World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Before the boarding gate to Foxborough, Boston, a staff member of the German Football Association realized they had forgotten their passport.
Before heading to the boarding gate for Boston Foxborough, the German Football Association staff realized they had forgotten their passports.
The entire team's schedule was delayed. DFB sports director Rettig had just characterized the team as "cornered," and this cornered team couldn't even handle the most basic boarding process, exuding a sense of amateurish panic.
Passports can be reissued, but a twelve-year knockout round drought cannot be changed. It has been a full twelve years since Germany last played a World Cup knockout match. After winning the title in 2014, they were eliminated in the group stage in both 2018 and 2022. Twelve years without tasting the intensity of a knockout match.
Julian Nagelsmann has been thrust into this pressure cooker. At 38 years and 341 days old, he is the youngest head coach to lead a World Cup knockout match in nearly 40 years. The unresolved history of failing to handle pressure at Bayern Munich still lingers, and the "genius young coach" label now feels more like a death warrant. After a 1-2 loss to Ecuador in the final group stage match, the team's sluggish performance prompted former player Jens Lehmann to openly criticize: "Fielding the strongest lineup and still playing like this is an ominous sign."
The youngest coach, with a defense that conceded two goals in the last match, stands on a cliff with no room for retreat. Lose this match, and he becomes the ultimate scapegoat for three consecutive World Cup failures.
Management's actions to soothe the locker room are often more honest than their verbal statements. Before the match, Rudi Völler displayed a subtly "paternalistic support." While outwardly backing Nagelsmann, his words precisely targeted the forward line, naming Musiala and Wirtz as "must take responsibility and give 100% effort." In plain terms: no matter how elaborate the tactics on the board, if goals aren't scored, it's the fault of these two talented attackers.
Tonight's opponent doesn't adhere to tactical logic.
Paraguay. In their history of five World Cup knockout matches, including regular and extra time, their goal tally is zero. Five matches with zero goals—this isn't an inability to attack; it's an obsession with "not conceding." Völler repeatedly warned before the match that the opponent "will defend deep and engage in intense physical battles," even drawing a comparison to Germany's 2002 team. That year, Germany carved a path through headers and brute force. The current German team fears nothing more than being dragged into a grinding battle.
Paraguay's all-time top scorer, Santa Cruz, made it even clearer. He admitted Germany is "clearly" the favorite, but quickly shifted focus—Paraguay has exploitable weaknesses. "We must make the match more physical and force Germany to work hard," Santa Cruz said. "I also hope for hotter weather, as it benefits us." Physicality, hard work, and hoping for heat. He laid all his cards on the table: drag the match into a grind, letting the technical advantages of Germany's talents rot away in sweat and muscle collisions.
A former world champion can forget their passport while boarding, while a South American grinding machine has scored zero in five knockout matches. Germany needs a clean win within 90 minutes tonight. But this team has always had a habit of passing the ball around like a rosary.
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