results from the Legends Cup:

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