Bayern Munich have arrived in Glasgow for their Champions League match against Celtic but not all of their superstars made the flight.

Franck Ribery, Manuel Neuer and Thomas Muller are all absent but it is the injury to striker Robert Lewandowski that's the most notable.

The German media covering the game are talking about little else as kick-off draws near and while there's no panic, there's plenty of debate over what manager Jupp Heynckes will do.

We've rounded up the best of the coverage from Munich in one easy read.

Bild has focused on the Scottish reaction to Karl-Heinz Rummenigge's comments.

The Bayern chief executive said Lewandowski would have been risked if they were playing Real Madrid, prompting questions from the Scottish media.

Bild has highlighted Heynckes downplaying the issue.

You know what they say about statistics...

That hasn't stopped Merkur "crunching" the numbers and pointing out Bayern lost the only game they have played in the Champions League without Lewandowski during the striker's time at the club.

They have lost games with him in the team and that one defeat came against Real Madrid in the knockout stages but still: Omen.

Abendzeitung carried a live blog of Joshua Kimmich and Heynckes' media conference, which had plenty of discussion about the options the German side have without key players.

A switch to 4-4-2 might be considered.

Heynckes was also asked about Celtic.

In addition to saying that Brendan Rodgers' side would be a tougher proposition on their own patch, he offered his own take on our national game, explaining: "In Scotland, honest football is played, the players are strong and combative. Here you live football..."

In among all the worry about injuries, Deutsche Welle got closer to the reality of Celtic's task.

They highlighted how a change of manager had led to an upturn in fortunes and a strong run of form this month.

Suddeutsche mulls over the starting line-up and presents the two options. Either Kingsley Coman and Arjen Robben will play as a strike partnership or alternatively, Thiago or James Rodriguez plays as a false nine.

Nothing to be scared of there.

Journalist Martin Schneider also offers a little bit of colour from watching training at Celtic Park.

"The lawn is so perfect that a very bald, very grim, very wide but also very friendly minder stands at the final training session, at the edge like a Highland fox to take care that no journalist's sneaker should push even a centimetre on to the grass."