Clinical Germany dismantle Australia

By Luke Phillips / Roar Guru

Three-time champions Germany fired out a warning to World Cup challengers with a comprehensive 4-0 dismantling of Australia in their opening Group D match Sunday.

The Germans totally dominated the Socceroos, with captain Philipp Lahm and rising stars Mesut Oezil and Thomas Mueller running Australian veterans Scott Chipperfield and Craig Moore ragged down the right wing.

Goals from Lukas Podolski, Miroslav Klose, Mueller and Brazil-born striker Cacau were just rewards for a team which also had a hatful of other scoring opportunities.

The victory leaves Germany atop of Group D, Ghana having beaten Serbia 1-0 in the day’s other game.

Podolski opened the scoring in the ninth minute, the happy recipient of a text-book training ground move executed to clinical perfection.

After Oezil had played in Mueller, the Bayern Munich right winger cut the ball back across the face of the goal for Podolski to hammer home left-footed, with Australia goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer getting a hand on it.

Klose, top scorer in the 2006 World Cup, made it 2-0 in the 27th minute with a well-taken goal – and his 11th in World Cup finals – rising between Australian captain Lucas Neill and Schwarzer to head powerfully home from a Lahm cross.

“Everything worked well and it is important that things went well in the first game,” Klose said.

“We have earned some respect. You could see that we had fun playing football out there. I know what I can do. I feel great.”

Germany coach Joachim Loew was delighted too.

“I am very happy about the performance, we showed some quick passing and good speed,” he said.

The Socceroos paid a heavy price for the dismissal of Tim Cahill, shown a straight red card in the 56th minute by Mexican referee Marco Rodriguez for a very clumsy challenge on Bastian Schweinsteiger.

Two goals in a matter of minutes from Mueller (67) and Cacau (70), on as a replacement for Klose, sealed Australia’s dismal start to their third World Cup campaign.

Mueller, who started the season in Bayern Munich’s reserves, looked like he’d overrun a Podolski through-ball it but he dragged it back and shot accurately past Schwarzer, in off the post.

With the Australian defence in disarray, Caucau then had a simple tuck-in from another inch-perfect pass into the box by the 21-year-old Oezil.

It was Australia who had the first real chance of the game, Lahm clearing a close-range effort by Richard Garcia in the fourth minute.

And for all their fine attacking instincts, Germany did at times look slow to close down at the back, allowing time and space for both Garcia and replacement Brett Holman to have shots on target.

The Crowd Says:

2010-06-14T10:35:06+00:00

pete

Guest


We can bounce back! In the 2006 World Cup Spain beat Ukraine first up 4-0 and Ukraine recovered to make the quarter finals http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/world_cup_2006/4852902.stm

2010-06-14T07:58:39+00:00

mario

Guest


Uhm, the Germans tried to win penalties by starting to dive!? What game did you watch mate? I didn't even see a single "dive" in the penalty box by the Germans - the only player who took a dive was the one Oezil got a yellow card for... The Germans were not only awesome in the beginning - they were awesome pretty much the whole match and the score doesn't even show how much better they were. Sheer class those young lads the Germans introduced to the world stage.

2010-06-14T07:02:25+00:00

et

Guest


They would not have won even if Cahill was never sent off. People need to wake up to the fact the Socceroos are nowhere near as good as they think they are. And the famous Australian sporting arrogance means nobody feels sorry for them either.

2010-06-13T21:23:44+00:00

Seiran

Guest


Germany were awesome in the beginning of the match and thoroughly deserved their two first goals. It is such a shame that they had to start diving and trying to win penalties to win the match. It took the gloss off such a great peformance. At least the ref wasn't duped all the time and handed out two yellow cards to German players for diving. Cahill should never have been sent off for his challenge, a yellow card at worse. Once he was sent off, the Aussie structure fell apart and Germany made easy pickings of them.

Read more at The Roar