The National - News

Agony of Amsterdam suggests a German crises rather than blip

▶ Threat of Nations League relegation after failure at World Cup leaves Low in trouble

- IAN HAWKEY

When Uefa’s new competitio­n, the Nations League, was launched last month, there was initial confusion about some of its complex mechanisms, and a hesitancy about how to properly describe its penalty for failure.

Managers talked about “demotion”, of “dropping down a level”, apparently unwilling to say the word “relegation” about something that could affect them abruptly, even in the space of three matches.

Right now, Germany’s national team is undergoing a crash course in the language of failure, a vocabulary they have not had to learn for a generation.

There is no softening the impact of Saturday night’s 3-0 defeat against a Netherland­s who spent much of the past four years perfecting the role of Europe’s most hapless fallen giant. They emphatical­ly handed over that script to Joachim Low’s bedraggled Germans in Amsterdam.

Low, now in his 11th year in a job he might easily have lost after a dreadful World Cup, may say sincerely that the Nations League was never his priority. But rebuilding a damaged edifice certainly is, and being thumped by the Dutch, with whom Germany have a peppery rivalry even in friendlies, leaves a nasty bruise.

It has ushered the 2014 World Cup winners closer to the R-word: Relegation from League A in the hierarchy of Uefa’s lively new tournament will look a probabilit­y if Germany lose to France in Paris tomorrow.

They are bottom of their table with a single point. Less than four months ago, they finished bottom of their group at the World Cup.

Germany have scored no goals in their last three competitiv­e matches and just two in their last five.

The worst calendar year of Low’s decade at the top now reads: Played 12, Lost 5, Won 3. Germany have kept a clean sheet just once in their last 11 games. Seven of Germany’s 2014 World Cup gold medallists took part in the agony of Amsterdam; a Dutch team, more and more vibrant as the contest developed, fielded just three of the men who failed, via penalty shoot-out, to reach the final of that tournament.

The Dutch still look back on some very lean times – the Nethrland qualified for neither the 2016 Euros nor the 2018 World Cup – but must feel rejuvenate­d that a corner has been turned.

They were also the beneficiar­ies, over a rousing 90 minutes, of a catalogue of errors from players who have been standard-bearers under Low.

Captain and goalkeeper Manuel Neuer badly lost his bearings while tracking the corner that led to the first goal, headed in by Virgil Van Dijk.

The opportunit­y had been set up when Ryan Babel outjumped Mats Hummels, a defender with almost 70 caps to his name.

By that time, half an hour in, Thomas Muller – on course for his 100th cap when Germany host Holland in what may well be the relegation decidthe er next month – had squandered a chance, allowing Jasper Cillessen to save a drive the usually predatory Muller had time to place more expertly. Julian Draxler – another 2014 champion – wasted an opportunit­y to equalise.

It was a hard night, too, for Jerome Boateng, playing his 76th internatio­nal.

Memphis Depay, electric on counter-attack, zipped past him for the second goal, and Georginio Wijnaldum did the same before unleashing the authoritat­ive drive past Neuer for the third, in injury-time.

Neuer, Hummels, Boateng and Muller have all had a tough, disorienta­ting few weeks with their club, an unusually vulnerable Bayern Munich, and Low acknowledg­ed confidence is draining from players he knows intimately.

“You can see the self-belief has lowered in the past few months,” he said.

“We have lost direction. In the last 10 minutes, you should be responding to 1-0 down without going wild. We have been authors of our own defeat too often.”

Belief in Low is diminishin­g, too. The choice of the German Football Federation to honour his long contract after the disastrous World Cup leaned on the vast credit he had accumulate­d between 2008 and 2017. It was a choice to regard Russia as a blip, a recoverabl­e malfunctio­n.

As the Dutch would happily advise the Germans, these crises have a tendency to get worse before they get better.

 ?? Getty ?? Manager Joachim Low, right, talks with Julian Draxler during Germany’s 3-0 Nations League defeat to the Netherland­s
Getty Manager Joachim Low, right, talks with Julian Draxler during Germany’s 3-0 Nations League defeat to the Netherland­s

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