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Germany Out-Played

Nick AmiesJune 12, 2008

Germany were second best for most of their Group B clash with Croatia and paid the price for slack passing, lazy defending and uninspired attacks, losing 2-1 in a match which called their desire into question.

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German head coach Joachim Loew is seen during the UEFA EURO 2008 Group B match between Croatia and Germany
Jogi Loew couldn't believe what he was seeing from a Germany side lacking inventionImage: picture alliance/dpa

Croatia bristled with imagination and inspiration as they dealt Germany a 2-1 Euro 2008 Group B defeat in Klagenfurt on Thursday, June 12, in one of the biggest surprises of the tournament so far.

The Croats were well worth their victory -- which came 10 years after the biggest result in their history when they beat the same opponents 3-0 in the World Cup quarter-finals -- as they took charge of the group and are now almost guaranteed a place in the quarter-finals.

It will be back to the drawing board for the Germans, who ended the match with 10 men.

Croatia take advantage of sluggish Germany

Croatia's Darijo Srna, right, scores the opening goal past Germany's Marcell Jansen
Croatia's Darijo Srna, right, scores the opening goalImage: AP

After a cagey and dull opening the game burst into life midway through the opening stanza. Croatia took the lead on 24 minutes with a move of delightful fluency.

Quick, zipped passes and intelligent running off the ball created space for left-back Danijel Pranjic and his pin-point cross picked out Darijo Srna at the back post. He beat the hesitant Marcell Jansen to the ball to prod home with an outstretched leg.

Another sweeping Croatia move on the half hour should have resulted in a goal as Ivan Rakitic chipped the ball into Ivica Olic, who cushioned a header back for Portsmouth's Nico Kranjcar but he slipped as he shot and fired miles over with the German defense opened up like a tin.

Germany hit back with a 25-yard Michael Ballack free-kick that Stipe Pletikosa in the Croat goal palmed to safety before also repelling a shot from Miroslav Klose moments later.

The Germans were pushing for an equalizer and center-back Christoph Metzelder headed narrowly over from a Torsten Frings corner.

Germans lucky to escape first half with only one goal against

But Croatia should have doubled their lead three minutes before the break as Vedran Corluka left Jansen for dead and crossed into the box where Olic teed up Kranjcar once again, only for Jens Lehmann to make a stunning point-blank save from the midfielder's left-foot volley.

On the stroke of half-time Germany had the ball in the net but Klose's effort was ruled out as Mario Gomes was penalized for the slightest of contacts with Pletikosa.

Early in the second period Germany didn't really look like getting back into the match despite a Ballack snap shot that sailed over the bar.

Croatia's Ivica Olic, right, scores his team's second goal past Germany's Jens Lehmann
Jens Lehmann could only watch as Olic poked homeImage: AP

On 62 minutes the lead was doubled as Rakitic's right wing cross took a huge deflection off Lukas Podolski and beat Lehmann at his near post, coming back off the upright and presenting Olic with a simple tap in.

Germany did at last come alive and Pletikosa had to divert behind a fierce cross-shot from substitute Bastian Schweinsteiger.

Poldi arrives late to give some hope

Podolski gave them a lifeline with 11 minutes to go as he thrashed home a loose ball in the box on the half-volley but it wasn't enough.

And Germany's misery was complete in stoppage time when Schweinsteiger was dismissed for a push on substitute Jerko Leko.