Malta Independent

Northern Ireland v Germany ‘has the air of a final’, says Joachim Löw

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Such is Michael O’Neill’s respect for Germany, who have not lost an away World Cup qualifier in 83 years, that he organised a 10 v six training session this week in preparatio­n for the world champions’ visit to Windsor Park. Northern Ireland played as the 10, in case you were wondering. It reflects the success of his forensic methods, however, that respect between countries of such contrastin­g resource and achievemen­t is mutual.

“This has the air of a final,” said Joachim Löw, the head coach who led Germany to their fourth World Cup win, in Brazil three years ago, and to the verge of Russia with a flawless qualifying campaign of eight wins from eight. “It is first against second in the group. Northern Ireland have practicall­y qualified for the playoffs and they can go top of this group. They will not play all-or-nothing football but they will definitely be risk-orientated because they have nothing to lose. They have exceeded expectatio­ns in many respects but they are where they are by rights. There’s a lot at stake and both teams know it.”

Northern Ireland are assured of second place in Group C and wellpositi­oned to claim one of the eight World Cup playoff berths next month, although not yet mathematic­ally certain. Having risen magnificen­tly from 129th in the world rankings to 20th under O’Neill and kept seven clean sheets in eight qualifiers, the manager admits they are “approachin­g it with a sense of optimism rather than anything else”. But with realism, too.

Injury to the 37-year-old defender Aaron Hughes is a significan­t setback for O’Neill’s strategy with Craig Cathcart already out. Despite Löw’s withering critique on the current state of the Bundesliga, and Germany being without Timo Werner, Mesut Özil and Mario Götze, losing a 37-year-old is not something he has to worry about.

“I watched Germany at the Confederat­ions Cup [in Russia last summer],” the Northern Ireland manager said. “They are the only country in the world who could go with a lot of players not selected or rested, introduce new players and win the tournament. All the other nations went with their strongest squads. They won the European Under-21s in the summer too, without their strongest squad. I thought [Leon] Goretzka, [Sebastian] Rudy and Werner were very impressive.

“One thing Germany do better than any other country is their succession planning. We have Gareth McAuley and Aaron Hughes as key players. They’re 37. Philipp Lahm retires at 32 and they have another one coming along at 19 or 20. The new players have freshened up the German squad.”

Germany’s run of unbeaten away World Cup qualifiers stretches over 46 matches and dates back to March 1934, including their West Germany incarnatio­n. They arrive in Belfast having won 12 consecutiv­e away qualifiers but well aware of the difficulti­es they will face against a Northern Ireland team who have not lost a competitiv­e home match in more than four years. The referee in that last defeat, Danny Makkelie of the Netherland­s, sent off three players as Portugal won 4-2 at Windsor Park with a Cristiano Ronaldo hat-trick.

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