• Serie A champions lose 2-1 to Lazio in first home reverse since August 2015 • Hertha show solidarity with NFL players before 2-0 defeat to Schalke

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

Juventus suffered their first home defeat in Serie A in more than two years after Ciro Immobile scored twice to give Lazio a 2-1 victory in Turin.

A product of the Juve academy, who was recently a formidable goalscoring force for their cross-town rivals Torino, Immobile continued his hot streak with a leveller shortly after the break.

Lazio shock Juventus while Hertha Berlin players ‘take a knee’ Read more

The Bianconeri then paid the penalty for Gianluigi Buffon’s last-man foul on Immobile, as the Neapolitan converted a winner to confirm Juve’s first league loss here since August 2015.

That outcome could have been avoided had the Argentinian substitute Paulo Dybala stuck away a stoppage-time penalty, but Thomas Strakosha denied the prodigious No10 with a flying parry.

Earlier, Douglas Costa had scored from two yards out to open his account for the reigning champions, who were are now five points adrift of the leaders Napoli, who won 1-0 at Roma in the evening game courtesy of Lorenzo Insigne’s 20th-minute goal.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest The Lazio goalkeeper Stefan Strakosha is mobbed by his team-mates after saving Paulo Dybala’s stoppage-time penalty, Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

In the Bundesliga, Jupp Heynckes made a winning return to the Bayern Munich bench as the champions crushed Freiburg 5-0 for their first win in three matches.

The emphatic victory moved Bayern, who take on Celtic in the Champions League next week, two points behind the leaders Borussia Dortmund, whose 41-game unbeaten home run came to an end when they lost 3-2 to RB Leipzig.

Heynckes, 72 – in his fourth stint at the club – led Bayern to the 2013 treble, and took over last week from the sacked Carlo Ancelotti.

He could have not picked more appropriate opponents, with Freiburg having never won in Munich and having lost 13 of their 15 previous league matches in the Bavarian capital beforehand.

The hosts needed only eight minutes to take the lead, with Freiburg’s Julian Schuster’s second own goal in consecutive matches after a flowing passing move from the hosts.

Kingsley Coman’s diving header after Arjen Robben had his effort palmed away in the 42nd minute gave them a two-goal cushion but instead of wasting it – as they had done in their last two league games, when they ended up drawing 2-2 – Bayern cruised to victory.

Thiago Alcântara capped an outstanding personal performance with a goal, his powerful low shot beating Alexander Schwolow just past the hour mark, before Robert Lewandowski pounced on a defensive error to take his goal tally to nine. Bayern completed the rout in stoppage time, with Joshua Kimmich scoring on the break.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Thiago Alcântara celebrates scoring Bayern Munich’s third goal. Photograph: Christof Stache/AFP/Getty Images

Dortmund and Leipzig both had a player sent off in the second half of an entertaining match that the visitors controlled throughout.

The Bundesliga’s top scorer, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, put Dortmund ahead after four minutes, but Leipzig struck back through Marcel Sabitzer and Yussuf Poulsen to lead 2-1 at half-time.

Dortmund’s Sokratis Papastathopoulos was sent off shortly after the break and Jean-Kevin Augustin extended Leipzig’s lead from the penalty spot. The visitors’ Stefan Ilsanker received a second yellow card in the 56th minute and Aubameyang pulled a goal back for Dortmund shortly afterwards, but could not find the net again.

Hertha Berlin showed solidarity with NFL players in the United States by kneeling ahead of their home game with Schalke. The club’s starting lineup linked arms and took a knee on the pitch, while coaching staff, officials and substitutes took a knee off it.

NFL players have been demonstrating against discrimination in the US by kneeling, sitting or locking arms through the national anthem before games.

The movement, which was started last year by the former quarterback Colin Kaepernick, has been harshly criticised by President Donald Trump.

On Twitter, the Bundesliga club says: “Hertha BSC stands for tolerance and responsibility! For a tolerant Berlin and an open-minded world, now and forevermore!”

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Hertha lost the game 2-0, after having Genki Haraguchi sent off just before half-time for a dangerous challenge on the Schalke forward Guido Burgstaller. Leon Goretzka and Benjamin Stambouli scored in the second half for Schalke.

Hoffenheim, in third place, twice led against Augsburg, but conceded a last-gasp goal for a 2-2 draw that left them on 15 points. Eintracht Frankfurt scored late for a 2-1 win at Hannover, and Mainz defeated Hamburger SV 3-2.

In France, Paris Saint-Germain moved six points clear at the top of Ligue 1 after beating Dijon 2-1. Thomas Meunier gave PSG the lead in the 70th minute, but Benjamin Jeannot’s stunning volley in the 87th minute looked to have earned Dijon a draw. Meunier pounced again in the second minute of injury time, however, after being set up by Kylian Mbappé’s pass from the left wing.