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Freed from weight of expectation, can Germany fly at Euro 2024?

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New Delhi, March 28, 2024: The odd thing about watching Germany less than three months from the 2024 European Championship, their first major event on home soil since the 2006 World Cup, is the blasé vibe you get from fans, players and coach Julian Nagelsmann.

The 45,000 fans in attendance for Tuesday’s 2-1 friendly win against Netherlands certainly made a racket, but in a corporate crowd/stadium DJ/pass-the-beer sort of way. They didn’t despair when Joey Veerman put the visitors ahead after just four minutes, nor did they lose their minds when Maxi Mittelstadt — whose errant backpass led to Germany going a goal down — wiped the slate clean with a surgical strike into the top corner a few minutes later.

In fact, their reaction was in line with the music they play after each German goal, chosen as the result of a recent fan-led campaign: a catchy version of Peter Schilling’s “Major Tom” which itself was picked up from this Adidas ad. (Me? I prefer this one from “Breaking Bad.”)

The tune, of course, is about an astronaut whose spaceship loses contact with ground control back on Earth and he drifts off into space. While everyone back home mourns, he’s actually content (“floating weightless, coming home”) as he loosens the Earthly shackles and drifts away into the darkness (or maybe the light; we don’t get to find out.)

Were this a ninth-grade English paper, the metaphor with Nagelsmann’s German national team adventure would be almost too obvious. Germany — with their four World Cups and three European crowns and Gary Lineker’s famous declaration that “football is a simple game; 22 players chase a ball for 90 minutes and in the end Germans always win” — may be the ultimate aristocrats of the European game. But in June, it will be eight years since they last won a knockout game in a major tournament. They’re under no illusions about their prospects; confidence is at a low ebb. So why not stop worrying, keep it simple and enjoy the ride for as long as it lasts?

That seemed to be Nagelsmann’s thinking heading into this international break. Unlike the last two outings — defeats at home to Turkey and away to Austria — there were no fancy schemes or out-of-the-box brain waves like Kai Havertz at left-back. Instead, he kept things as simple and straightforward as he could with a tidy 4-2-3-1 system that generally fielded most players in the roles they fill with their clubs. And he let them play, come what may.

With hindsight, it makes sense. Nagelsmann, 36, is the former boy wonder of German football, a guy who got his first senior Bundesliga gig at the age of 28 and went on to coach both RB Leipzig and Bayern Munich. The latter signed him at great expense and fired him a year ago at even greater expense amid grumbling that, for all his brilliance, he was arrogant and immature. That may or may not be true, but the perception of it is true and Nagelsmann knows this.

He took the Germany job in September as a de facto caretaker until after the Euros. Whatever ambitions he had of making his mark on the side via tactics, patterns of play and philosophy appeared to go out the window with those defeats back in November, possibly because he realized what he likely already suspected: that a national-team coach simply doesn’t have the time to effect meaningful change. Not when he only gets a couple training sessions with his squad every couple months according to the reports published in espn.in.

It’s not just the off-the-shelf 4-2-3-1 that’s a testament to this. It’s also his decision to recall 34-year-old Toni Kroos, three years after his international retirement. The Real Madrid midfielder lined up just behind captain Ilkay Gündogan, 33, giving Germany a central axis long on experience and technical ability but inevitably short on legs and intensity. Which is why, to complete his midfield trio, he turned to a guy like Robert Andrich, who looks like (and often plays like) the sort of bouncer you might see at a warehouse rave. Andrich, 29, made his debut in Saturday’s 2-0 away win over France, and he does the blue-collar grunt work on behalf of Gündogan and Kroos.