Hope returns for hosts Germany ahead of Euro 2024
5th June 2024
The Euro 2024 tournament kicks off on 14 June.
- Germany face Scotland, Hungary and Switzerland in the group stages - three teams the hosts are expected to beat.
- The team lost to England in the last 16 of the Euros in 2021.
- Nagelsmann's side will be pushing for a fourth Euros trophy which would break a tie with Spain for most titles.
Host nation Germany are riding a resurgent wave of hope with
the Euro 2024 tournament opener against Scotland just days away.
After two group stage World Cup exits in a row and a loss to
England in the last 16 of the Euros in 2021, Germany suffered a dire 2023, with
just three wins in 11 games.
Many in Germany predicted an embarrassing early exit for the
three-time Euros champions on home soil but that view has changed in the four
months.
While Germany may only have drawn 0-0 with Ukraine in
Nuremberg on Monday, they spurned chances, particularly during a dominant
second half.
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"You'd prefer to win," coach Julian Nagelsmann
said after the match. "But the most important factor is that I want to see
a team which wants to win. Today, we wanted that victory."
Germany were without four players, including fulcrum Toni
Kroos, who played with Real Madrid in last Saturday's Champions League final.
Debutant striker Maximilian Beier went close to breaking the
deadlock while youngsters Florian Wirtz and Jamal Musiala showed they can form
a dangerous attacking combination.
Other Nagelsmann selections, including Stuttgart's Chris
Fuehrich and Maximilian Mittelstaedt also impressed, suggesting the coach has
got his squad right before the tournament.
The improvement in form on the pitch - and the optimism off
it - will buoy Nagelsmann's side as they push for a fourth Euros trophy which
would break a tie with Spain for most titles.
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Germany face Greece in their final friendly on Friday in Moenchengladbach but will come up against sterner tests should they want to
make it to the business end of the Euros.
Taking over in late 2023 after Hansi Flick became the first
coach in German history to be sacked, Nagelsmann won just one of his first
four games.
The coach shook up his squad in response, leaving out 11
players and bringing back 2014 World Cup winner Kroos who had retired from
international duty in 2021.
Rather than relying on big names from powerhouse clubs
Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund, Nagelsmann's squad was heavy with players
from Bayer Leverkusen, on their way to a Bundesliga title, and Stuttgart, who
finished as surprise runners-up.
With Nagelsmann picking players on form, Germany beat two
Euro 2024 contenders France and the Netherlands in March with convincing
performances.
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Germany face Scotland, Hungary and Switzerland in the group
stages - three teams the hosts will now be expected to beat.
Nagelsmann said the Ukraine match was "perfect in view
of the games which await us in the group phase".
Veteran Thomas Mueller, heading into his fourth Euros, said
Monday there was "no reason to be nervous" despite the goalless draw.
After the difficult years, the German public has embraced
the national team on the eve of the tournament.
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Instead of the usual mode of squad announcements via tired
press conferences, the German FA (DFB) embraced a novel approach, drip-feeding the team player-by-player through TV personalities, influencers and celebrities
- reaching a new audience as a result.
Star midfielder Wirtz was announced at a concert by musician
Nina Chuba, while Real Madrid defender Antonio Ruediger's selection was made
public by a video from his favourite kebab shop in Berlin.
Just over 15,000 fans sold out a stadium in the central
German town of Jena to watch the team train in late May - with a further
16,000 watching a live stream.
Nagelsmann told AFP subsidiary SID in late May "we felt the enthusiasm of the public for their team. We'll take this great support with us until the tournament."