The Malta Independent on Sunday

Germany is hungry again ahead of Euros, says Jonathan Tah

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interview. “We have a great team, great quality and a really young team ... We don’t have to be scared of anybody.”

With a rebuilt team, Germany faces a tough test at the European Championsh­ip with group games against France and Portugal, the reigning world and European champions respective­ly. The fourth team in the group will be decided via playoffs.

Tah was training with Germany before the World Cup, but didn’t make the final squad.

Since then, though, the 23-yearold Bayer Leverkusen centerback has made his case for a starting spot with four internatio­nal starts and one substitute appearance in 2019.

Germany’s had a tough schedule with four games in 13 months against old rival the Netherland­s, another team rebuilt around younger players.

“We showed on the pitch that we are hungry, that something changed, that we want to win and showed our real character,” Tah said.

The rivalry with the Netherland­s played a big role in showing the world that Germany had its motivation back, Tah believes. He pinpoints the 3-2 win in Amsterdam in March, when he was on the bench, as the turning point.

“That was an amazing game in Amsterdam. That really felt like, ‘OK, something changed,’“he said. “And it was not only that we won, it was just the whole atmosphere was different.”

Germany’s goalscorer­s that day were Leroy Sane, Serge

Gnabry and Nico Schulz, none of whom made the 2018 World Cup squad, with the win sealed by Schulz with a 90th-minute goal.

The European Championsh­ip will also give Germany a taste of a major tournament at home for the first time since the 2006 World Cup.

Munich is one of the 12 co-host cities across Europe, and Germany will play all three of its group stage games there. That’s always special and feels more comfortabl­e,” said Tah.

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