Germany coach Joachim Loew is hoping his Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde team fulfill their potential by beating Spain in today's Euro 2008 final to complete the summer fairytale started in 2006.
Germany have shown two different faces at Euro 2008 — much like the character from Robert Louis Stevenson’s famous 1886 novel.
At times they have produced some good soccer, only later to turn in bad performances.
Having suffered a shock 2-1 defeat to Croatia in the group stage, they were impressive against Portugal in the 3-2 quarter-final win, but were then again hesitant before coming from behind to beat Turkey 3-2 in the semi-final.
Germany are bidding for a fourth European crown in Vienna and Loew hopes his side will show their fluent attacking side in today’s final, rather than a negative and defensive performance which would play into Spain’s hands.
“If you look at the other teams, the Dutch also had a bad day in the knock-out stages [beaten 3-1 by Russia] and we are fully aware we haven’t always played to the best of our abilities,” Loew said. “There is always room for improvement, but this team has shown they can bounce back from difficulty and have shown resilience.”
And Germany manager Oliver Bierhoff backed up Loew, saying Germany must attack Spain, rather than sit back and risk potent attackers Xavi Hernandez, Daniel Guiza or David Silva testing the German defense.
“The Spanish put great store on being comfortable on the ball, all of their team can produce that defense-splitting pass,” Bierhoff said. “If you leave them alone and give them time and space on the ball, you are in trouble. We must close them down, work hard to limit their space and not stand back.”
Win or lose, the German team will tour through Berlin’s streets tomorrow to reward their loyal fans, but midfielder Torsten Frings is hoping it will be a victory parade to complete the fairytale started two years ago.
German soccer fans still smile at the memories of the euphoria that swept the country on July 8, 2006, when Jurgen Klinsmann’s side beat Portugal 3-1 in Stuttgart to claim third place at the World Cup on home soil.
Many Germans say it was the first time in living memory they can remember being proud to be German in Germany and it seemed a black-red-gold flag flew from nearly every window.
More than 10 million fans tuned in to watch the documentary Deutschland: Ein Sommermaerchen, or Germany: A Summer Fairytale, which was screened on German TV to celebrate their third place finish.
And a few days after that win against Portugal, 500,000 fans packed the streets of Berlin for the German team’s “thank you” parade.
But this time, Frings hopes tomorrow’s tour of the capital will be a victory parade with just as many supporters expected.
“We had a fantastic experience in 2006, after the game in Stuttgart we flew to Berlin, but this time we want to hold a trophy aloft,” the 31-year-old said. “We want to actually show the fans something more than just T-shirts saying ‘Thank You.’”
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