• This is a reminder of 3 IMPORTANT RULES:

    1- External self-promotion websites or apps are NOT allowed here, like Discord/Twitter/Patreon/etc.

    2- Do NOT post in other languages. English-only.

    3- Crack/Warez/Piracy talk is NOT allowed.

    Breaking any of the above rules will result in your messages being deleted and you will be banned upon repetition.

    Please, stop by this thread SoccerGaming Forum Rules And Guidelines and make sure you read and understand our policies.

    Thank you!

Official German NT Thread aka Sauerkraut Thread

Hendrik

Team Captain
Never put your money on Germany when the game doesn't matter. Avoiding pot 1 isn't too bad though. These last games came in handy to try out some new faces in midfield due to the absence of Ballack, Frings, Schneider and Schweinsteiger. Especially Hitzlsperger was able to impress.

JJ, your countrymen chanting "Are you England in disguise" made me giggle. (H)
 

easyeasyeasy

Senior Squad
Yeah I heard that when I was watching the game last night made me laugh, our boyos who travelled out gave a good account of themselves by outsinging 50,000+ Germans by belting out "Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau". (H)
 

easyeasyeasy

Senior Squad
Well my German buddies we'll be seeing you again next qualifying campaign!

World Cup 2010 Qualifying - GROUP 4
Germany, Russia, Finland, Wales, Azerbaijan, Liechtenstein
 

Hendrik

Team Captain
Holy cow, we would've been in Group C if we had beat Wales.

The Austrians should be pushovers, regardless of the home advantage. They just have too little quality.

The other two shouldn't be underestimated though. I'd probably drop Podolski against the Polaks, he clearly didn't feel comfortable the last time we played them.
 

Deisler

Red Card [Being a douche] exp. 22/1/06
Considering what happened in Group C i say we were the luckiest bastards in that draw. Its time to pay the Kroats back for what they did us in 1998.
Poland and Austria should be affordable.
 

Deisler

Red Card [Being a douche] exp. 22/1/06
Great article on the first weltmeister captain. :)
Courtesy of UEFA.com



Germany's captain marvel

To help mark UEFA's Jubilee, each national association was asked to nominate its most outstanding player of the past 50 years. In the latest in a series of articles looking at the Golden Player selected by the nations who have qualified for UEFA EURO 2008™, uefa.com remembers the career of Germany's Fritz Walter.

He played for only one club, 1. FC Kaiserslautern, making his first-team debut at the age of 17. He scored a hat-trick on his international debut two years later. And on 4 July 1954, he captained West Germany to their first FIFA World Cup triumph, as they beat Hungary 3-2 in Berne. Indeed, had his national-team career not been interrupted for eight years between 1942 and 1950, Fritz Walter would likely have become the first player to win 100 caps for his country.

Decisive operator
Walter was a hugely gifted footballer. His brilliant ball control meant he was always two steps ahead of his opponent. His ability to read the game, combined with his natural agility, allowed him to act immediately and decisively upon a situation.

'Right-hand man'
Soon 'Friedrich', as his team-mates called him, developed from mere goal-getter to playmaker as his authority grew. He was no orator, yet his word carried great weight – and not just on the field of play. Long-serving national coach Sepp Herberger considered him his "right-hand man" on the pitch. In discussions that sometimes went on for hours, they worked out tactics. And if the opposition produced an unforeseen response, it required minimal eye contact between the captain on the park and the coach on the bench for the necessary adjustments to be made.

Prisoner of war
Walter was also proof of the game's universal appeal. Towards the end of the Second World War, he was taken prisoner by the Russians and held in a camp on the Romanian-Russian border, where both prisoners and guards played football. When the soldiers saw Walter play, they told their commanders and the next day he was in the guards' team against another Russian team.

Back home
The general in charge of the camp turned out to be an ardent football fan, and when the camp was dismantled, with the prisoners due to be transported into the Soviet interior, the general decided that Fritz could go home: "Fritz comes from Kaiserslautern and that's in the French-occupied zone, so he's French and can go home." Home he went, to rebuild his club. He served Kaiserslautern as coach, player, executive committee, groundsman, cashier and general help. It was at this time that he also met his future wife, an interpreter for the French occupying force.

Carry on Walter
Walter missed West Germany's first match after readmission to FIFA in 1950 due to injury, and two years later chose to retire from the international stage aged 32. The decision was prompted by headlines like "What's this old man doing in the team?" following a 3-1 defeat in Paris. However, Herberger coaxed him into a re-think and Walter agreed to carry on.

Final victory
And carry on he did, leading the side to the World Cup final against Hungary. The Hungarians had beaten West Germany 8-3 earlier in the tournament and were runaway favourites. Another walkover looked likely when the Magyars took an early 2-0 lead. But Max Morlock narrowed the gap, Helmut Rahn equalised, and six minutes from time, Rahn made it 3-2. West Germany were world champions and the victory gave the country renewed self-confidence nine years after the end of the war.

End of the road
Walter retired twice in the years that followed, but was back for the 1958 World Cup. However, a serious injury suffered in the semi-final against hosts Sweden ended his international career after 61 caps and 33 goals. In 1959, he also played his last game for Kaiserslautern, with whom he had won national championships in 1951 and 1953.

Family man
Walter's popularity never waned. He worked tirelessly for the Sepp Herberger Foundation, visited young prisoners in jail and, until his death in June 2002, was a devoted father to his family as well as to the family of the 1954 world champions.

©uefa.com 1998-2007. All rights reserved.
 

Deisler

Red Card [Being a douche] exp. 22/1/06
This seem to be the away jersey. I find it hideous. WTF is wrong with the kid designers? Why would they make a striped kit anyways?

 

RobbieD_PL

Unreliable deceiver
Staff member
Moderator
Yes I am f*cking blind. I can't see it for the life of me. Did Stasi make up phantom Poles? (H)
 

Deisler

Red Card [Being a douche] exp. 22/1/06
The German list.

Goalkeepers
Jens Lehmann (Arsenal FC), Robert Enke (Hannover 96), Rene Adler (Bayer Leverkusen)

Defenders
Christoph Metzelder (Real Madrid), Per Mertesacker, Clemens Fritz (both Werder Bremen), Philipp Lahm, Marcell Jansen (both FC Bayern), Arne Friedrich (Hertha BSC), Heiko Westermann (FC Schalke 04)

Midfielders
Michael Ballack (Chelsea FC), Thomas Hitzlsperger (VfB Stuttgart), Simon Rolfes (Bayer Leverkusen), Torsten Frings, Tim Borowski (both Werder Bremen), Bastian Schweinsteiger (FC Bayern), Piotr Trochowski (Hamburger SV), Jermaine Jones (FC Schalke 04), David Odonkor (Real Betis), Marko Marin (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

Strikers
Miroslav Klose, Lukas Podolski (both FC Bayern), Mario Gomez (VfB Stuttgart), Kevin Kuranyi (FC Schalke 04), Oliver Neuville (Borussia Mönchengladbach), Patrick Helmes (1. FC Köln)
 

Tosiek

Słowiańska Dusza
It's 2:0 at HT. How come Poland's sparing partners not foul Roger so sharply as Belorussians? I'm disappointed.:(
 


Top