
Penalty Refusal and Private Jets: Germany’s World Cup Unravels Against Paraguay
A missed spot-kick by a reluctant volunteer and revelations of dressing-room discord over family privileges have plunged German football into crisis after a shock last-32 exit.
Germany’s 2026 World Cup ended in the round of 32 when Jonathan Tah, a central defender who had never taken a professional penalty, saw his sudden-death effort saved by Paraguay’s Orlando Gill, sealing a 4-3 shoot-out defeat after a 1-1 draw in Boston. The moment was freighted with the chaos that had engulfed the team: captain Joshua Kimmich had twice asked the vastly more experienced Leon Goretzka to step forward for the sixth kick, only to be refused. Tah, a reluctant volunteer, shouldered a responsibility others would not, and his miss confirmed Germany’s earliest World Cup departure in decades.
On the pitch, Julian Nagelsmann’s side had begun the tournament with a 7-1 demolition of Curaçao and a 2-1 win over Ivory Coast, but a late group-stage loss to Ecuador exposed familiar vulnerabilities. Against Paraguay, Julio Enciso’s header forced Germany to chase the game; Kai Havertz equalised, yet the team managed only two shots on target across 120 minutes. In the shoot-out, Havertz and Nick Woltemade also failed to convert, but it was the sight of senior players declining the ball that drew the sharpest censure from former internationals.
Within hours, a parallel narrative of internal fracture emerged. Lothar Matthäus, the 1990 World Cup-winning captain, used his podcast to accuse the squad of treating the tournament as a “free family holiday.” He detailed how disputes over travel arrangements—some relatives flew on the team charter, others on commercial flights—had stoked jealousy and distracted players, echoing the disharmony that derailed Germany’s 1994 campaign. Asian and Latin American media amplified the claims, with Indonesian and Argentine outlets reporting that the presence of wives and girlfriends had been a “biang keladi” (root cause) of the breakdown.
Nagelsmann’s own position immediately came under scrutiny. In a terse post-match interview with ZDF’s Lili Engels, he insisted he was “not one to run away” and would continue if the federation wished. DFB president Bernd Neuendorf promised a calm review, while sporting director Rudi Völler offered public backing but conceded he was “not the DFB alone.” German media reported that behind the scenes, a severance package was being prepared and that Jürgen Klopp, currently Red Bull’s head of global soccer, had signalled through intermediaries that he would listen to an approach. Klopp, working as a television pundit during the tournament, deflected questions by saying the matter would have to be addressed “at some point.”
The elimination extends a grim pattern: since winning the 2014 title, Germany have failed to reach the quarter-finals in three consecutive World Cups, exiting in the group stage in 2018 and 2022. With the next major assignment the 2028 European Championship, the DFB faces a decision on whether Nagelsmann can rebuild a side that, in the words of Bastian Schweinsteiger, has “lost its DNA” and become “mid-table.” The immediate sporting consequence is a vacant summer and a federation summit that will determine whether the coach or the culture is deemed the greater liability.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
After losing to Paraguay on penalties, Germany is out of the World Cup. Coach Nagelsmann admitted that his team is no longer a world-class side. Speculation is mounting that Jürgen Klopp will take over, leaving Nagelsmann's future hanging by a thread.
Germany's World Cup debacle has pushed Nagelsmann to the brink. Federation bosses are debating his dismissal, and a remark by Rudi Völler is being read as a hint of his exit. Jürgen Klopp is seen as the saviour to rebuild the team.
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