The National - News

Germany crash out in group stage for first time since 1938

▶ A 2-0 defeat to eliminated South Korea sends defending champions home at the group stage

- RICHARD JOLLY

This time you can write off the Germans. Now internatio­nal football’s most consistent team have a taste of what everyone else has experience­d in the last eight decades.

After 16 consecutiv­e top-eight finishes in the World Cup, Germany are out. Gone, at the first hurdle for the first time since 1938. Gone, in a defence of the crown so embarrassi­ngly lamentable to bear comparison­s with France in 2002, Italy in 2010 and Spain in 2014.

Gone, because a side who scored seven times against Brazil four years ago could not muster one when they needed it against South Korea.

Gone, because they conceded two in injury time instead. Eliminatio­n brought humiliatio­n. It was a historic low for Joachim Low. A byword for progress has seen his side regress.

This time there was no act of escapology from Toni Kroos, no proof of Germany’s tournament mentality to camouflage their footballin­g flaws. There could have been. Five minutes before Kim Young-gwon set South Korea on their path to a monumental, magnificen­t win, Mats Hummels ought to have headed Mesut Ozil’s cross in.

Instead, as a centre-back who could have had a hat-trick, he shouldered it over. He should not shoulder all of the blame, however, and not just because substitute striker Mario Gomez was also profligate amid desperate directness.

Until then, a team who dominated in Brazil had sterile domination against South Korea. Germany had plenty of possession – 74 per cent – and precious little creativity. They lacked pace and penetratio­n, dynamism and drive, cohesion and clarity of thought.

Instead they began ponderousl­y and ended raggedly, hopeful substituti­ons entailing flooding the pitch with attackers. It was a recipe that somehow worked against Sweden, but there was no repeat.

Instead, South Korea, aided by VAR, delivered the late drama to leave Germany propping up Group F. Kim had been half a yard offside when he prodded the ball in after Son Heung-Min’s cross reached him at the far post but technology showed the ball came via Kroos. The decision to rule the goal out was overturned.

Then came an image to show how the most resilient, most redoubtabl­e of teams suddenly fell apart. Leaving his post in a hare-brained attempt to rescue things, Manuel Neuer lost the ball 80 yards from his own goal. Ju Se-jong booted the ball upfield and Son ended up with a tap-in with the Germany goalkeeper stranded.

It added to the indignitie­s for Germany’s luminaries. Thomas Muller, the World Cup talisman, was dropped. Sami Khedira and Ozil, who had experience­d the same fate against Sweden, were recalled, but to no effect. The new generation were no better.

Leon Goretzka spurned one fine chance, though it still required an athletic save from Cho Hyun-Woo to keep his header out. Low put his faith in Timo Werner, but he blazed wide three minutes after Goretzka’s chance. The striker was the top scorer in last year’s Confederat­ions Cup. He failed to score in the World Cup. He has had a wretched tournament. He is not alone.

South Korea, whose own chances of qualificat­ion disappeare­d when Sweden led against Mexico, defended valiantly, attacked intelligen­tly and won deservedly.

For Germany, this World Cup will stand out. Given their track record of success, it was failure on an epic scale. The obituaries can be written.

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 ?? Reuters ?? Two goals in injury time from South Korea ensured an early exit for Joachim Low, right, and his Germany side
Reuters Two goals in injury time from South Korea ensured an early exit for Joachim Low, right, and his Germany side

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