Given the shots ratio of 25:12, the late equaliser was deserved. In the first three away matches of the current campaign, BVB have had a maximum of ten shots on goal. Here are facts on the match in Ingolstadt.

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Slump: Borussia Dortmund have failed to win three consecutive Bundesliga matches for the second time under Thomas Tuchel; the winless streaks have come between Matchdays 6 and 8 of the last two seasons.

Landmark goal: Aubameyang's goal this afternoon was BVB's 100th in 42 Bundesliga matches under Thomas Tuchel; on average, they have scored 2.4 goals per game under the 43-year-old's leadership, meaning he now has the best average of any Dortmund head coach.

In the thick of it: Having returned to first-team action following a spell out, Gonzalo Castro was involved in eight of the 13 shots BVB had before he was substituted.

Preferred opponents: Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has always scored against Ingolstadt, with four goals in three games.

Back in action: Roman Weidenfeller lined up between the sticks in the Bundesliga for the first time since 2 March 2016 (in Darmstadt). It was his 347th Bundesliga game – almost as many as the entire Ingolstadt starting XI put together (388).

Gaps at the back: BVB last conceded three in the Bundesliga 11 months ago, when they lost 3-1 to HSV in November 2015.

Conceding early on: Borussia were last caught on the hop in the Bundesliga against Frankfurt in December 2015 (also in the sixth minute).

Starting XI: Joo-Ho Park was in the starting XI for the first time since BVB played in Mönchengladbach on 23 January 2016.

Set-piece specialists: Four of Ingolstadt's seven goals this season have come from dead-ball scenarios, as have 21 of their 40 Bundesliga goals in total. The last time Borussia Dortmund conceded twice from free-kicks was in a 5-1 defeat in Munich on 12 September 2015.

Draw: FC Ingolstadt got their first point against Borussia Dortmund in the third meeting between the sides; last season the Black and Yellows won 4-0 and 2-0. (br)