You will know the pose. Head bowed, hands on hips, the haunting realisation a chance to finally become a winner had slipped away.
Harry Kane cut that figure in Moscow and Madrid, Wembley and Doha but he could never have foreseen adding Leverkusen to his destinations of despair. But here he was, shattered, confronting the prospect that another calamity is potentially unfolding.
When Kane cut ties with Tottenham, we expected with good reason his medal famine would end. Bayern Munich always win the Bundesliga and had signed England’s captain for £100million - how could things go wrong?
Well, things are certainly going wrong now. Bayern have time to extricate themselves from a situation that sees them trail Xabi Alonso’s effervescent collective by five points but, watching them get ripped apart, you feared Kane will again be second best when the hints are given out in May.
This was the kind of contest you expected to see him arriving into the penalty area with stealth, sweeping his right foot back and running off with that trademark celebration, a kiss of his left hand and a little jump in the air.
To stand a chance of doing that, though, he needed to see the ball – and he didn’t. He got 18 touches over those brutal 95 minutes, when Alonso showed why many are ready to anoint him as Liverpool's next manager, and never mustered a shot. Kane's final contribution was an injury-time pass that rolled apologetically out of play.
Kane, be absolutely clear, isn’t the reason Bayern are floundering. His debut campaign in Germany, personally, has been excellent with 28 goals to date but he sought this challenge because he wanted more than individual recognition. He wanted to be a winner.
But Bayern are out of the German Cup, face a tricky
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