World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
In the 80th minute, the score was 1 1, and Sinko fell to the turf. Nathaniel Brown bent down to pick up the ball, wiped it on his jersey, and threw it directly into touch. The German team launched an attack, and no one on the German bench called for a halt.
In the 80th minute, with the score 1-1, Singo lay on the turf. Nathaniel Brown bent down to pick up the ball, wiped it on his shirt, and threw it directly into touch. Germany launched an attack, and no one on the German bench called for a stop.
Brown, the 23-year-old Eintracht Frankfurt left-back with dual German-American citizenship, had been hailed by DW as "the left-back Germany has been waiting for." In this match, he won all six of his ground defensive duels. But when Ivory Coast right-back Singo kicked the ball out of play due to injury, the unwritten rule of football wasn't even worth a yellow card in the eyes of this rising star.
When someone is injured and kicks the ball out, the opponent returns possession. This is the default rule from the Premier League to the local park. But with the score 1-1, Germany needed three points to secure qualification. In a do-or-die match where only three points would guarantee advancement, gentlemanly fair play went out the window. The ball was already thrown in.
On the same day, Bastian Schweinsteiger sat in ARD's commentary booth. After Kessié scored a rebound goal for Ivory Coast in the 30th minute, the 2014 World Cup winner evaluated the opposition live on air: "A bit of African football, a bit unorthodox, a bit wild, maybe not too bound by tactics." With each "a bit" that came out, the condescending arrogance grew thicker.
Schweinsteiger later issued a statement through ARD: "I was talking about football, not people." No apology. ARD publicly backed him, and he continued to commentate the next match between England and Ghana. His seat in the commentary booth didn't move.
At the final whistle, Ivory Coast head coach Emerse Faé stopped Brown in the tunnel after the match.
"I told him to stay humble," Faé said afterward, his tone flat. "He played a great match, but he didn't need to say bad things to us." No shouting, no shoving in the tunnel, just those five words dropped.
Faé held his cards close. In 2024, he led Ivory Coast to win the Africa Cup of Nations. A desperate losing coach's complaints are one thing; a champion coach's public reprimand is another entirely.
Total successful dribbles in the match: Ivory Coast 20, Germany 6. Schweinsteiger said the opponent wasn't bound by tactics, but dribbling itself is a tactical choice — just not one in Schweinsteiger's dictionary. In the post-match press conference, Faé's words were even more measured than in the tunnel. About Brown, he repeated "he didn't need to say bad things to us." About the German team, he said: "I expected a great football nation like Germany to show more fair play."
Faé later publicly used the word "racist" to describe Schweinsteiger's comments. But in the press conference, he swallowed that word back down.
In the 90+4th minute, Nmecha played a through ball, and Undav received it in the box, turned, and scored.
2-1. A last-minute winner.
Undav was released by Werder Bremen's youth academy at age 14 and drifted through lower leagues. At 17, he worked in a factory operating a laser cutting machine, waking up at 4 a.m. for eight-hour shifts before rushing off to play football. Later, he joined Union Saint-Gilloise in the Belgian second division, scoring 17 league goals and helping the team win promotion and the title. At 29, Undav sat on Germany's World Cup bench. Subbed on in the 60th minute, he equalized eight minutes later and scored the winner in stoppage time. Across two substitute appearances in the tournament, he tallied five goal involvements (3 goals, 2 assists), matching Roger Milla's 1990 World Cup record for most goals by a substitute in a single tournament.
Schweinsteiger sat in ARD's air-conditioned commentary booth in his suit. One word — "wild" — erased 90 minutes of tactical execution and 20 successful dribbles by the opposition.
Germany celebrated the victory. Brown walked back to the locker room, with no one stopping him in the tunnel. Singo left the field in tears.
A few days later, Jürgen Klopp, as a World Cup guest commentator, gave an interview with DW. As the most internationally recognized figure in German football, he was asked about Schweinsteiger's comments. Klopp stood up and walked away without saying a word.
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