Germany...


Tuesday, July 04, 2006



Germany 0-2 Italy (aet)
Stunning late extra-time strikes from Fabio Grosso and Alessandro Del Piero took Italy into the World Cup final at Germany's expense with a 2-0 win.
An absorbing semi-final seemed set for penalties until Grosso curled man of the match Andrea Pirlo's pass past Jens Lehmann with just one minute left. Del Piero then finished an Italy break with a delicate chip into the corner.
Germany's Lukas Podolski earlier sent a header wide and saw a shot saved, but the hosts' Cup dreams were shattered. There were, unsurprisingly, tears among German players and fans after the extraordinary end to an enthralling encounter - in which Italy also hit the woodwork twice in extra-time. The opening 90 minutes were intriguing - but goalless - and it was in the extra period that the game truly exploded into life.
The Italians, famed for their defensive strength, adopted an increasingly attacking approach, aware of the Germans' brilliant record at penalty shoot-outs. Substitute Alberto Gilardino's shot rebounded off the post and Gianluca Zambrotta's drive struck the bar.
But Podolski led the German attacking threat, missing the header from David Odonkor's cross and forcing a brilliant one-handed save from Gianluigi Buffon. Del Piero then squandered a shooting chance from the edge of the box after great work from Vincenzo Iaquinto and Francesco Totti and Pirlo forced a diving save from Lehmann. But Pirlo still had time to have his say as, with Italy pushing forward in numbers, he threaded the ball to Grosso whose first-time shot left Lehmann with no chance.
The goal was timed at 119 minutes and Germany, and their supporters who had crammed into Dortmund's Signal Iduna Park, were stunned. And as Jurgen Klinsmann's side pushed forward in desperation, Gilardino found the ball in space and rolled it to Del Piero who sent a clinical finish beyond the advancing Lehmann into the roof of the net.
The opening 90 minutes saw Italy work the first clear opening as Totti's astute pass picked out Simone Perrotta, but Lehmann smothered the ball. Fabio Cannavaro, exceptional throughout the match, marshalled the Italian back line effectively and limited Germany in the opening period. Italy saw a Pirlo free-kick on 24 minutes elude both Luca Toni and Marco Materazzi by a fraction. Then Toni was played in by Grosso, only for his goalbound shot to be blocked by Per Mertesacker.
Germany, however, fashioned the best chance of the first half, but Bernd Schnieder shot over after finding rare space behind the Italian defence. Buffon had to make his first real save, and had to race from his goal to block as Miroslav Klose danced his way into the area.
Germany were on top and Buffon parried a close-range effort from Podolski 12 minutes later. But extra-time seemed inevitable as Michael Ballack, not at his imperious best, sent a free-kick over the top from 20 yards. Indeed, the 90 minutes ended without a goal - opening the dramatic extra period in which Grosso and Del Piero wrote themselves into Italian football history.
Their delight at the final whistle was in stark contrast to Germany, who were left bereft as their dream of lifting the World Cup on home soil came to a sudden, heart-breaking end.

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Monday, July 03, 2006



Fifa has suspended Germany midfielder Torsten Frings for Tuesday's World Cup semi-final against Italy.
Frings, 29, was banned for punching Argentina forward Julio Cruz in a fracas which followed the quarter-final between the two countries. He has been given a two-match ban, but the second match is suspended meaning he will be available for the World Cup final, if Germany qualify.
Germany team manager Oliver Bierhoff said he was disappointed by the ban.
"We found out about it on the plane on the way to Dortmund (for the semi-final)," Bierhoff told reporters. "We haven't seen the written reasons but will accept the Fifa decision. Frings will get a special training programme to be completely fit for the final. Torsten is obviously not very happy about it. He'll be able to go at full steam for the final, though."
The ban is a blow for coach Jurgen Klinsmann, who would have started the Werder Bremen player had he been available. Klinsmann said before the verdict that he was confident Frings would be cleared, saying Argentina were to blame. "I don't think we were the culprits. He should be in the line-up on Tuesday," Klinsmann said.
Fifa had announced on Sunday that it would take no action against the German players.
Football's governing body is considering action against officials of both teams and cases have already been opened against two Argentine players.
Non-playing substitute Leandro Cufre was red-carded by referee Lubos Michel for his part in the incident. A Fifa spokesman said Maxi Rodriguez may be punished for an "apparent attack on Bastien Schweinsteiger".
The referee and Fifa officials were caught up in the fighting, with punches and kicks appearing to be thrown during the ugly scenes which lasted 90 seconds.

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Saturday, July 01, 2006



Ugly scenes mar Germany triumph

Germany and Argentina players clashed on the pitch after the hosts' quarter-final victory in Berlin.
Ex-striker Oliver Bierhoff, now part of the German backroom team, appeared to be at the centre of the melee. Fifa officials and referee Lubos Michel were involved, while Argentina's unused substitute Leandro Cufre was sent off for unsporting behaviour.
Bierhoff said: "Fans have shown they can get on with each other. We should be able to do the same as sportsmen." Punches and kicks appeared to be thrown in chaotic scenes which went on for approximately 90 seconds in front of a 72,000 crowd.
Bierhoff told German TV that he intervened after Cufre trod on German defender Per Mertesacker, leaving the player lying on the ground. The trouble seemed to start when midfielder Tim Borowski gestured towards the Argentina players to "keep quiet" having scored his penalty to make it 4-2 in Germany's favour.
Several of the South American players walked towards him and when the final Argentina spot-kick was saved, the Argentina defender Fabricio Coloccini approached Germany's Oliver Neuville. Punches were thrown in a brief melee before it was broken up.
"It's a shame that in a game like a quarter-final such pictures end up getting sent around the world," Bierhoff added.
Germany coach Jurgen Klinsmann put the trouble down to the intensity of Germany's dramatic win. "I'd like to remind people that in football there is so much tension, so many emotions and if it goes all the way to penalties someone can lose control," he said.
"Football is just so emotional. It's just normal. It's no big deal, no problem at all."
And he was backed by Argentine coach Jose Pekerman.
"At times emotions run away with themselves at a match and it's not what we feel. Germany and ourselves have great respect for each other and this was a thing of the moment," he said.

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Tuesday, June 27, 2006



Germany stronger than last time says Frings

Germany midfielder Torsten Frings has warned Argentina that the World Cup hosts are a much stronger outfit than the team they faced at the Confederations Cup last June.
Germany cross swords with Argentina on Friday in a titanic quarter-final tussle in Berlin and Frings said Jurgen Klinsmann's team had made giant strides since the two 2-2 draws last year. "We were close to beating them on both occasions and were arguably the better side," Frings said at Tuesday's press conference. "I do not know if they are stronger now, but all I can say for sure is that we are."
In February last year Germany drew 2-2 with Argentina in a friendly in Dusseldorf and then by the same scoreline in the group match at the Confederations Cup. Werder Bremen midfielder Frings played in both of those matches and hopes it is third time lucky against Jose Pekerman's team. "We can play at a high tempo for 90 minutes or 120 minutes if we need to. I do not think Argentina like it when you get amongst them," Frings explained. "We will do everything to beat them and I think we can do it. I think Friday is finally the time to defeat a top nation."
Germany have failed to defeat a recognised top nation since a 1-0 win over England in a World Cup qualifier back in October 2000.
Much has been made of the statistic but Frings, capped 56 times for his country, says he and his team-mates do not have a mental block.
"Not once have we thought about going out," he said. "We are not interested in the past five years. The only important thing is we win on Friday." The 29-year-old Frings is Germany's holding midfielder but said the team would not consider man-marking Argentina's playmaker Juan Roman Riquelme. "We can not make the mistake of concentrating on one player as Argentina have a lot of players that can decide the game," Frings admitted. "I can not imagine running round after Riquelme for 90 minutes. Myself and Michael Ballack will play against him, depending on whose side of the pitch he is on. "We understand each other perfectly and it has worked brilliantly with Michael and the rest of the team."
Defender Per Mertesacker has enjoyed three consecutive clean sheets and says it is vital Germany double up if they are to stop Argentina's potent attack. "We played against Argentina twice last year and know all about (Javier) Saviola, (Hernan) Crespo and the others," Mertesacker said. "They can turn quickly and are very fast. We need to defend as a team and double up. If we allow them one-on-one situations it will be difficult."

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Germany 2-0 Sweden

Hosts Germany booked their place in the World Cup quarter-finals as two early goals from Lukas Podolski helped secure victory over 10-man Sweden.
Podolski scored on just four minutes, driving home the loose ball after Sweden keeper Andreas Isaksson parried. And Podolski finished smartly after Miroslav Klose's pass on 12 minutes. Sweden's Teddy Lucic was sent off for a second booking on 35 minutes and their miserable day was complete when Henrik Larsson missed a second-half penalty. It was an assured display from Germany, who always looked like adding to their lead after gaining the early advantage.
Both sides were still settling down when Podolski's goal sent the home fans at the Allianz Arena into raptures. Michael Ballack created the opening as he found Klose, who turned his marker but saw the ball pushed away from his feet by Isaksson.
However, Podolski was on hand to slot in via a deflection off Lucic's head. Larsson had an opportunity to level on eight minutes but shot into the side netting from inside the six-yard box.
He was left to rue his wastefulness four minutes later as Podolski was played in by a delightful pass from Klose before finishing with considerable assurance. Unsurprisingly, the goals filled Germany with confidence and instilled their play with a real swagger.
Jurgen Klinsmann's side surged forward - Ballack's drive was parried by Isaksson, Bernd Schneider drove wide, Klose's near-post effort was saved and Bastian Schweinsteiger's 30-yarder was brilliantly tipped around the post. And things got worse for Sweden on 35 minutes as Lucic received a second yellow card after being judged to have tugged Klose's shirt. Referee Carlos Simon was surrounded by Germany players brandishing imaginary cards - and the Brazilian eventually did what they wanted as he waved the red, receiving a pat on the back from Podolski. Ironically, Sweden's best passage of play followed.
Zlatan Ibrahimovic's shot from a narrow angle was fumbled around the post by Jens Lehmann, while Mattias Jonson beat Lehmann to Larsson's cross only for Phillip Lahm to clear. After the interval, Sweden were gifted a chance as they were awarded a penalty for an innocuous-looking challenge on Larsson. The Barcelona player picked himself up, dusted himself down - and blazed way over the bar.
Ballack then shot from 20 yards only for Isaksson to produce another fine save, tipping the ball on to the post. The pace, unsurprisingly, began to drop in the sweltering heat of Munich and the match lost much of its earlier fluency. But following Larsson's penalty miss, the Germans never seriously looked like conceding.
Indeed, they looked close to increasing their lead as Schneider's 85th-minute drive was deflected by Tobias Linderoth on to a post, while substitute Oliver Neuville's shot was blocked.

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Friday, June 23, 2006



Ecuador 0-3 Germany

Hosts Germany made it three wins out of three in the World Cup as they beat Ecuador to finish top of Group A.
Miroslav Klose, now with four goals, became the tournament's leading scorer, first putting the Germans ahead early on by rifling home from close range. He then coolly slotted in from Michael Ballack's brilliant chip before Lucas Podolski slid home to wrap it up. Ecuador will play England in the last 16 on Sunday, while Germany face Group B runners-up Sweden on Saturday. The Germans were clearly taking the threat of a possible meeting with England more seriously than Ecuador and, despite having already qualified, were at full strength. Having started the World Cup as dark horses, Germany's qualification for the knockout stages has been remarkably easy. Granted, they have not faced any sort of test yet, coming up against a poor Costa Rica, a woeful Poland and now Ecuador who rested half of their first-team regulars.
But they have beaten every team they have faced, and they never seriously looked in any danger of not getting all three points once again in Berlin.
They took an early lead when Ecuador hopelessly failed to clear their lines and Bastian Schweinsteiger cleverly pulled the ball back for Klose to arrow into the corner from eight yards.
In truth, Germany should have had it wrapped up well before the break. Klose just failed to connect with a Philipp Lahm cross, Bernd Schneider lashed one off target and Ballack's audacious 50-yard lob flew just over the bar. Podolski looked like he desperately needed a goal to boost his flagging confidence, but when the killer second came, it fell to his strike partner once more.
Ballack's sumptuous chip cut out two defenders and Klose - albeit clumsily - rounded Cristian Mora and slotted home to double the advantage. If Podolski was worried, he need not have been. Just before the hour mark, he finally broke his World Cup duck. Germany repelled an Ecuador attack and broke quickly on the counter, Schweinsteiger sending Schneider away down the right from where the midfielder crossed superbly for a sliding Podolski to guide the ball home. They cantered home after that, coach Jurgen Klinsmann using his substitutions to give Klose, Torsten Frings and Schneider a rest ahead of their last 16 tie on Saturday.
Which, as they face Sweden, is almost certain to be their first real test of the 2006 World Cup.

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Friday, June 16, 2006



Subs turned match says Klinsmann

Germany coach Juergen Klinsmann praised the contribution of substitutes Oliver Neuville and David Odonkor after the World Cup hosts beat 10-man Poland 1-0. Odonkor crossed for Neuville to score in stoppage time, giving Germany a victory that moved them top of Group A.
Klinsmann said: "We wanted to bring more speed into the match and both substitutes are fast - they brought some life to the match." Neuville added: "Clearly, I was a bit lucky but I think it was well earned."
It was Germany's first tournament win over European opposition since beating Czech Republic in the Euro 96 final.
"These are very special moments, also for the coach," said Klinsmann, who was a member of the German team that beat the Czechs 2-1 in extra-time at Wembley. When everything comes together like this it's like a big burst, one feels the emotion of the players."
Odonkor added: "I can't even describe the feeling it's so incredible - I'm happy Olli scored and we won the game. I'm thrilled I got to play for half an hour. It's a great feeling."

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Germany 1-0 Poland:
Oliver Neuville put Germany within reach of the last 16 with a goal in the first minute of stoppage time to leave Poland pointless after two games.
The forward latched on to a low cross from fellow substitute David Odonkor to slide the ball past the despairing dive of Poland goalkeeper Artur Boruc.The goal came a minute after Miroslav Klose and Michael Ballack had hit the bar within seconds of each other.
Poland's Radoslaw Sobolewski was sent off late on for two bookable offences. The Germans created a hatful of chances, but failed to make the most of them and also found Boruc in sensational form.
Klose should have eased German nerves earlier in the game, but the 28-year-old could not add to his two-goal tally from the first game against Costa Rica. The Werder Bremen striker, who scored 25 goals in the Bundesliga last season, came close twice in the first 15 minutes with a header and low shot that the Poland keeper smothered. He then failed to hit the target with another header and struck the crossbar in the second half with a similar effort.
His strike-partner Lukas Podolski also came close to scoring, but his shot from Philipp Lahm's low cross went wide of Boruc's left-hand post. At the other end, Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann had little to do. The Poles threatened on several occasions, particularly in the second half with Ireneusz Jelen pulling the strings in midfield.
But for all their good intentions and vibrant build-up play, the final ball let them down. When they did get a sight on goal, it was Jelen who came closest to scoring, but his second-half strike from the edge of the area went straight down Lehmann's throat.
Germany brought on the pacy David Odonkor in the last 20 minutes and his arrival appeared to add a spring into the step of his frustrated side. However, the Poland keeper was in no mood to lie down and made fantastic reaction saves from the industrious Lahm and Neuville. When he was beaten the woodwork saved him as in the last minute of normal time Klose headed against the woodwork from close range and Ballack did the same with the rebound.
But with just a few seconds of stoppage time remaining, all of Boruc's good work was undone by the instinctive reactions of Neuville. Odonkor sped down the right to fire in a low ball which found the diminutive forward who eluded his two markers to prod past the helpless Poland shotstopper. Neuville's goal gave Germany their first win against another European team at the finals of either the World Cup or European Championships since their victory over the Czech Republic in the final of Euro 1996.

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Saturday, June 10, 2006




Germany opens World Cup with victory:
Germany responded to the pressure as the World Cup's host nation with a 4-2 victory over Costa Rica in the tournament opener Friday, a performance that could inspire the team the rest of the way. Germany captain Michael Ballack missed the game with an injury but striker Miroslav Klose celebrated his 28th birthday by scoring two goals. Paulo Wanchope also scored two for Costa Rica, while Philipp Lahm and Torsten Frings added the others for Germany.
"That's how I imagined this day more or less," Klose said. "Every opener is difficult and we are pleased that we won. The goals we conceded were own fault. We must recover better after losing possession." The game had the most goals of an opening match since the World Cup began in 1930. Germany stayed true to its style under coach Juergen Klinsmann - creating many chances, scoring goals and playing recklessly in the defence.
Klinsmann said he was delighted for the fans who saw six goals in the opening game, "but we would have preferred not to have given any away." "We wanted to play well and get the fans involved. We were a little bit nervous. We made some mistakes, but they happen," Klinsmann said. "We can draw a lot of positives from this game. We are happy to have our first three points." "If the players want to go out tonight and have a beer, they can do it."
Lahm, a defender still wearing a special brace after surgery on his left elbow three weeks ago, curved a shot from the edge of the box in the sixth minute to put Germany ahead.
Lahm cut in from the left and got the space he needed when Luis Marin slipped, leaving Lahm plenty of time to aim his shot into upper corner.
"We can't keep conceding so many goals," Lahm said. "I was lucky to hit the ball just right on my goal. "Ballack can now heal in peace," he said.
Ballack told a German newspaper that he had recovered from his right-calf injury but the team doctors advised against using him. "I simply wanted to play, I didn't have any pain, but the doctors were against it," Ballack told German television after the game.
He spoke to Klinsmann "and we were of different opinions, he had to stop me (from playing)," Ballack said. Klinsmann told Ballack he could understand his desire to play, "but I also told him, `what if something happens to you, what will then go on in the nation?"'
Germany piled on the pressure after Lahm's goal and Bernd Schneider fired high from close range, but Costa Rica stunned the hosts in the 12th when Wanchope beat the German offside trap and coolly slipped the ball past goalkeeper Jens Lehmann.
Germany has well-documented problems in its young and inexperienced defence and its shortcomings were exposed again. While most of Germany's back line was signalling offside with their raised arms, Arne Friedrich was caught behind Wanchope.
It didn't take Germany long to recover.
Schneider broke through on the right in the 17th minute and passed the ball to Bastian Schweinsteiger, who sent a crisp pass to the far post for Klose to knock in.
In the 61st, Klose's header was saved by goalkeeper Jose Porras, but the Bundesliga's leading scorer fired the rebound into the roof of the net.
The Germans couldn't relax, however, after Wanchope's second in the 73rd.
He again beat the offside trap when a through pass caught Germany central defenders Per Mertesacker and Christoph Metzelder off guard. Wanchope was suddenly alone and shrugged off a late challenge by Friedrich to beat Lehmann for the second time.
But Frings settled the issue when he drilled a swerving shot from more than 25 yards.
The capacity crowd of 66,000 gave the team a standing ovation.

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