Kompany has faith in Bayern despite winless run
Vincent Kompany does not believe any major changes are needed at Bayern Munich despite its current three-game winless run.
Bayern sits top of the Bundesliga on 14 points, ahead of RB Leipzig on goal difference, and is looking to get back to winning ways against in-form Stuttgart this weekend.
Kompany's team, however, has been far from convincing in recent weeks, having lost to Aston Villa in the UEFA Champions League and drawn with Bayer Leverkusen and Eintracht Frankfurt in the Bundesliga.
It will need to quickly turn things around against Stuttgart with a busy match schedule ahead, including a trip to Barcelona next week in the UEFA Champions League.
"We know we have to do things better, but we have 100 per cent faith that our way will be successful. Hopefully, we will take the next step in the next game," Kompany said.
The Bavarian side was largely dominant against Villa and Eintracht but lost 1-0 in England and drew 3-3 in Frankfurt after conceding a stoppage-time equaliser.
"I come from Belgium, so we are very pragmatic, much like the Germans," Kompany added. "It is not only the belief but also what the analyses showed.
"We were dominant in those games [against Villa and Eintracht]. We had many, many more chances than our opponents.
"Of course, we have to be better, to optimise, but I believe if we are objective it would be stupid to change everything just because the results were not right.
"We will keep fighting to win games, but we are convinced we will win many games in the future."
Bayern will be without Jamal Musiala, who is recovering from injury, while defender Dayot Upamecano is a doubt.
Stuttgart provided six players to the Germany national team for this month's international matches, twice as many as Bayern. Last season's surprise runner-up is eighth on nine points in the current campaign.
"Stuttgart have shown what they want to do," Kompany said.
"They want to play their game and that's what made them successful. That's why they were second last season.
"It shows they have worked really well."