FIFA 19: Bayern Munich Career Mode Guide, Tactics, Formations & Tips

For so long, Bayern Munich were one of Europe’s most feared the sides. There is still no doubt they are one of the big boys in the Champions League, but after a change in manager and with their senior players aging, the tide is changing in Germany.

Bayern trail Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga, and have a massive Champions League last 16 clash coming up against last year’s runners up Liverpool. The Bavarians were the last team outside of Spain to lift the European Cup, but that was still six years ago. They have the capacity to overthrow Real Madrid and Barcelona, and with some promising youngsters now getting their chance, it could be a very different Bayern Munich side we see challenging in the years ahead.

Can you take Bayern back to where they belong on FIFA 19 Career Mode? RealSport gives you all you need to know as you target Champions League success with FC Hollywood. 

Team rating

Of course, it’s a five star rating for Bayern Munich. This consists of an 88 attack, 83 midfield and 85 defence.

Formation

expand image

Bayern’s default system is a 4-2-3-1 wide, although they have used a 4-3-3 at times to strike with midfield runners. Another formation you could use is a 4-5-1 attack, allowing you to play both James Rodriguez and Thomas Muller in advanced positions. 

World class shot stopper Manuel Neuer (90 GK diving) is in goal, with a solid back four consisting of Joshua Kimmich, Jerome Boateng, defensive rock Mats Hummels (92 interceptions) and David Alaba

New signing Leon Goretzka links up with complete midfielder Thiago (90 ball control) in the engine room, with chief creator James Rodriguez (89 short passing) operating as a number 10.

Thomas Muller (87 finishing) is a goal scorer out wide, with Serge Gnabry on the other flank, with the clinical Robert Lewandowski (91 finishing) leading in the line.

Sven Ulreich, Niklas Sule, Rafinha, Corentin Tolisso, Kingsley Coman, Arjen Robben and Sandro Wagner make up the substitutes bench. 

Tactics and instructions

With so much quality on the field, you shouldn’t struggle with Bayern, or need to change around with how they play too much. The squad should allow you to control possession, especially with the midfield trifecta of Leon Goretzka (84 short passing), Thiago (90 short passing) and James Rodriguez (90 ball control).

Robert Lewandowski (91 positioning) and Thomas Muller (92 positioning) will find space in the area and don’t need to be asked twice when in the penalty area, whether it be in the air or along the deck. Get the ball out wide to Joshua Kimmich (90 crossing) at right back or drive at the defence with Serge Gnabry (87 dribbling) on the left and play in the attackers.

You can aid this by playing around with Bayern’s instructions. Tell Muller to ‘get into box for cross’ to get him closer to the goal and stick the ball away.

expand image

Meanwhile, Gnabry on the other wing should ‘stay wide’ and ‘get in behind’ to utilise his 90 sprint speed. 

expand image

With so much movement around him, striker Lewandowski should ‘stay central’ on his support runs. 

expand image

Don’t forget your subs too, with Kingsley Coman (95 acceleration) bringing an injection of pace, whilst Arjen Robben’s control (89 dribbling) can help you create an opening. If all else fails, throw on the 6’4” striker Sandro Wagner (88 heading accuracy) to offer a direct approach.

Training

In training, look to use your high growth players, which is notified by the green icon. For Bayern, these include Leon Goretzka, Corentin Tolisso, Serge Gnabry, Niklas Sule, Renato Sanches and winter recruit Alphonso Davies.

The transfer market

Starting transfer budget: £106 million

Starting wage budget: £188,000 a week

Who should go

It’s a stacked squad for Bayern, and you could always risk getting rid of a talented player to bring in someone greater, but with this changing of the guard going on with the younger men getting their opportunity, don’t do anything rash in the transfer window.

Instead, sell off some of the young fringe players who don’t have a long-term future at the club. Meritan Shabani, Maxime Awoudja, Ron-Throben Hoffmann, Paul Will and Jonathan Meier can all be let go, and should fetch you a combined £1.5 million and free up £18,000 a week in wages. 

Loans

Due to this deep, high quality squad you can afford to send plenty of players out on loan. The Canadian Alphonso Davies has just joined from Vancouver Whitecaps and is just 17, so you should loan him out for the season.

Academy products Christian Fruchtl, Lars Lukas Mai, Oliver Batista Meir, Jeong Woo Yeong and Franck Evina won’t get the game time at Bayern, so look to loan them out to second division clubs around Europe. 

Who to sign

New transfer budget: £107 million

New wage budget: £206,000 a week

Back up left back

With the Bayern starting lineup so strong, and with the ‘weaker’ links able to grow into top class players, you need to have a look at the gaps on the subs bench. David Alaba is the only senior left back in the entire squad, so you need to bring in a long-term understudy.

expand image

Ferland Mendy has been a revelation for Lyon, and would be perfect, attacking alternative with a promising future. The new French international has a 78 overall rating, and can grow to a potential of 86 so he will be able to challenge Alaba in the years ahead. The 23-year-old’s best stats include 89 acceleration, 86 sprint speed and 83 stamina, meaning he will cost close to £20 million with wages of £41,000 a week. 

Alternative options

Player
Age
Club
Country
OVR
POT
Cost
Wage
Ben Chilwell
21
Leicester
England
78
85
£19m
£37k
Luke Shaw
22
Man United
England
80
85
£22m
£84k
Jose Gaya
23
Valencia
Spain
80
85
£23m
£29k
Benjamin Mendy
23
Man City
France
81
86
£26m
£92k
Grimaldo
22
Benfica
Spain
81
87
£27m
£12k

Another strike option

It’s not too dissimilar in attack, with Robert Lewandowski’s only out-and-out replacement being the 30-year-old one-dimensional Sandro Wagner. A younger alternative is needed, and one that could replace the 29-year-old Lewandowski in the years ahead.

expand image

Marcus Rashford would be an exceptional signing with the Manchester United striker able to grow from an 82 overall rating to 90. The England international can play anywhere across the front line, and holds abilities of 93 spring speed, 90 acceleration and 87 shot power. He will set you back over £40 million with wages of £106,000 a week. 

Alternative options

Player
Age
Club
Country
OVR
POT
Cost
Wage
Andrea Belotti
24
Torino
Italy
82
86
£39m
£51k
Arkadiusz Milik
24
Napoli
Poland
81
88
£35m
£62k
Timo Werner
22
RB Leipzig
Germany
83
87
£42m
£62k
Gabriel Jesus
21
Man City
Brazil
83
92
£50m
£114k
Josef Martinez
25
Atlanta United
Venezuela
82
85
£30m
£13k

Right back understudy

Joshua Kimmich is likely to move back into a defensive midfield role from right back in a few seasons’ time, and you could do the same on FIFA 19. Plus, the 32-year-old Rafinha is out of contract at the end of the season and isn’t a reliable back-up, so look to bring in a replacement.

expand image

Sticking with the English theme, Trent Alexander-Arnold has the potential to be the best right back in the world, able to grow from a 79 overall to 89. The Liverpool and England youngster has abilities of 83 crossing, 82 acceleration and 80 free kick accuracy, meaning he will set you back around £25 million and wages upwards of £35,000 a week. 

Alternative options

Player
Age
Club
Country
OVR
POT
Cost
Wage
Hector Bellerin
23
Arsenal
Spain
80
85
£24m
£75k
Nelson Semedo
24
Barcelona
Portugal
81
86
£28m
£110k
Elseid Hysaj
24
Napoli
Albania
81
86
£25m
£51k
Sergi Roberto
26
Barcelona
Spain
83
86
£31m
£150k
Benjamin Pavard
22
Stuttgart
France
79
85
£20m
£28k

Contracts

Just three players have contracts up at the end of the season, and you should let them be released. Arjen Robben and Franck Ribery still have quality, but aged 34 and 35, respectively their ratings will drop this season and are only getting in the way of young talent. As for Rafinha, he is a weak link and should be replaced before you release him.

Managerial objectives

expand image

As you’d expect, it’s all or nothing in Bayern’s managerial objectives. The treble will be demanded with Bundesliga, DFB Pokal and Champions League trophies expected from the domestic and continental success objectives.

Brand exposure is of a critical importance, and here you will need to gain £176 million from shirt sales over the season and earn £150 million from prize money over three seasons. Bringing in big names and racking up the goals will help you here.

Bayern do like to bring on youngsters, and for youth development you will need to sign four players to your youth academy. These need to be a goalkeeper, defender, midfielder and attacker. 

Your financial objective has a low importance, but it does require you to finish the season with a profit margin of £66 million. This may cause you to rethink your transfer policy and sell off some talent. Back yourself to lift silverware at the end of the season, and you’ll be in the clear. 

Take over Europe once again

It’s been six years since Bayern were even in a Champions League final, and that needs to change. It may be a tall order to target a fifth European crown in your first season in charge, but perhaps prioritise reaching the semi-finals and take it from there.

Domestically, you just need to be wary of the threat of Borussia Dortmund. Bayern’s Der Klassiker rivals have turned up this season and are firing, and your clashes with BVB will probably dictate the Bundesliga title race. The German Cup should take care of itself, and it’s here where you should look to rotate your squad.

Keeping your big players fresh should be a simple task with Bayern Munich given the depth of talent, and if you get your domestic season off to a good start, you can then turn your focus to Europe. There are enough ‘easy’ games in the Bundesliga to make changes, with Die Roten’s second string side still likely to get the better of any side in the bottom half.

If a treble was possible with any club in your first Career Mode season, it may just be Bayern Munich. 

Full Bayern Munich player ratings

Player
Age
Pos
Country
OVR
POT
Value
Wage
Goalkeepers
Manuel Neuer
32
GK
Germany
89
89
£33m
£114k
Sven Ulreich
29
GK
Germany
80
80
£9m
£53k
Christian Fruchtl
18
GK
Germany
65
86
£1m
£3k
Ron-Thorben Hoffmann
19
GK
Germany
56
74
£140k
£1k
Defenders
Mats Hummels
29
CB
Germany
88
88
£41m
£141k
Joshua Kimmich
23
RB CM CDM
Germany
85
88
£36m
£81k
David Alaba
26
LB CB CM
Austria
85
87
£33m
£97k
Jerome Boateng
29
CB
Germany
85
85
£26m
£101k
Niklas Sule
22
CB
Germany
84
90
£32m
£74k
Rafinha
32
RB LB
Brazil
76
76
£4m
£47k
Lars Lukas Mai
18
CB
Germany
64
84
£700k
£4k
Maxime Awoudja
20
CB
Germany
61
72
£330k
£6k
Jonathan Meier
18
LB
Germany
59
75
£260k
£3k
Midfielders
James Rodriguez
26
CAM CM RM
Colombia
88
89
On Loan
£277k
Thiago
27
CM CAM CDM
Spain
86
86
£40m
£114k
Thomas Muller
28
CAM RM RW CF
Germany
86
86
£40m
£119k
Arjen Robben
34
RM RW
Holland
84
84
£14m
£97k
Serge Gnabry
22
LM RM CAM LW
Germany
83
88
£30m
£75k
Leon Goretzka
23
CM CAM CDM
Germany
83
88
£30m
£75k
Corentin Tolisso
23
CM CDM
France
83
88
£30m
£75k
Kingsley Coman
22
LM RM LW RW
France
83
87
£30m
£75k
Javi Martinez
29
CDM CB
Spain
83
83
£18m
£82k
Franck Ribery
35
LM LW
France
83
83
£10m
£64k
Renato Sanches
20
CM
Portugal
75
84
£9m
£36k
Alphonso Davies
17
LM RM
Canada
72
87
£5.3m
£17k
Oliver Batista Meier
17
LM LW
Germany
63
83
£600k
£5k
Franck Evina
17
LM LW
Germany
63
81
£600k
£5k
Meritan Shabani
19
CAM RW RM
Germany
62
75
£500k
£4k
Jeong Woo Yeong
18
LM CAM
South Korea
61
80
£460k
£4k
Paul Will
19
CM
Germany
61
77
£460k
£4k
Attackers
Robert Lewandowski
29
ST
Poland
90
90
£68m
£180k
Sandro Wagner
30
ST
Germany
78
78
£9m
£63k
This Article's Topics

Explore new topics and discover content that's right for you!

FIFA
Have an opinion on this article? We'd love to hear it!