World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
85% of people want Leroy Sané on the bench.
85% of people want Leroy Sané on the bench.
The voting trend in the German fan community before the match clearly stated, "Please don't start him." Then Lennart Karl collapsed in training. A tear in the front left thigh muscle fibers—the 18-year-old Bayern Munich midfield prodigy was removed from the World Cup squad, with RB Leipzig's Xavi Simons stepping in.
Sané slipped back into the starting vest. It had nothing to do with form—it was purely because a spot had opened up.
On June 6, at Soldier Field in Chicago. Germany's final warm-up match before the World Cup, against the United States. In the second minute, Kimmich chipped a free kick into the box, Havertz headed it home. 1-0, as fast as an accident.
The U.S. team didn't crumble. In the 37th minute, Antonee Robinson volleyed a shot into the top corner, and Soldier Field erupted. 1-1.
The deadlock held until the 57th minute. Germany launched a counterattack; Havertz laid it off at the edge of the box, Sané followed up with a low shot that deflected off a defender and into the net. 2-1.
This was Sané's 17th goal for the national team, and his third in six matches since returning to the side last November. In six months, three goals and three assists—the stats alone are hard to fault. The problem was never in his feet.
Nagelsmann didn't fall back on clichés like "finding form" in his post-match comments. He cut straight to it: Sané is a key figure for the World Cup. His reasoning was tactical—"His speed and technique can make a huge difference when the opponent packs the bus."
Against a backdrop of 85% opposition, this was the head coach laying all his cards on the table. Nagelsmann didn't need a winger who pleases the crowd; he needed a crowbar to pry open a deep defense. Sané was his pick.
What was even sharper was how he dismantled the off-field noise. Nagelsmann called it a "psychological phenomenon"—"If you put a person in a certain drawer, it's hard for outsiders to pull them back out." The implication was clear: Sané's feet weren't the issue; the observers' minds had already grown moldy. Protecting a player with such words before a World Cup shows Nagelsmann has the dressing room and the public relations calculus well figured.
He wasn't the only one keeping score. Gündogan dedicated a whole passage in his Spiegel column to backing Sané. The former Germany captain, now Sané's club teammate at Galatasaray, directly refuted external accusations about his attitude on the pitch. Leweling was even more blunt—when a Frankfurter Allgemeine reporter pressed him with pointed questions about Sané, he snapped back on the spot, apologizing only afterward.
Eighty percent of the outside noise wanted him buried, but the people inside lined up to take the bullets. The dressing room had formed a solidarity pact before the World Cup.
On a foundation of nine consecutive wins, Nagelsmann's system needed a linchpin for breaking down deep defenses. Sané's tactical role is being nailed down inch by inch by the head coach.
When that deflected goal rolled into the net in the 57th minute, the German fans in the away section at Soldier Field stayed silent. The 85% opposition rating wasn't erased by that strike. Nagelsmann had shoved his chips to the center of the table, and Sané had caught the first one.
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