Pep Guardiola promises to take care of Arsenal fans in Bavaria

‘I will speak with (Arsene) Wenger for next time to make it cheaper for our fans’

Bayern Munich fans hold a banner as they protest in the stands against the cost of tickets. Photograph: Getty Images
Bayern Munich fans hold a banner as they protest in the stands against the cost of tickets. Photograph: Getty Images

Bayern Munich boss Pep Guardiola has promised Arsenal fans they will pay a "good price" for tickets in November's Champions League return in Bavaria.

Bayern fans protested at ticket prices for the opening five minutes of last night’s Champions League match in north London.

Banners in the away section declaring “£64 a ticket but without fans football is not worth a penny” were applauded by home supporters when the Bayern fans eventually took their seats.

After the match, Guardiola acknowledged that Gunners fans would not be overcharged when they head to Germany for the return match on November 4.

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He said: “I will speak with (Arsene) Wenger for next time to make it cheaper for our fans.

“We will take care of Arsenal fans in Munich with a good price. They can travel.”

On the pitch, Arsenal won the contest 2-0, with goals from Olivier Giroud and Mesut Ozil keeping their hopes of qualification alive.

The Munich boss leapt to the defence of goalkeeper Manuel Neuer after the German World Cup winner gifted Arsenal the opening goal in a rare moment of uncertainty, when he came out to meet a Santi Cazorla free kick but flapped at the ball and substitute Giroud bundled it home for the first goal Bayern have conceded in the competition.

“In the Champions League you have to be perfect in every aspect of your game and we weren‘t perfect in some of them,“ Guardiola told reporters.

“We did not lose because of Manuel Neuer because he made some superb saves in the first half. We had enough chances to decide the game in our favour,“ the coach said.

“We came here to close our qualification and we could not do that so we now have to go to the next game.“

The Germans had won their previous 12 matches in all domestic and European competitions this season in a record-breaking season start but it proved an unlucky 13 as they suffered a rare defeat.

With the English side playing an unusually defensive game at the start, Bayern could have scored on several occasions but neither Robert Lewandowski nor Thiago Alcantara could convert their chances before Neuer's blunder.

Instead it was Arsenal who scored twice, with German Mesut Ozil sealing the win in stoppage time.

“Obviously a defeat is never nice but I think it was still a high-level Champions League game,“ said Bayern CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.

“The luckier team won but it could equally have been us. But in two weeks time in the game in Munich against Arsenal we will turn it around.”

Bayern are still top of Group F on six points, as many as Greek champions Olympiakos, with Arsenal on three along with Dinamo Zagreb.

The Bavarians, eyeing a record fourth consecutive Bundesliga title, are again considered Champions League contenders, a trophy Guardiola has not won with the club in his previous two seasons.

With that title also in their sights, Bayern will get up, dust off and keep working, defender Jerome Boateng promised.

“Overall it was just too little from us. We will work to get better now,“ Boateng said.