In the discussion rounds after a Bundesliga game, it is customary to let the guest coach have the floor first.

An act of courtesy that Leipzig press spokesman Till Müller has internalized as a veteran in his profession.

After the 1: 4 from RB Leipzig, he announced the guest coach.

Without reels, without thinking, without thinking.

A certain irritation at the moment would have been forgiven him.

Was it Julian Nagelsmann, who had only been allowed to speak second in Leipzig for the past two years because he was the RB trainer and hosted. The role change had left no traces on either Nagelsmann or Müller. As it is in the fast-moving Bundesliga. After the trainer is always before the trainer.

For the Leipzig team, however, this only applies to a limited extent.

Your process of cutting the cord from the old coach is much more difficult than in other departments of the club.

Nagelsmann's successor in Leipzig is Jesse Marsch.

An American who thinks differently than Nagelsmann, not just because of his origins in football.

Marsch is a fan of rapid pace, his credo is speed, not so much the positional play with the ball that Nagelsmann taught the Leipzigers.

So Marsch can definitely be relieved when he says: "We need a little more time to study."

Leipzig in a moderately difficult upheaval

Who learns what, when and at what speed, was one of the overriding topics after this game, which cemented the status quo in German football.

Leipzig had continued to develop since its promotion in 2016, followed a few months ago with second place in the Bundesliga and reaching the final in the DFB Cup, measured by the results, the provisional high point.

And of course there was always the question of when RB could actually be dangerous to Bayern.

Well, the answer is sobering from Leipzig's point of view: At least not this year.

Bayern's performance was too sovereign, even if their coach Nagelsmann said: “We weren't as much better as the result suggests.

For a long time it was a very open game. "

RB is in a moderately difficult upheaval, it's not as if only coach Marsch and his specifications are new. In addition to Nagelsmann, defense chief Dayot Upamecano and captain Marcel Sabitzer have left the club for Munich. Ibrahima Konaté, another highly talented defender, moved on to Liverpool. A number of new players came, including André Silva, who scored 28 goals for Eintracht Frankfurt last season.

In Leipzig there is only one goal for Silva, scored from the penalty spot. Silva hit the net against Bayern, but the goal was rightly not given due to an offside position for the Portuguese. For Silva, what also applies to his colleagues like Mohamed Simakan and Josko Gvardiol: They all have to get used to the new environment first, so they need time to learn, as Marsch puts it. But this time is now rare at clubs like RB Leipzig, the tight schedule leaves little time.