Master tactician Loew out to pain Spain
By Ryland James, 6 Jul 2010 Ryland James is a Roar Rookie
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He has tamed Fabio Capello’s Three Lions, demolished Diego Maradona’s dream and snuffed out Lionel Messi’s magic. Now can Germany’s coach Joachim Loew inflict some World Cup pain on Spain?
After routing Argentina 4-0 in Sunday’s quarter-final, Germany face the team from the Iberian Peninsula in Wednesday’s semi-final in Durban with a place in the July 11 final against either the Netherlands or Uruguay at stake.
“My team showed great resolve, a great willingness to win and it wasn’t just a high-level victory, but a true champions’ performance,” beamed Loew after Germany out-classed Maradona’s Argentina.
The 50-year-old’s contract with the German Football Federation (DFB) expired last Wednesday, but if Germany are crowned world champions next Sunday, Loew will be able to name his price.
A deep thinker adn snappy dresser, Loew has admitted to seeing a psychologist in the past and although he never got higher than Germany’s Under-21 team as a player, he has won titles at club-level as a coach in Austria, Turkey and Germany.
Like most of his squad before this World Cup, Loew was largely unknown outside of Germany, but his tactical ability and reading of the game has seen his side claim the scalps of two of international footballs giants.
Having noted England’s defence struggled for pace, Loew insisted on fast counter-attacks to allow pacey midfielders Mesut Ozil and Thomas Mueller to exploit the space at the back with devastating consequences for Capello’s side.
Against Argentina, Germany’s tireless work in defence cut off Messi’s supply of possession and without the ball to showcase his attacking brilliance, Loew’s team reduced the world footballer of the year to a redundant midfielder.
Even Maradona was humbled by Germany’s performance on what he decribed as the ‘toughest day of my life’ as Bastian Schweinsteiger bossed the midfield and Miroslav Klose scored twice in the rout.
Despite his low profile, Loew succeeded Jurgen Klinsmann as head coach four years ago and guided the Germans to the Euro 2008 final where they lost 1-0 to Spain in Vienna.
He showed he can handle Germany’s big-name stars during a player revolt in October 2008.
First, reserve striker Kevin Kuranyi stormed out at half-time of the qualifying victory over Russia, bitter about a lack of opportunities, then captain Michael Ballack questioned Loew’s commitment to his senior players.
Ballack was brought back into line without losing face, while Kuranyi was simply told he will never play for Germany again while Loew in in charge.
The key to Loew’s success here has been his squad’s fitness, allowing them to exploit the gaps in defences, blended with established senior players like captain Philipp Lahm, Klose and Schweinsteiger leading by example.
To a man, the Germany squad — with an average age of just under 25 — has risen to the occasion
There were only glimpses in the warm-up games to the dazzling form produced in South Africa by rising stars Ozil and Mueller.
Ironically, the blow of losing Ballack has transpired to be a blessing in disguise as the next generation have seized their chance.
© AAP 2012Recommend this story.
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The Crowd Says (3) | Page 1 of Comments
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July 6th 2010 @ 7:56am
Dominic Herzberg said | July 6th 2010 @ 7:56am | Report comment
Don’t give all the credit to Löw. For sure he is the head coach and in this function he’s for sure responsible for a huge part of the success. But as the whole worldcup, also the tactical side, is teamwork. Löw works in association with the university for sports in Cologne. Under the lead of Urs Siegenthaler every team which Germany played is analyzed by 40 students. After that a data file with all the informations which are relevant are given to the team. Also every player gets his own file with explicit advice on how to play against the next opponent. It’s not just Löw, it’s the whole system of teamwork which brings the success at the moment.
I’m really excited about the game against Spain, but also I won’t bet on a win. For sure the German team did an outstanding word so far but you have to think from game to game. Just because we smashed Argentina and England doesn’t mean we’re able to do the same with Spain. I’m optimistic, but nothing more. Good thing is that the national team does the same. They stay on the ground and keep the focus. If they keep their minds free and concentrated they can achieve everything, but football is more then just tactics and physical fitness. Anything can happen, an early goal, a red card, a penalty or something like that could bring the team in an awkward position. I don’t know if they’re able to handle it, but I keep my fingers crossed. We have some really good boys out there with the will to win, in two days we’ll know if they can.
July 6th 2010 @ 10:48am
Al said | July 6th 2010 @ 10:48am | Report comment
I also think the tactical naivety of Australia, England and Argentina have made Germany look better than what they are. Serbia for example constricted the space in the middle of the park which rendered Ozil almost useless, their chances were far and few between and their strikers got frustrated. Ghana should have beaten them aswell, their centre-halves were exposed against a Ghanaian side lacking in finishing prowess, Friedrich and Mertersacker aren’t world class centre-halves and Boateng is quite a slowish, lumbering type for a full back.
The Spanish will play with proper protection for their back four, anchored by Alonso, one of the most underrated defensive midfielders who can also create as a deep lying playmaker. They have the firepower to test the overrated german centre halves, Iniesta has grown with every game in the tournament and will run amok. Spain by two goals at least.
July 6th 2010 @ 12:41pm
JR said | July 6th 2010 @ 12:41pm | Report comment
Klinsmann has an article on the BBC site explaining that the credit is all his…but it’s a good read.