Germany reap rewards of youth culture
Joachim Löw has revitalised his squad with a fresh, bold multicultural approach
When Sami Khedira and his Under-21 teamâ'mates held aloft the European Championship trophy last summer, after humbling England 4â"0 in the final, they dreamed of changing the face of German football. Little did they know that their opportunity would come so quickly.
After Euro 2008, Joachim Löw, the Germany manager, accepted the need to "rejuvenate" a squad that had become too heavily seasoned in parts. He has done so in spectacular fashion. Germany have only nine survivors from that tournament here. (It is worth remembering that they were runners-up in Austria and Switzerland.) And once Löw had done with filleting his squad, the players he turned to were almost all from the next generation.
⢠Follow the Guardian's World Cup team on Twitter
⢠Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game
⢠Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player
⢠The latest team-by-team news, features and more
Khedira, the U-21 captain during that heady campaign in Sweden, and five of his teamâ'mates, including Mesut Ozil, who had orchestrated the destruction of Stuart Pearce's England, were given the call and so were four other youngsters who were eligible for the U-21 finals. Two of those, Thomas Müller and Holger Badstuber, were not selected for Sweden simply because they had not yet emerged from Bayern Munich's reserves. Their progress over this past season has been startling.
Löw's squad bristles with the exuberance and fearlessness of youth. "Roughly half the squad is 24 or younger," Löw said â" the precise number is 12 â" "and they bring a freshness and hunger that can only be helpful." It was very much in evidence as Germany opened their Group D campaign in Durban last Sunday with a swashbuckling 4â'0 thrashing of Australia. With Khedira and Ozil both outstanding, the team have since revelled in global acclaim and all eyes will be on them when they play Serbia tomorrow.
The youth of this new Germany, however, is only part of the story. The country has changed greatly over the past decade or so, with its society becoming more integrated, and Löw's squad reflects what the tabloids like to call German "multi-culti". Of the six players promoted from Horst Hrubesch's U-21 champions, five are of immigrant backgrounds. The exception is the goalkeeper Manuel Neuer. Khedira's father is Tunisian and Ozil is of Turkish descent. Jerome Boateng's father is Ghanaian, Dennis Aogo's is Nigerian while Marko Marin was born in Bosnia. In addition, Serdar Tasci, one of the group that was eligible for Sweden but did not play, has Turkish parents.
The German government oversaw a liberalisation of its eligibility laws in 1999, which made it easier for foreigners and the children of immigrants to gain citizenship. The stand-out case in Löw's squad is the striker Cacau, who came on as a substitute against Australia to score the fourth goal. The 29-year-old was born and raised in Brazil and came to Germany, initially, to play lower-league football. But as he has worked his way to the top, so he has passed the requisite tests to become a German national. One of his examination questions concerned the names of former German chancellors; Cacau has consequently earned the nickname of "Helmut" from his teamâ'mates.
The challenge that faced the German Football Association (DFB), though, was to make sure the likes of Khedira, Ozil and Boateng did not declare for the other countries for which that they were eligible. Boateng's brother, Kevin-Prince, the Portsmouth forward, has pledged himself to Ghana â" in a quirk of fate, Germany face Ghana in the final group game, pitting the brothers against one and other.
Driven perhaps by their lack of young talent, the DFB made a conscious effort to court and groom players from the immigrant community, even employing a dedicated integration officer. They can now enjoy the fruits of those labours.
"We are aware that it's something new to have German national players with Turkish, Ghanaian, Nigerian or Tunisian roots but for our generation, it's very normal," said Khedira, who is the DFB's poster boy for the liberation generation. "We have some players called Khedira and some called Müller. We don't know any differently."
s case Ozil "is considered as particularly important. Turkish-Germans are by far the largest ethnic minority in the country, in the past, many of them as brothers Altintop, decided to play for the country of their parents. Ozil, third-generation immigrants, can inspire the community to follow in his footsteps.
There remains a section of Germany's support that struggles to come to terms with the multiculturalism, traditionalists who complain about some of the players not singing the national anthem. Ozil murmurs verses from the Koran when it plays. But Aogo says "people shouldn't attach too much importance" to this. "I don't sing the national anthem and I am still proud to play for Germany."
Löw's squad is the most ethnically diverse at the tournament. In addition to the six young players and Cacau, there are four more veterans of immigrant heritage â" the Polish-born Miroslav Klose, Lukas Podolski and Piotr Trochowski, and Mario Gomez, who has a Spanish mother.
Over and above the socio-political benefits, there are also those of a footballing nature. "Up front, we exude a bit of Latin or southern ease but defensively, we are incredibly disciplined, very German," said Khedira. Ozil noted that "my technique and feeling for the ball is the Turkish side to my game and the always-give-your-all attitude is the German part" while Aogo said that "the mixture of African physical strength and European tactical awareness can be very good for the DFB".
South Africa knows all about the destruction of racial barriers. In Germany and shirts with federal eagle on his chest, players Leo 's going to make a statement on its own.
- Germany
- World Cup 2010 Group D
- World Cup 2010
Blog Archive
-
▼
2010
(178)
-
▼
June
(70)
- Top 10 beaches in Turkey
- Where McChrystal led, Britain followed | Robert Fox
- GDC's new DSLware products deliver next gen DSL te...
- State pension age could rise to 66
- Society daily 21.06.2010
- Key Cabinet, Hook-Style, Wall Mount, Locking, Plas...
- Wimbledon: A very British obsession
- Anxiety over housing revolution
- Anxiety over housing revolution
- LIVE: Budget reaction and PMQs
- Gulf oil spill - A hole in the world | Naomi Klein
- Tesco braced for revolt over bonuses
- The price of economic posturing | Paul Krugman
- Gulf oil spill: A hole in the world
- Selective gay rights from the coalition | Patrick ...
- Germany reap rewards of youth culture
- Your say on the day's news and results
- Lost Planet: Extreme Condition
- Kindle DX Wireless Reading Device (9.7" Display, G...
- Poor investigation into child sex case
- GDC's new DSLware products deliver next gen DSL Te...
- Belgium will not fall apart because of separatist ...
- Belgium will not fall apart because of separatist ...
- 'Gold-plated' state pensions face cuts
- > Atelier Annie: Alchemist of Sera IslandDiscript...
- News Corp picks its moment to take full control of...
- Simon Jenkins
- Society daily 15.06.2010
- > Business Wire : Jambo Networks Launches Next Ge...
- > Next-gen interactive whiteboards: a new generat...
- > New-Gens are taking tech to the next level.: An...
- > Admit One Single Ticket Roll, Assorted Colors, ...
- > New Dansko Next Gen Caitlin Black 37/7 Womens S...
- Belgium will not fall apart because of separatist ...
- > 2008 Global Conference: The Race to the Finish:...
- Where the Tea Party runs out of juice | Sasha Abra...
- Where the Tea Party runs out of juice | Sasha Abra...
- > Kindle Wireless Reading Device (6" Display, Glo...
- > Drawn to Life The Next ChapterDiscription : Onc...
- Universities on the brink of catastrophe
- Universities on the brink of catastrophe
- Our universities are standing on the brink of cata...
- Hunt: 'We have a media policy, not a BBC policy'
- > A new next from Next Gen: Next Generation Power...
- Hunt: 'We have a media policy, not a BBC policy'
- Hunt: 'We have a media policy, not a BBC policy'
- Growth forecast is cut but borrowing improves
- And God said, let there be cheap chicken
- Virginia Bottomley: the big-name headhunter puttin...
- Why stability for kids is good for all of us
- Europe embraces the cult of austerity โ€“ but at w...
- Inspiring the workforce
- Refugees' flight from fear
- Insiders' guide to independent holidays for teenagers
- Reportage trumps fiction
- Q&A: BP's dividend
- Lib Dems must dare to be different over prisoners'...
- Hamid Karzai: Afghanistan's weakest link | Daniell...
- Trichet says market jitters forced ECB's U-turn on...
- Iran โ€“ one year on: How long can Islamic Republi...
- Spending cuts consultation 'is a PR ploy'
- Women, Power and Politics: script for a revolution
- PM sets stage for Afghan pullout
- Plan to cut social work bureaucracy
- Social workers back on the front line
- David Cameron admits sympathy with Obama before di...
- Cameron voices sympathy with Obama in BP row
- Monckton's climate denial is a gift
- The genetics of autism
- Kids labeled 'generation next' before they grow up...
-
▼
June
(70)
0 comments:
Post a Comment