Coach Marco Rose rushed to the referee after the final whistle, and Mats Hummels had another need to speak.

The anger was great at BVB after a questionable red card for defense chief Hummels brought the black-yellows to a successful revenge against Ajax Amsterdam.

Borussia suffered the next setback against the Dutch champions on Wednesday at 1: 3 (1: 0).

On November 24th, Dortmund will have to go to a "final" at Sporting Lisbon to make it to the last sixteen in the Champions League.

“I have no idea how to give red.

How, as a referee at Champions League level, you can come up with the idea of ​​giving red, "said Hummels at the DAZN streaming service and added:" I stayed right on the pitch.

When he stayed on the Red Card, I was incredulous.

That was an absurdly wrong decision. "

“We left everything on the pitch,” said Marco Reus after the game at DAZN: “The goals we conceded were annoying, the first two came from completely the same situation.” Even the 32-year-old couldn't understand Hummel's dismissal: “It wasn't Red card."

Fighting, passionate, at times hot-headed - BVB showed in front of 54,820 spectators in an electrifying atmosphere everything that it had missed at the 0: 4 in Amsterdam two weeks ago.

Marco Reus (37th) gave the cup winner the lead with a penalty kick after video evidence - the whistle was just as questionable as Hummels' expulsion for gross foul play (29th).

Dusan Tadic (72nd), the former Frankfurt Sebastien Haller (83rd) and Davy Klaassen (90th + 3) turned the game for clearly superior guests.

Haaland watches, Tigges storms

Erling Haaland was sitting in the VIP box with a black bobble hat, at the center there was an unlikely representative ready to kick off: Steffen Tigges, recently a third division striker in the Dortmund U23, was allowed to take the lead - not star shopping Donyell Malen, not Reus, not Thorgan Hazard.

The demonstration in Amsterdam had worried and annoyed coach Marco Rose, "a completely different face" should now be seen.

BVB actually tried hard to get possession of the ball and to radiate dominance, the not only combative Jude Bellingham should have headed into the empty goal after an excursion by goalkeeper Remko Pasveer (8th).

The ball flew by.

Ajax, a performance show in modern tempo football in the first leg, let itself be pushed in behind and staggered.

Rose had exchanged ideas with Frank Wormuth, Heracles Almelo coach: He managed a surprising 0-0 win against Ajax in the league - he recommended rigorous physical toughness, among other things.

For Hummels' tackle against Antony, however, yellow instead of red would have been appropriate.

Ajax shuddered after a weak start and became more active.

Daley Blind and Antony found depth on the outside positions, BVB goalkeeper Gregor Kobel had to fly for the first time (22nd).

On the other side, Pasveer dived with lightning speed in a Reus shot (25th).

The game was attractive and offensive - but not one-sided this time.

However, the statics changed: Marin Pongracic came for Hazard to close the back four that had been decimated by being sent off.

Before the penalty kick, the English referee Michael Oliver looked at the pictures of an alleged foul on Bellingham at least this time.

Ajax reacted angrily, with great chances from Lisandro Martinez (44th) and Steven Berghuis (45th + 2).

BVB managed to keep the ball away from his goal for a few minutes after the break.

However, Amsterdam pulled the noose tighter and tighter, it was an exhausting Dortmund fight in their own penalty area.

Every ball win was enthusiastically celebrated by the audience, the professionals threw themselves into the shots regardless of losses.

Then they ran out of strength.