MY KOLKATA EDUGRAPH
ADVERTISEMENT
regular-article-logo Wednesday, 03 July 2024

At home, Germans fire at will: Biggest win fans hosts' hopes 'to go far'

Goals from Florian Wirtz and Jamal Musiala in an imperious first half set Germany on the way to a confidence-boosting 5-1 win over 10-man Scotland in the Euro 2024 curtain-raiser on Friday

AP/PTI Munich Published 16.06.24, 10:08 AM
Representational image

Representational image File image

Host Germany co­uld hardly have wished for a better start to the European Championship.

Goals from Florian Wirtz and Jamal Musiala in an imperious first half set Germany on the way to a confidence-boosting 5-1 win over 10-man Scotland in the Euro 2024 curtain-raiser on Friday.

ADVERTISEMENT

While Germany didn’t really have to break sweat ag­ainst a sub-par Scotland at Allianz Arena, it was the ideal result to launch their tournament and ramp up excitement in the country.

“Yes, that’s exactly the way we wanted to start and, to be honest, we needed a start just like that,” Germany captain Ilkay Gündogan told German broadcaster ZDF. “I had a good feeling before the game already, to be honest, and it came true, thank God.

“But exactly this atmosphere, the euphoria in the stadium now with our own fans, that’s exactly what we need in order to go far.”

Pre-tournament title expe­ctations of the Germans were underwhelming after they crashed out of their last three major tournaments. But th­ey’ve opened with their biggest victory in Euros history.

They dominated the first half, which ended in the worst possible way for Scotland when defender Ryan Porteous was sent off and Kai Havertz converted the resulting penalty kick. Substitutes Niclas Füllkrug and Emre Can piled on to Scotland’s misery after the break.

“The first 20 minutes were very impressive. The first goals were very good,” Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann said. “It’s very valuable that many players performed well early on.

“It was only the first step but a very good one and we
can build on this one. We’re very happy.”

Scotland, who hadn’t had a shot on goal all match, managed to give their raucous fans something to celebrate late on when the ball was bundled into the back of the net off Germany defender Antonio Rüdiger for an own goal.

Steve Clarke’s side will have to do better against Hungary and Switzerland if they are to get out of Group A and reach the knockout stage for the first time.

Follow us on:
ADVERTISEMENT