World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
At the penalty spot stood Jonathan Tah. At Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts, in the Round of 32 of the World Cup, Germany vs. Paraguay. Kai Havertz’s equalizer had just pulled the team back from the brink, and Tah sent everything into the stands from twelve yards out.
Jonathan Tah stood at the penalty spot. At Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts, in the Round of 16 of the World Cup, Germany faced Paraguay. Kai Havertz’s equalizer had just pulled the team back from the brink, and then Tah sent everything into the stands from twelve yards.
Penalties: 3-4.
When Jose Canale slotted the winning spot-kick, Germany was sent home from a World Cup penalty shootout for the first time in their history.
In the mixed zone after the match, Julian Nagelsmann dropped a line into the cameras: "I won't step down. If the DFB wants me to continue, I'll continue, but I know how the industry works."
July 1, 36 hours after the penalty exit, over 150 investigators from the North Rhine-Westphalia State Criminal Police Office pushed open the doors of the German Football Association (DFB) headquarters in Frankfurt. The search wasn't limited to the headquarters. Municipal offices in the ten host cities of Euro 2024 were simultaneously raided, from Gelsenkirchen to Munich, not one missed. What Nagelsmann's words hid went far beyond locker room politics.
The crack in the dam was opened by a suspicious transaction of less than €2,400. Euro 2024 generated total revenue of €2.5 billion, a tournament record, with final match tickets priced up to €2,000. €2,400 doesn't even register as a rounding error in that book, yet it pried open the underbelly of the entire tournament machine.
Two men were targeted. One, a 46-year-old Frenchman employed by EURO 2024 GmbH—the tournament operating company, a joint venture between the DFB and UEFA. The other, a 66-year-old German, a former municipal administrator from Gelsenkirchen. Prosecutors suspect the pair funneled thousands of Euro 2024 tickets at discounted rates to municipal officials in host cities, along with hotel invitations, classified as "structural bribery." The €2,400 was one such instance. Someone was suspected of using the money to take a Euro 2024 office staffer to watch Spain vs. France in the semi-final, with travel and hotel fully covered.
North Rhine-Westphalia Interior Minister Herbert Reul offered no quarter: "Football tickets are not part of anyone's salary. Anyone in the public sector who accepts benefits must face the consequences."
€2,400 looks meager, but it exposed the dual-track system of ticket allocation. Euro 2024 issued a total of 2.7 million tickets, with fans globally submitting over 20 million purchase applications. The official line was that 85% of tickets—roughly 2.3 million—were sold via lottery to the public and team fans. As you stared at the "application submitted" spinner on the lottery platform, another channel had already reserved seat numbers and hotel key cards for the municipal system's people.
EURO 2024 GmbH was precisely where the suspects worked. Registered in December 2020, its shareholders are DFB EURO GmbH and UEFA Events SA—in essence, the tournament execution body controlled jointly by the DFB and UEFA. It managed operations, ticketing, and logistics. The suspects' paychecks came from this company. A joint venture structure has a convenient feature: when trouble arises, both parties can say, "This is an operational company issue." Responsibility is inherently blurred.
For the DFB, having law enforcement raid their offices is nothing new. In 2015, Der Spiegel revealed a suspicious €6.7 million payment related to the 2006 World Cup bid, forcing President Wolfgang Niersbach to resign. In 2020, around 200 investigators searched DFB headquarters, alleging €4.7 million in tax evasion from misclassifying income to lower tax liability. The legal battles dragged on for years without a single guilty verdict. Niersbach reached a settlement with prosecutors in 2024 to drop his case; Theo Zwanziger and Horst R. Schmidt followed in April 2025, each making charitable donations to settle. In June 2025, the court imposed an additional €130,000 fine on the DFB itself. On September 27, 2018, Germany won the hosting rights, defeating Turkey. Eight years later, what they received was the North Rhine-Westphalia State Criminal Police Office's battering ram.
Raid, scandal, case closed or left hanging, then another raid. This cycle has run for a decade, with no one stepping on the brakes.
Nagelsmann said in Massachusetts, "I know how the industry works." He was making a defiant statement about his own job security, but it became a prophetic commentary on the management of German football. €2,400 makes no sound in a €2.5 billion pot. But the fact that the ticket system left a backdoor for power is something ordinary fans can't even find a complaint portal for.