Oliver Kahn criticised Bayern Munich’s players for their display in Saturday’s 3-1 loss at Mainz but absolved head coach Thomas Tuchel of any blame for their current slump.
Bayern dropped points for the second Bundesliga game running to relinquish top spot to Borussia Dortmund, who beat Eintracht Frankfurt 4-0 later in the day.
Tuchel replaced Julian Nagelsmann last month but has already overseen Bayern’s exits from the Champions League and DFB-Pokal at the quarter-final stage of both.
Despite winning just two of his opening seven games in charge, Bayern CEO Kahn does not believe Tuchel deserves any criticism for results over the past month.
“Thomas Tuchel is the last person we need to talk about now,” Kahn told reporters. “He is doing everything he can to help the boys progress.
“There are 11 men on the pitch who have to work hard to achieve the goals of this club. What the team showed on the pitch is not enough.”
Kahn and sporting director Hasan Salihamidzic are under growing pressure, with Bayern at risk of missing out on the Bundesliga title for the first time since the 2011-12 season.
“I have no problem with criticism,” Kahn said. “I have been through a lot in my career and I know what it means when things are not going well at Bayern. We are all responsible.
“Despite this poor performance, we can still become German champions this season. My only objective is to finish the season as champions and to set off again next season.”
Sadio Mane gave Bayern the lead at Mainz, but goals from Ludovic Ajorque, Leandro Barreiro and Aaron Martin in the space of 14 second-half minutes stunned the visitors.
Bayern have now gone four games without a win across all competitions, and Kahn was particularly concerned by his side’s collapse at Mewa Arena.
“We played a catastrophic second half,” he said. “Who was the team that wants to become champions? It will be very difficult to become champions with such performances.”
According to German outlet Sport1, Kahn, Salihamidzic and president Herbert Hainer spoke to the Bayern squad for 15 minutes in the dressing room after the game.
Echoing the views of Kahn, Hainer accepts something has to change with Bayern’s mindset if they are to catch Dortmund – one point better off – in their final five matches.
“We had the game completely under control in the first half, were 1-0 up and forgot to score the second goal,” he said. “After their equaliser we broke up completely.
“The second half was disappointing – I have to say that very clearly. When you see two halves that are so different and we collapse like that, it’s really difficult to explain.
“You’ve seen that a few times in the last few games, and I don’t know why. The coach will work on it. You can tell there’s no security. There’s more when they’re a goal down.”
Bayern return to action a week on Sunday with a home match against bottom side Hertha Berlin.