With Bayer Leverkusen threatening to run away with the Bundesliga title, Thomas Mueller appealed to a higher power ahead of Bayern Munich's home clash with Mainz on Saturday.
Xabi Alonso's side are 10 points clear of Bayern with 10 games remaining, but Mueller – a veteran of 12 Bundesliga titles, including the last 11 in a row – knows his side can never be counted out.
"We want to give the football gods another chance to keep the cliche alive," Mueller said after Bayern returned to form with a 3-0 win over Lazio on Tuesday to make the Champions League last eight.
The 'cliche' Mueller was referring to is Leverkusen's unwanted reputation of crumbling in big moments and finishing second, which sparked their 'Neverkusen' nickname.
But Mueller admitted: "Right now they don't look like Neverkusen but we want to stay in the race."
In 2002, Leverkusen were five points clear in the league with three games to go and had qualified for the Champions League and German Cup finals – but finished runners-up in all three competitions.
Leverkusen have never won the Bundesliga, finishing second five times, and no team in history has accumulated as many points as them without winning the title.
Leverkusen midfielder Robert Andrich, 29, said Wednesday he "can't remember that much" of 2002, telling reporters that "a lot has changed since then – you can't compare it".
"We have a very good team across the board. We're clear headed. We're not celebrating anything yet or feeling safe... We are confident things won't go like they did in 2002."
Dropping just two of a possible 30 points in their past 10 league games would indicate Alonso's Leverkusen have banished the ghosts of the past.
Indeed, with just two wins in their past six games, it is Bayern who are
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