The Star Malaysia

Wagner a throwback striker in youthful Germany squad

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SOCHI: Physically imposing and direct, Sandro Wagner is a veteran throwback centre forward in a youthful German squad looking to the future at the Confederat­ions Cup.

Forget about diminutive false nines like Mario Goetze, the six-foot-three inch tall Wagner is the genuine article: a lofty battering ram of a striker who can wreak havoc in defences.

Just the type of player out of favour in the modern game. Little wonder that it’s taken Wagner until the age of 29 to earn his first call-up to the national team.

“Tall players aren’t so agile, busy or as strong dribblers as smaller players,” Oliver Bierhoff, the Germany team general manager, said on Friday. “Normally tall players who aren’t called Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c are often criticised and polarise opinion.”

Particular­ly Wagner, with his penchant in the past for annoying people with outspoken remarks – from claiming “women and football do not fit” to calling for players to be paid more.

But it is Wagner’s footballin­g intelligen­ce that appeals to Germany.

“He can definitely also hold the ball up well and defend well,” said Bierhoff. “These are the types of players that we haven’t had many of recently.”

Tough too, playing through the pain after dislocatin­g a finger during a Hoffenheim game earlier in the year.

And patient, in the extreme.

Like so many in Germany’s travelling party in Russia, Wagner has limited internatio­nal experience as establishe­d stars are given a summer off. Unlike many team-mates, Wagner lacks time to prove himself on the internatio­nal stage.

Wagner only made his competitiv­e debut for Germany last week, but made the most of it. Demonstrat­ing his aerial prowess with an early header, Wagner went on to grab a hat-trick in a 7-0 victory over San Marino in World Cup qualifying.

A promising club career that began at Bayern Munich stalled as Wagner drifted around Germany. Some time was even spent in the lower leagues playing for the B teams of Werder Bremen and Hertha Berlin as the goals dried up. From 2010 to 2015, he scored barely a dozen goals in first-team football.

But then came the renaissanc­e: 14 goals to keep Darmstadt in the Bundesliga in the 2015-16 season and a transfer to Hoffenheim.

By the end of 2016, Wagner was the top-scoring German striker in the calendar year and readily bragging about it.

“I’ve been the best German striker in my eyes for some time,” he said with typical self-confidence.

Eleven goals in the recently-completed campaign propelled Hoffenheim to fourth place and a first-ever shot at the Champions League.

Just where has this explosive form come from? “This is not an explosion,” Wagner said ahead of the Confederat­ions Cup. “This is my quality.” — AP

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