Bayern Munich have picked up 47 points from their 17 games so far - the only team to do so apart from Pep Guardiola's 2013/14 side.
Bayern Munich have picked up 47 points from their 17 games so far - the only team to do so apart from Pep Guardiola's 2013/14 side. - © Adam Pretty
Bayern Munich have picked up 47 points from their 17 games so far - the only team to do so apart from Pep Guardiola's 2013/14 side. - © Adam Pretty
bundesliga

What does being top of the table at the halfway stage mean for the Bundesliga title race?

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Bayern Munich lead the Bundesliga at the halfway point for the 28th time, having won 15 and drawn the other two of their 17 matches so far in 2025/26.

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Historically, what might that mean for the title race? How often do the leaders go on to lift the Meisterschale? And which team has staged the greatest comeback over the second half of a season?

Followers of German football will have no doubt come across the term Herbstmeister or Herbstmeisterschaft, which literally translates as ‘autumn champions’ or ‘autumn championship’.

It is the symbolic honour bestowed upon the team that leads the table after half of the season’s games have been played (17 out of 34 since 1965/66, previously 15 out of 30), which in most years means that every team has played every other team once.

Watch: What is the Meisterschale and how do you say it?

It’s an unusual name for non-Germans to get their heads around. First of all, it’s not a title that’s awarded in autumn (or actually at all, as it’s symbolic), since the season only reaches its midpoint in winter.

Second, the midpoint of the season has historically been reached in the final game of the calendar year, with the league leaders able to enjoy their status over the winter break. However, in recent years the Bundesliga hasn’t reached Matchday 17 until January. This has seen a tendency to move away from the term Herbstmeister and more towards something like Hinrundenmeister.

German football followers will also be familiar with the word Hinrunde and its associated Rückrunde. They are essentially the first and second leg of the season – or, better said, the first and second half of the season – because each leg sees a team play all 17 rivals once.

Watch: Bayern Munich - The Invicibles 2.0?

In the context of 2025/26, Bayern hold an 11-point lead over second-placed Borussia Dortmund, meaning they are comfortably top at the halfway stage of the campaign. It is the 28th time in their 61 campaigns in the Bundesliga that the record champions have led the pack after half of the season’s games have been played.

It’s usually an ominous sign for the rest of the league, given the Bavarians have gone on to convert 24 of their previous 27 Herbstmeisterschaften into a proper Meisterschaft - a success rate of nearly 89 percent.

The three occasions they failed to do so were in 1970/71, 1992/93 and 2011/12. Of the remaining 35 seasons since the Bundesliga’s creation in 1963/64, 15 other teams have claimed the honour of Herbstmeister, led by Werder Bremen with six, then Dortmund and Borussia Mönchengladbach with four each.

Watch: Bayern put eight past Wolfsburg

When it comes to teams other than Bayern, the conversion rate of sides being top at halfway and who go on to be champions drops to 54 percent (19 out of 35). Out of teams to have been Herbstmeister more than once, only Gladbach have a 100 percent success rate.

Taking into account all teams, the numbers work out at around two thirds, with the team top at halfway in 43 of the previous 62 campaigns going on to be champions.

That has been the case in each of the last five seasons (4x Bayern, 1x Bayer Leverkusen). The last time the leaders at halfway were knocked off top spot was in 2019/20, when RB Leipzig were overtaken by Bayern’s treble winners.

Watch: Bayern’s 2020 treble winners

The team sitting second at the halfway stage has gone on to claim the title in 10 seasons (16 percent), which means the champions have either been in first or second after playing half of the games in 85 percent of seasons.

That also means that nine teams have come from third place or even lower to take the Meisterschale. In fact, only two out of 62 champions have been outside the top three at the halfway stage.

The first side to achieve the feat was VfB Stuttgart, who recovered from fourth in 2006/07, but the most famous second-half-of-the-season charge to silverware came in 2008/09.

Felix Magath guided Wolfsburg to one of the most unexpected title triumphs in history. - imago sportfotodienst

Wolfsburg were actually way down in ninth place, nine points off the summit, after 17 games. But Felix Magath’s side then earned 43 of a possible 51 points in the Rückrunde to storm to a famous title, finishing two points ahead of Bayern.

The Herbstmeister that year were Hoffenheim, who led Bayern on goal difference in their maiden Bundesliga campaign. However, the Sinsheim outfit suffered a drop in form in the second half of the season, finishing seventh to become the only team in Bundesliga history to be top at halfway but finish outside of the top five.

Hoffenheim are one of four teams to have claimed the Herbstmeisterschaft but never got their hands on the actual Meisterschale, alongside Eintracht FrankfurtSchalke (both twice) and Leipzig.