The German footballers got off to a dream start against England. It’s 3-0 after half an hour. In the end, the seven-goal spectacle will be close.
Thanks to a furious initial phase, new national coach Christian Wück celebrated a perfect debut at London’s Wembley Stadium. In the 4:3 (3:2) test match spectacle against European champions England, captain Giulia Gwinn (4th minute, penalty kick/11th) and Klara Bühl (29th) scored the German footballers 3-0 after less than half an hour Guide. Sara Däbritz (72nd, penalty kick) sealed the Wembley madness. Bavaria’s Georgia Stanway (33rd, penalty kick, 36th) and Lucy Bronze (81st) were successful for the hosts in front of 47,967 spectators.
“The players won the game today on their own. It would be wrong to blame everything on the new coach,” said Wück after his successful debut on ARD. The new national coach also expressed some criticism: “You have to be more calm.” Because his team started furiously and still had to tremble in the end.
Bad pass, penalty, goal!
The “God save the King,” which had been sung thousands of times, had barely faded away when England captain Leah Williamson made a catastrophic bad pass. Debutant Giovanna Hoffmann from RB Leipzig passed the ball to Linda Dallmann, who could only be stopped by a foul from Millie Bright in the penalty area. Gwinn safely converted the penalty.
Things continued at a rapid pace, with Dallmann and Bühl in particular, who were extremely keen to play, throwing the English defense into disarray. The 2-0 was outstanding: Bühl, coming from the left, fooled England’s back four, who were completely on her side, with a dream pass to right-back Gwinn, who sent the ball flat into the far corner with her second contact. In return, Alessia Russo missed the connection and her shot hit the post.
Bühl silences Wembley
Instead, Bühl gilded the German turbo start. From the half-left position of the penalty area, she shot the ball powerfully through the legs of the pitiful Bronze into the near corner, goalkeeper Hannah Hampton was once again powerless. Shouts of “Germany, Germany” from the small DFB supporters echoed through the huge stadium. “I don’t have the words for some of it,” said Wück at the start of his team.
It was thanks to Stanway that the England fans, who had meanwhile fallen silent, were able to cheer. First she confidently used a hand penalty caused by Gwinn after video evidence to make it 1:3, shortly afterwards a dream combination to make it 2:3.
Wembley was awake again. The Germans anyway, Hampton just managed to direct a cheeky Dallmann lob from 30 meters onto the crossbar shortly before the break. “It was a roller coaster ride of emotions today,” said Gwinn, commenting on the game.
The Germans continued their brilliant tempo game at times, with some compromises, in the second half despite a number of substitutions. Selina Cerci, Felicitas Rauch, Däbritz, Pia-Sophie Wolter, Sophia Kleinherne and Vivien Endemann came one by one. Wolter promptly took the penalty after a Russo foul, which Däbritz kicked into the goal. The regular shooter, Gwinn, was already outside.
Not much more came from England until goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger dropped the ball after a harmless cross. Bronze dusted off. “Of course the goal annoys me. Thank God I play a team sport,” said Berger about her mishap.
But the Germans didn’t allow anything more, and at the end of the six-minute stoppage time, Wück was able to celebrate a memorable debut victory.
Source: Stern

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