Preußen Münster and Dynamo Dresden Share the Spoils in Gritty 2-2 Draw as Relegation Race Intensifies
Under the slate-gray skies of Münster, two clubs tangled in the lower reaches of the 2. Bundesliga delivered a contest that was every bit as tense, turbulent, and ultimately unresolved as their respective league positions would suggest. By the final whistle at the LVM-Preußenstadion, Preußen Münster and Dynamo Dresden had each left something on the pitch—a point, yes, but also a sense of what might have been, and what must still be done.
The match began with a quiet, almost wary intensity, both sides aware that a slip here could push them further toward the dreaded relegation zone. Dynamo Dresden, languishing in 16th place with six points from eight matches, needed a result to stop the rot. Preußen Münster, sitting just above them in 11th with 10 points, sought to put daylight between themselves and the basement. For the opening 20 minutes, the play was cagey, both teams probing without truly threatening.
That changed in the 23rd minute, when Alexander Rossipal, Dynamo’s understated midfield anchor, found himself unmarked at the edge of the box. A loose clearance fell to his feet, and he curled a left-footed shot past a diving Raphael Koczor. It was a goal born of opportunism, but also of a subtle shift in momentum; Dresden, having spent much of the season chasing games, were now in the unfamiliar position of leading one.
Preußen Münster responded with increased urgency, but for all their possession, clear chances were scarce. The home side’s recent form has been a rollercoaster—a stirring win over Eintracht Braunschweig and a hard-fought victory at Bochum bookended by disheartening losses to Hertha, Kaiserslautern, and Fortuna Düsseldorf. The pattern was repeating itself: flashes of promise, undermined by defensive lapses and a lack of ruthlessness in the final third.
But football, as ever, is a game of moments. Six minutes after the restart, Jorrit Hendrix, the veteran midfielder whose experience has been vital for Münster this season, ghosted into the box and met a driven cross with a glancing header. The ball nestled into the far corner, and the LVM-Preußenstadion, so subdued moments before, erupted. Hendrix’s equalizer was more than just a goal—it was a statement that, for all their inconsistency, Preußen Münster would not go quietly.
What followed was a frantic, back-and-forth affair, both sides trading blows as if the points on offer were a bulwark against the abyss. Lars Bünning, Dresden’s combative forward, restored the visitors’ lead in the 70th minute, finishing a swift counterattack with a clinical strike. For a team that had drawn three of its last five, and lost the other two, this was a rare chance to snatch a precious away win.
Yet Münster, driven on by a vocal home crowd, refused to buckle. Their pressure finally told when a hopeful ball into the box sparked a scramble, and the ball ricocheted into the net off a Dresden defender—an own goal, but no less valuable for its aesthetics. The final minutes were a maelstrom: tackles flew in, tempers flared, and in the dying seconds, Dresden’s Stefan Kutschke was shown a straight red card for a reckless challenge, leaving his side to see out the match with ten men.
When the referee blew for full time, the scoreline read 2-2—a fair reflection of the balance of play, and of the stakes for both clubs. For Dresden, it was another step toward respectability, another point in their fight to climb out of the relegation places. For Münster, it was a reminder that, while they have shown they can compete, their league position remains precarious. The two sides’ recent head-to-head history has been a series of tight, hard-fought encounters, and this match fit the pattern.
As the players trudged off, the implications were clear. The 2. Bundesliga’s relegation battle is heating up, and every point matters. For Münster, the challenge is to find consistency—to turn their flashes of brilliance into a sustained run of form. For Dresden, the task is even more urgent: to stop the rot, to start winning, and to prove they belong in Germany’s second tier.
The road ahead is forbidding, but for ninety minutes in Münster, both teams showed they have the fight to survive. Whether that will be enough, only time will tell. One thing is certain: in the cauldron of the 2. Bundesliga, there are no easy games, and no easy exits. The battle for survival is only just beginning.