That night in Durban: reflecting on Socceroos' loss to Germany

By hittingthevalve / Roar Guru

In a few days time, Australia will play Germany in a friendly at Mönchengladbach. The last time these two teams met was during the World Cup campaign.

The heavy defeat of the Socceroos in Durban probably generated the highest number of column inches out of any of the games Australia was involved in and set the tone for the coverage of the rest of the World Cup.

I thought now would be an appropriate time to share my thoughts about what happened that night.

This is not another piece analysing the game and what went wrong as far more qualified people than I have already done this. What this piece is about was the experience from my perspective. The build up. The let down. The aftermath.

If sharing is caring, then consider this some sort of group therapy to exorcise a few demons and get some things of our chests as fans.

Having arrived in Durban a couple of days before the World Cup started we had begun to settle in for the upcoming few weeks where our days would be filled with five hours of world quality football.

It may have been the middle of winter but the daily temperature always seemed to reach the mid 20’s and the ocean was warm enough for swimming. Durban was the perfect place to be based for the upcoming campaign.

We had been at the Fansite on Durban beach in the middle of the 25,000 strong crowd to see South Africa score the opening goal of the World Cup. The atmosphere was fantastic but as Australia’s opening game drew nearer, there was a feeling that ‘our’ World Cup was about to begin.

The day before and the day of the game against Germany had seen a continual build up of both the number of Australians flooding into Durban and the media covering the event. As we were staying at the tent city, the cricket ground which we were calling home for the next few weeks had become the focal point of much of the coverage.

There was no shortage of obliging Australians decked out in green and gold to fill the background of the numerous crosses the TV networks made. Chanting ‘Simon Hill’s a silver fox, do-dah, do-dah’ as he struggled to keep a straight face certainly made you feel a part of it all.

As kick-off drew closer, most Socceroo fans would have been watching the second game of the day (I think it was Serbia v Ghana) either at our camp, the Fansite, or at one of the bars around town.

As I sat watching the big screen, I felt my left leg shaking from nerves. I wanted Australia to put in a good performance to show the world that 2006 hadn’t been a fluke.

Around me inflatable boxing kangaroos mingled with green and gold safari suits that had been made-to-order in Singapore en route to South Africa.

When it came time to leave camp for the stadium, I tried to comprehend everything that was happening around me.

The road to the stadium had been shut down for us so we marched and filled the air with the sounds of vuvuzelas and chants.

My personal favourite was ‘Where’s your Ballack, where’s-your-Ballack, where’s-your-Ballack’ sung to the tune of Bassment Jaxx’s ‘Where’s your head at’. The enjoyment was compounded when one German fan responded by saying that Ballack was only one player in the German squad and that football was a team game so we should not assume that one player’s absence would be critical.

This was to be proven correct in a few hours, but I don’t think that particular German grasped the idea that facts should never get in the way of a chant involving a fantastic play on words and music.

The chanting continued all the way to the magnificent Moses Madhiba stadium. Over the coming weeks it would prove itself to be a great football venue and a magnificent piece of architecture (I never knew I could take so many pictures of the massive arch that sat over the stadium).

This game was the first time we had been inside the stadium, and the moment I first saw the pitch sent shivers down my spine. We had arrived and everything seemed to be in place for a wonderful football experience to unfold.

We took our seats and soaked it all in.

The first inkling that something might be awry was when the squads came out for their warm-up. As the Australians went about their drills it became apparent that this was to be a very different starting 11 that what we had expected.

When the team line-ups were read out it was clear that the normally conservative Dutchman had surprised us all.

The national anthems were sung and the referee blew the whistle to start the game.

And then it all went wrong.

What unfolded over the next 90 minutes of play is almost a blur in my memory. The early goal, the clinical way the German’s dismantled the Australian team, the sense of frustration, disappointment and shock.

After a particularly wonderful passage of play that lead to a German goal, a fan sitting in front of us stood up, turned around and said ‘That’s how you play football, Soccer-oos!’.

None of us had the energy to return fire.

The final whistle blew and we began to file out of the stadium.

The snippets of conversation I overheard as we walked back to camp ranged from shock right through to anger. Some of the gnashing of teeth and howls of protest did go over the top as that night Germany were just a better team than us. Soon we were to be joined by England and Argentina in the ‘Germany scored four goals against us at South Africa 2010’ club.

And with most things with football, the next day brought us three new games and the competition rolled on. The rest of the Australian campaign came and went (more stories for another time), the final was played and Spain was crowned the champion.

It was at a Bill Bailey show a few months later that I finally came across a description that summed up my feelings of Australia’s performance on that night.

To paraphrase Mr Bailey (who used this particular joke to describe the English team, but I think it equally applies to the Socceroos that night), the Australians played like old men, with injured backs, working in a warehouse, who had been given conflicting instructions about where to put things.

Since then, Australia has moved on from the World Cup campaign and in a lot of ways many fans have as well. There is also a hope that when Australia and Germany meet in the early hours of Wednesday morning, the game will be a bit less one-sided.

I had been a little too young to fully comprehend Johnny Warren’s tears in 1997. It was all too distant in 2001 with Tony Vidmar’s tears. But on Sunday 13 June 2010 I completely understood the tears I saw on the face of an Australian fan as he sat on the steps outside the stadium in Durban.

Sometimes, football hurts.

The Crowd Says:

2011-03-29T00:26:30+00:00

Roger

Roar Rookie


Ah the pain, I felt it.... it was terrible. One of the worst things was that no one knew at the time whether it was because the Socceroos were atrocious, or whether Germany were awesome. In the end, perhaps a bit of both (arrrg, the high defensive line... ???), but we were certainly the laughing stock for a while. I think we lost some of the respect we managed to get at the 2006 WC. Bring on the friendly, I know the Socceroos will do better.

2011-03-28T05:14:44+00:00

Nathan

Guest


"After that game I was gutted." You and everyone else in the nation ): Agree with you on all points there. No shame in getting the same results against the Germans as teams of those calibres!

2011-03-28T00:28:50+00:00

whiskeymac

Guest


germans booed off despite winning 4-0, why? beasue the fans thought they should have won 6-0! insane pressure and or expectation. Am sure they will be playing to win this game, and even w/o 3 or 4 of their best players out (Lahm, Ozil and Khedira (and Ballack)) they will be a force to be reckoned with at home. If Guus had Germany? We didnt score against 10 man Italia (defence masters though they are) and at times were a little naive (neills tackle) - the same team was more experienced in 2010. I think the 2010 German team wld have beaten the 2006 Roos.

2011-03-28T00:02:28+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


WSFC If you are a football fan you'll know that "should have" and "could have" are terms that have little meaning in the World Game ... or, quite frankly, in any sporting contest or, even in life. Brasil "should have" won the 1982 FIFA WC; the Netherlands "should have" won the 1974 FIFA WC and Australia "should have" been 6-0 up by half-time in the 1997 2nd leg WC Qualifier against Iran at the MCG. The facts are all that matter and history will tell us that: Italy won WC1982, W Germany won in 1974 and Iran went to France 1998. And, let's not forget Australia's Richard Garcia "should have" scored in the opening 5 minutes when Lahm cleared the ball off the goal-line. PS: Australia played for 1/2 hour against Germany with only 10 men. I wonder how competitive Argentina and England would have been with 10 men, too?

2011-03-27T23:58:55+00:00

ItsCalledFootball

Roar Guru


Will be an interesting game and played on German soil this time. Hopefully the Germans don't take it seriously, I know we will. I wonder if we came up against Germany first up with Guus in 2006, would we have had a different result or would we have been eliminated after virtually the first game.

2011-03-27T23:19:14+00:00

West Sydney FC

Guest


10-0 Fussball, thats the score that australia should have lost to Germany, we werent competitive at all. you cant compare us to the 4-0 germany scored against england and argentina, they were competitive and were in the game for most of it until they went and chased goals and got caught on the counter attack. we got carved up, and if it wasnt for bad finishing it would have been 10 nil.

2011-03-27T21:59:34+00:00

whiskeymac

Guest


too true - the WC started in the doldrums and ended withgained respect. 4 points aint bad; it just wasnt good enough this time around. The emergence of a strong, young and relatively unknown (i guess) german team on the world stage against us was just not what we needed frst time up. Who wldve thunked they wld be so brilliant with the stars like Ballack out?

2011-03-27T21:56:56+00:00

whiskeymac

Guest


hurt it certainly does. that german team was dynamic and breath of fresh air - for me, they were the team of WC2010 not Spain and they produced some fantastic results against some very fancied teams who they all made look inept. They ruined the WC for me in that first game froma roos perspective (i got up way too early on cold day too watch that tranwreck unfold ) i had to admit i admired their gameplan, which came unstuck eventually but there ya go. Only one team wins in the end. The fact they are kicking on from where they left off (smashing kazakhstan with the now seemingly usual 4-0) is telling as is the fact their oldest player, Klose, is 32.

2011-03-27T21:51:29+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


"Sometimes, football hurts." ... ain't that the truth! After that game I was gutted. But, whilst we were awful, the rest of the 2010 campaign demonstrated that Australia could play football and get results against Ghana & Serbia; and, the Germans were a damn good team, who easily tore apart the defences of two of the best teams in the competition. And, if an Argentinean team that boasted the attacking power of Messi, Tevez, Di Maria, Higuain & Aguero couldn't score against the Germans, it puts into perspective Australia's impotence against the Germans that fateful night in Durban.

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