Bayern Munich are out. Paris Saint Germain are through to the Champions League final. And German football is once again left asking the same old question, is there a conspiracy, or just a cursed run of bad luck?
The 2026 semi final second leg in Munich ended 1-1 on the night. PSG went through 6-5 on aggregate. But the manner of Bayern’s exit has sparked yet another furious debate about refereeing errors against Bundesliga sides.
And honestly? The Germans might have a point.
The Mendes handball that wasn’t even given
Let’s start with the big one.
Bayern are chasing the tie. Konrad Laimer plays a pass. It smacks the outstretched arm of PSG full back Nuno Mendes. Clear as day. Referee Joao Pinheiro stops play.
Then it gets weird.
After a chat with the fourth official, Pinheiro awards the free kick to PSG. Not Bayern. To PSG.
The explanation? Laimer supposedly handled it in the build up.
Replays showed definitively he didn’t. Not even close.
So what actually happened? Mendes commits a handball. It’s a “Stop of a Promising Attack” (SPA). That’s a mandatory yellow card. Mendes had already been booked. He should’ve walked.
Instead? PSG kept eleven men on the pitch. Bayern got nothing. Not even a free kick.
That’s not a mistake. That’s a howler.
The Neves shout, actually the right call
To be fair, not every claim was valid.
Bayern players screamed for a penalty when Joao Neves handled inside his own box. Vitinha had attempted a clearance. The ball ricocheted off his own teammate’s arm from close range.
Under IFAB rules? That’s not a penalty. The law specifically protects “teammate deflections” when the ball comes from close proximity. Ref got that one right.
But one correct decision doesn’t erase the other.
A history of heartbreak, the ‘German Tax’
This isn’t a one off. German sides have been on the wrong end of big calls for years. The list is genuinely staggering.
Bayern against Real Madrid in 2017? Cristiano Ronaldo scored two offside goals. Everyone saw it. Nothing done.
Bayern against Real Madrid in 2024? A late offside flag that should’ve disallowed a Madrid winner. The flag never came. Bayern went out.
Borussia Dortmund against Manchester City in 2021? Jude Bellingham had a goal ruled out for a foul on the goalkeeper that never was. City scored moments later. Momentum gone.
Dortmund against Chelsea in 2023? A penalty awarded for a handball that hit a Dortmund player’s back. Not his arm. His back.
Even the Germany national team. Euro 2024 semi final against Spain. A clear handball by Marc Cucurella in the box. No penalty. Germany lose in extra time.
At some point, it stops being coincidence.
Why does this keep happening?
That’s the question nobody can answer.
Is it unconscious bias? Poor refereeing standards across Europe? Or just a genuinely unlucky run that has somehow lasted nearly a decade?
Bayern fans will tell you it’s the first one. The “German Tax” they call it. A sense that 50/50 calls never go their way. That the big moments always benefit the other side.
Wednesday night didn’t change that view. If anything, it added more fuel to the fire.
The bottom line
Bayern are out. PSG are heading to Budapest for the final. The refereeing will be debated for weeks.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth, German clubs have been on the wrong end of so many howlers now that it’s gone beyond bad luck.
Whether it’s bias or incompetence, the “German Tax” is real. And until something changes, Bayern and every other Bundesliga side will go into European games wondering if the ref is about to cost them. Again.
