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Don't Mention the World Cup: A History of England-Germany Rivalry from the War to the World Cup

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Page 1: Don't Mention the World Cup: A History of England-Germany Rivalry from the War to the World Cup
Page 2: Don't Mention the World Cup: A History of England-Germany Rivalry from the War to the World Cup

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Page 3: Don't Mention the World Cup: A History of England-Germany Rivalry from the War to the World Cup

DON’T MENTION THE WORLD CUP

Copyright © Summersdale Publishers, 2006

Condition of Sale

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent publisher.

Summersdale Publishers Ltd46 West StreetChichesterWest SussexPO19 1RPUK

www.summersdale.com

Printed and bound in Great Britain

ISBN 1 84024 521 2

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With thanks to: Emma Grove, Patrick West, Adam Beecher of

www.foot.ie, Mathijs van der Kooi of www.voetbalforum.nl, Michael C. Yates of www.myfootballforum.

com, and the people atwww.tamb.net

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INTRODUCTION

‘Football,’ Gary Lineker once remarked, ‘is a game played by 22 players. And then the Germans win.’ It’s been a century since England and Germany first met on the football pitch and, despite brief flir tations with Argentina, France and Scotland, the Germans remain England’s number one rivals. English football suppor ters love above all else to beat the

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INTRODUCTION

Germans, and not even that 5–1 dream win in Munich has cured this complex.

This summer, Sven’s boys go to Germany, the nation still obsessed with the idea that through efficiency, discipline and even some mystical pact with Satan himself, the Germans are destined always to triumph over a morally superior English side. The painful World Cup and Euro Championship defeats of 1970, 1972, 1990 and 1996 have shown us that.

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As a Guardian writer once put it, ‘England and Germany are in an S & M relationship, and no prizes for guessing who is the dominant par tner.’

And despite the current German side being, in the words of former Bayern Munich manager Uli Höneß, ‘a catastrophe’, you can’t keep a good people down, and at 7/1 they’re second favourites to take the World Cup for the third time. If they win it this summer, it’s theirs forever.

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INTRODUCTION

So this June, make friends with some Germans, enjoy a drink and a joke (they do have a sense of humour, remember), but please – don’t mention the World Cup.

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CHAPTER 1

ENGLAND VS

GERMANY – 100(ISH) YEARS

OF SPORTING

CONFLICT

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1880s

British academics and businessmen attempt to convert the Germans to football, rugby and cricket, but only the beautiful game takes hold, the German royal family admiring its manliness. The Germans’ public school-based British teachers, with remarkable foresight, declare that football will provide ‘an education in that spirit of chivalry, fairness and good temper’.

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1899

An England team made up of gentleman amateurs and ghastly ‘trade’ professionals tour Germany for the first time, winning 13–2 and 10–2, the games covered by a British press eager to patronise the plucky Germans. When the English side beat a combined German/Austrian team 8–0, the Manchester Guardian commends their ‘excellent’ goalkeeping. Bless.

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1901

The Germans arrive in England for a return series, where an amateur English side beat them 12–0 at White Hart Lane. The tourists then go off to West Bromwich, where a team of professionals squeeze past 10–0.

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Christmas Day, 1914

British and German soldiers on the Western Front take a break from the slaughter of the trenches to play a game of football in no-man’s-land, the truce initiated by a group of soldiers from Saxony. Local commentators refer to the Germans’ ‘discipline’ but the game finishes Lancashire Fusiliers 3 Saxons 2. Though, technically, no-man’s-land – covered with shell holes, dead bodies and landmines – does not meet FIFA pitch criteria.

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1915

Some British units begin the dis-astrous attack on Loos by kicking footballs over the top and chasing them. To the amazement of British military exper ts, these prove no match for the Germans’ machine guns.

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1916

The football craze takes off. At the Battle of the Somme, the clearly insane Captain W. P. Neville gives his men four footballs, one of which bears the inscription ‘The Great European Cup-tie Finals, East Surrey v Bavarians’, and offers a prize to the first platoon to dribble all the way to the German lines, not understanding that English footballers have trouble dribbling at the best of times, let alone when they’re getting shot at.

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1920

The FA withdraws from FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), refusing not only to play Germany or Austria but any other team that plays them, or any team that plays a team that has played Germany.

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1924

Arsenal tour Germany, the first English club to do so.

1930

The first official match between the two sides ends with a 3–3 draw in Berlin. The amateur Germans are impressed that their visitors do not drink before the games, but the English also learn a bit about foreign culture, noting that the Germans tend to whistle

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rather than boo. There is mutual admiration, the English media impressed that the Germans do not let their Continental emotions run away with them by congratulating the goalscorers, as has been observed with Italian teams. Out of respect for the hosts, English players refrain from shoulder-barging the German goalkeeper, as is the custom among English gentlemen.

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1935

The countries meet for a friendly at White Har t Lane, which is appropriately refereed by a neutral Swede. The game, which England win 3–0, is played with an air of spor ting chivalry, despite protests by many anti-Nazis. Almost 10,000 German fans make the trip over, but there is no trouble, hardly surprising with the Gestapo in charge of public order back home. An English journalist, ever insightful, observes: ‘Football is a

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game more suited to the Anglo-Saxon and the Teuton than to the Latin race.’

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1938

England play Germany in Berlin and the Foreign Office forces the players to give the Hitler salute, in a ‘friendly’ that England win 6–3 in front of 110,000 people. Stanley Matthews says afterwards that the players are ‘livid’ about the gesture, mainly because they aren’t allowed the comic bonus of making Hitler moustaches with their other fingers.

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1941

In February Old Trafford is bombed, forcing United to share with City for the next ten years. According to City folklore, one of the Luftwaffe crew goes on to be the grandfather of their mid-90s centre forward Uwe Rösler, inspiring the popular T-shir t bearing the slogan ‘Uwe’s Granddad Bombed Old Trafford’. Sadly there appears to be no truth in the legend.

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1945

German soldier Ber t Trautmann escapes from the American, French and Soviet Red armies, only to be captured by a British soldier with the immor tal words ‘Hello Fritz, fancy a cup of tea?’ and forced to endure ‘a fate vorse than death’ – playing for Manchester City. Trautmann overcomes prejudice to take the number 1 shir t and helps City win the FA Cup in 1956, despite playing for most of the game with a broken neck. After the

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game Trautmann is congratulated by Prince Philip, who asks, ‘Why is your neck so crooked?’ Ber t becomes the first foreigner (and last for four decades) to win Footballer of the Year, and is made an OBE in 2004. To this day he is the only man to hold both the Iron Cross and an FA Cup winner’s medal, a record he is likely to hang onto for some time.

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1945– 49

The English FA takes the lead in encouraging West Germans to play football, setting up most of the German FA’s infrastructure, and organising Anglo–German youth tournaments. Stanley Rous, head of the FA, is awarded the West German Grand Cross of the Order of Merit, something which nowadays would have his head superimposed on a Gestapo uniform by one of the tabloids.

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1950

A shell-shocked German nation misses the World Cup finals for the last time, while England wish they hadn’t bothered. In their first outing on the biggest stage, they lose to a USA team who had been par tying all night. England’s coaching system is still quite archaic, with the team picked between manager Walter Winterbottom and a fish-process-ing magnate from Grimsby.

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1954

The sides meet for a friendly at Wembley, which England win 3–1. Later in 1954, at the comically named Wankdorf Stadium in Switzerland, West Germany beat Hungary to lift the World Cup for the first time.

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1956

England beat Germany 3–1 in Berlin, and still manage a lap of honour before running up four flights of stairs to their dressing room. The German FA’s president declares them ‘supermen’, a compliment that would make anyone uncomfortable on the Führer’s old turf.

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1961

Commando comic is launched, providing English football fans with enough of the basics of the German language to get by, namely ‘schnell ’, ‘achtung ’ and ‘for you, Tommy, ze war iz over ’.

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1962

The star t of West Germany’s economical miracle: the Daily Mirror declares that the Germans are building fantastic businesses from the ruins of the war, they produce faultless merchandise, and their women have the biggest breasts in Europe.

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1965

England beat West Germany 1–0 in Nuremburg, the Sun commenting that their visit has created ‘the biggest buzz since the War Crimes Tribunal’.

1966

England win the World Cup, helped by a third goal that never was, and a Russian linesman – Tofik Bakhramov – who is actually an Azeri. The Azerbaijan national stadium is later named after the

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country’s greatest ever assistant referee, suggesting a nation desperately in need of heroes. Three decades later technology proves that it wasn’t in fact a goal: still, from the angle we see on TV, it looks as though had Roger Hunt just kicked the ball rather than run back to claim a goal, none of this controversy need ever have happened. A four th goal is scored, despite people being on the pitch, which strictly speaking should have caused the referee to blow the whistle. Sir Geoff’s

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hat trick is accompanied by the commentary of BBC One’s Kenneth Wolstenholme, and his immor tal words ‘They think it’s all over – it is now’, which echo down the years, much to the annoyance of everyone in Scotland who is forced to listen to endless accounts of the triumph.

1968

In a bad-tempered friendly in Hannover, Germany win 1–0, the start of three decades of dominance.

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1970

Gerhard Müller scores the winner as the Germans come from two behind to beat England 3–2 in the quarter-finals. England blame it on Gordon Banks’s diarrhoea. On his return home, England manager Alf Ramsey declares their chances of winning the next World Cup ‘very good indeed’.

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1972

In April the two sides meet in a European Championship qualifier and an economically unstoppable, reborn West Germany win 3–1 against an England of power shor tages, industrial disputes and Spinal Tap-esque dinosaur rock. The Germans triumph at the next World Cup, while England fail to qualify in either 1974 or ’78.

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1974

In the World Cup final, an ultra-efficient West German team led by Franz ‘Kaiser’ Beckenbauer grind out a 2–1 victory against the flamboyant Dutch side that gave the world total football. The Dutch press are less than magnanimous in defeat, bringing up a load of unpleasant recent history between the two nations as proof that their neighbours ‘have done it again’.

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1981

Bobby Moore and Mike Summ-erbee lead an allied POW team to an impressive 4–4 draw with the German national side, despite having Sylvester Stallone in goal, in Escape to Victory .

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1982

England draw with West Germany and exit the World Cup in Spain, having previously overcome the mighty Kuwait. The Germans eventually progress to the final. But England, it is agreed by everyone, have a much better kit and World Cup anthem, ‘Back Home’.

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1989

In a beer advert, the boys of the 617 Squadron attack a German dam with bouncing bombs, but much to their surprise, the German soldier saves each of their shots, leading one airman to comment, ‘I bet he drinks Carling Black Label.’

1990

England play West Germany in the World Cup semi-final and go out on penalties. Gazza cries when a booking prevents him from

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playing in the final, and Gary Lineker motions to the bench with a strange look in the young Geor-die’s direction. Several BMWs are vandalised after the final whistle, and apparently a dachshund is verbally abused. England’s penalty failures Chris Waddle and Stuart Pearce go on to appear in a Pizza Hut advert. West Germany go on to beat Argentina in the final, in possibly the most boring game of football ever played. Germany is reunited later in the year.

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1993

A friendly held in Germany is postponed for security reasons after organisers realise that the date – 20 April – is the bir thday of former German gaffer Adolf Hitler. The two sides meet Stateside for the US Cup, where England lose to both Germany and the USA.

1994

Jürgen Klinsmann joins Spurs and instantly becomes the most

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popular German in English history, for his deft touches, modesty (he drives a VW) and sense of humour, demonstrated by how he follows his first goal with a celebratory dive. In subsequent opinion polls Klinsmann consistently takes second place as the most famous German, after You Know Who.

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1996

England play a united Germany for the first time at a competitive level, for a European Championship semi-final at Wembley. England score early, but Germany level it at 1–1 and it goes to penalties. Cue predictable ending, with this time Gareth Southgate cast as the villain. While the Germans have spent months and hours practising penalties, Southgate last had a go three years previously, for Crystal Palace, and he’d missed

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that. Attempting to escape it all, Southgate immediately heads for a holiday in a remote region of the Peruvian Andes, where a local goatherd asks him, ‘You Mr Penalty Drama?’ Germany go on to win the final, while Southgate is later seen in an advert for Pizza Hut. The Baddiel, Skinner and Lightning Seeds song, ‘Three Lions’, is the anthem of the tournament, and later becomes as big a hit in Germany.

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1997

The English FA, having allegedly promised Germany their support for the 2006 World Cup, launches its own bid. Franz Beckenbauer, in full Red Baron mode, laments the days when he shook hands with ‘honourable’ Englishmen like Bobby Moore.

1998

A World Cup in France featuring every major nation in the Second World War inspires everyone to

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go into Battle of Britain cliché overdrive. Eighty-four years after the 1914 Christmas Truce, English and German hooligans arrange to meet for a fight in Flanders, therefore interrupting a football tournament with a mini war, just as their forefathers interrupted a war with a mini football tournament.

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2000

England beat Germany 1–0 at the European Championships in Charleroi, Belgium, after a competitive wait of 33 years, 10 months, 18 days, 4 hours and 17 minutes, not that anyone’s been counting. England are awful, but their old rivals have become indescribably bad, with second-rate players spor ting names like Hans Nomark. Both teams go out in the group stages.

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Later that year, England play their last ever game at the old Wembley stadium, and manage to lose 1–0 to Germany on a rainy, miserable afternoon of bad football and worse facilities. National self-esteem reaches its lowest point, and England look set to have to endure a play-off in ‘some muggy gaff like Ukraine’, as Ian Wright puts it.

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2001

The greatest ever moment in modern English football: England thrash Germany 5–1 in Munich, and John Motson’s outburst ‘This gets better and better and better’ becomes a standard motif for any English football fan for use on the pitch, in front of an Xbox, or while making love.

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2002

Despite having one of their worst sides in history, the Germans still manage to make it to the World Cup final, largely due to the freakish exit of most major nations early on. They lose to Brazil in the final, having beaten South Korea in the semis.

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2005

The Football Association comm-issions a series of TV adver ts featuring David Beckham, Michael Owen and Wayne Rooney pleading that English fans ‘Don’t mention the war’ in a fruitless attempt to get the visiting suppor ters not to be beastly to the Germans. A message about anti-German songs will also be sent out with each ticket.

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ENGLAND VS GERMANY

A survey of countries par ticipating in World Cup 2006 finds that only two nations feel negative about the Germans, England being one of them.

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2006

According to Nostradamus’s Third Book (four th quatrain), ‘In the sixth season after the third age (2006) the people of the triple lion (England) will go to the father’s land (Germany), where the Knights of the Black Eagle (the German team) will send them packing early, through an ordeal of nets (penalties).’**I might have made this up. The rest of the timeline is true.

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CHAPTER 2THE IDIOT#S

GUIDE TO THE

GERMANS

Forget Bach, Beethoven, Marx and Kant, there are only two types of Germans you need know about: footballers and Prussian warlords.

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Ballack, Michael

German captain and voted ‘Germany’s Sexiest Footballer’ in 2002, Ballack single-handedly took the team to the World Cup that year, but is still criticised for being lazy in his own country.

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Beckenbauer, Franz

Captain of the winning side of 1974 and manager of the 1990 champions, ‘The Kaiser’, as the British press affectionately call him (perhaps even they thought ‘The Führer’ was too much), is the greatest German footballer of all time.

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Klinsmann, Jurgen

Intelligent, ar ticulate and sober – no wonder he stood out like a sore thumb in the Premiership. German manager from July 2004, despite having no previous qualification, Klinsmann was once seen as the archetypal German player by the English press: blond, disciplined, and likely to turn the slightest challenge into the agonising death throes of a tragic opera star. Then he signed for Spurs and became the most popular Teuton in English history.

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Kuntz, Stefan

The man who broke English hearts by equalising in the Euro 1996 semi-finals is no longer a great force in German football, but his name continues to provide much mir th. In the re-issued ‘Three Lions’ video in 1998, all the German fans sported Rudi Völler haircuts and ‘Kuntz’ on their shir ts.

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General von Moltke

Prussian strategist responsible for beating France in the 1870 war, Helmuth Carl von Moltke only laughed twice in his life; the first time when told the French for-tress Metz was ‘impregnable’; the second when given the news that his mother-in-law had died.

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Rahn, Helmut

Scorer of the 1954 World Cup final winner, the famous victory that lifted German spirits after the war. The tournament is the subject of the film The Miracle of Bern, a big hit in Germany in 2003. At a private viewing of the film, director Sonke Wor tmann and Rudi Völler decided it would be a nice gesture to invite Rahn to the premiere. That same day, Rahn died of old age.

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Rommel, Erwin

Even during the war, the leader of the German Afrika Korps was a hero in England. The ‘Deser t Fox’ was everything the British wanted in a German: an officer of the old school, who led the ‘gentlemen’s war’ in Nor th Africa, where the Brits and Jerries fought a bloody good battle in the deser t, the two sides burying the enemy’s dead with full military honours and every POW receiving a cup of tea. He was accused of plotting

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against Hitler, and killed himself to save his family, being a man of honour to the end.

Völler, Rudi

Klinsmann’s predecessor, and one of the victors of 1990, Völler is remembered mostly for his mullet and moustache combo, the look that was de rigueur in Germany throughout the 1980s and ’90s.

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CHAPTER 3

DON#T MENTION

THE HEADLINES

The English tabloid press is unique in the world in having the forthright courage to say exactly what it thinks, even when it thinks like a dementia sufferer who#s just spent ten hours in the pub after losing

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his wife and job in the same day. Here are some of the tabloids# greatest moments of Jerry baiting.

It was the Sun what star ted the current trend, with some now classic headlines ahead of Anglo–German clashes. In 1982 it was ‘ACHTUNG STATIONS’; for the 1987 friendly it was ‘THE BATTLE OF THE KRAUTS’; while three years later, during Italia 90, they pleaded: ‘HELP OUR BOYS CLOUT THE KRAUTS’.

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Before the Euro 96 semi-final, the Mirror printed the headline ‘ACHTUNG SURRENDER, FOR YOU, FRITZ, ZE EURO 96 CHAMPIONSHIP IS OVER’ with a picture of Stuar t Pearce and Paul Gascoigne wearing WW2 helmets. It followed this with ‘WATCH OUT, KRAUTS, ENGLAND ARE GONNA BOMB YOU TO BITS AT WEMBLEY’.

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Piers Morgan wrote an editorial for the 1996 clash that began: ‘Last night our ambassador in Berlin handed the German government a note,’ going on to paraphrase Neville Chamberlain’s declaration of war in 1939, adding, ‘We are at soccer war with Germany.’

When the former Hamburg and Liverpool player Kevin Keegan had tipped Germany to win the Championship, the Mirror criticised his disloyalty by declaring, ‘KEEGAN KRAUT OF ORDER’.

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The Sun gave us ‘BLITZ FRITZ’, while the Daily Star ran with ‘BRING ON THE KRAUTS’, with manager Terry Venables done up as Lord Kitchener.

Both the Sun and Mirror ‘invaded’ Germany during the tournament, turning up in the country decked with England flags and banners stacked with war references, the latter announcing, ‘MIRROR INVADES GERMANY: WE DARED TO TEACH THE HUN A LESSON’. While one Mirror reporter was sent to

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Berlin to distribute ‘propaganda leaflets’, another went to Cheshire, where the German team was staying, to change the road directions around, Home Guard-style, so the team would drive to Scotland by mistake. A third was sent to their hotel in London to place British towels on their sun-loungers.

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The Mirror headlines were so unpopular with the readers that the paper was forced to issue an apology, and sent a Harrods hamper to Jürgen Klinsmann, repor ting it with the headline ‘PEAS IN OUR TIME’. It also abandoned its latest stunt idea – a Spitfire flypast over the England team hotel.

After UEFA backed Germany’s bid for the 2006 World Cup in 1997, the Sunday People moaned, ‘HUN-BEARABLE’.

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After England’s 5–1 win in Sep-tember 2001, the headline ‘DON’T MENTION THE SCORE’ was used by the News of the World and, of all places, the Independent on Sunday.

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When England were drawn against Germany in the World Cup 2002 qualifying group, having already been paired off for Euro 2000, the Star ’s headlines were ‘HUN-CANNY!’, ‘HUN, DRAWN AND SLAUGHTERED!’ and ‘VE’RE OVER ZE MOON’. The Sun gave us ‘KEVIN LANDS IN DER SCHMIDT’ while the Daily Mirror, perhaps still stunned by the 900 complaints they received for ‘ACHTUNG FRITZ!’, could only offer ‘HERR WE GO AGAIN’.

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After England beat Germany in Euro 2000, the Sunday People repor ted ‘HUN-NIL! THE WORLD IS IN OUR HANS!’ England went out three days later.

After Frank Skinner had expressed his suppor t for the Germans at the last World Cup final, the Sun renamed him ‘Franz’ and superimposed some lederhosen onto the comedian.

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In December 2005 the Sun announced the use of mini ‘tanks’ in monitoring football fans at the World Cup with the headline ‘BRITSKRIEG!’

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On page 9, they published a list of German war jokes. This followed Sun columnist Jeremy Clarkson making a Hitler salute on Top Gear to illustrate how a BMW-owned Mini’s indicators worked, and the subsequent complaint from the German Embassy. At the top of the piece was a picture of the world’s most famous German, next to the caption ‘One ball’.

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But none of this is entirely new: in 1956 England beat West Germany 3–0 in the Olympic Stadium, Berlin, the first meeting of the two nations since the war. A news commentator, focusing on a couple of miserable-looking German fans, pronounced: ‘Donner und blitzen! Zees Englanders have us out-schnitzled!’ And the Sun had written on the eve of the 1966 final: ‘As the Fatherland are embarrassingly aware, England have never lost to Germany – at soccer either.’

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CHAPTER 4GERMAN BITE

While the English seem to see football matches between the countries as another El Alamein, the Germans just seem confused by the whole thing. Here are some headlines and extracts from the other side.

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‘YUK, ENGLAND, COME OFF IT! YOU ARE JUST AN EMBARRASSMENT. Somewhere along the line the English seem to have forgotten that this is just about football’ – Bild Zeitung, on 31 August 1996, after the Daily Spor t had told Germans ‘to stick their beach towels up their arse’.

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GERMAN BITE

‘The fatal defect in cows’ brains seems to have transferred to the two-legged inhabitants on the island’Cologne-based Express after the Daily Mirror’s 1996 outburst.

‘ENGLAND DECLARES FOOTBALL WAR ON US’, said Bild Zeitung, splashing the Mirror’s picture of Gazza and helmet on its front page. ‘Where did they find a helmet big enough?’ asked German keeper Andy Kopke (that may sound funnier in the original German).

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The Bild added: ‘11 Questions to the English – 11 jibes designed to send Fleet Street’s most scurrilous scribes running for their Biros.’ Here is a small sample: ‘Why do you wear your swimming costumes in the sauna?’ ‘How can your former colonies beat you at cricket?’ ‘When did an Englishman last win at Wimbledon?’ All valid points, it has to be said, apart from the sauna one.

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‘A year’s work improving Anglo–German relations can be undone by a single England–Germany match’a British diplomat in Berlin, to the Observer in September 2001

‘FOOTBALL’S COMING HOME – THANK YOU SOUTHGATE’popular German T-shir t slogan seen after the 1996 match

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When England drew Germany in the 2002 World Cup, the front page of Hamburg-based tabloid Bild announced ‘SORRY ENGLAND’ in English, alongside pictures of German victories in the World Cups of 1970 and 1990, and the European Championships in 1972 and 1996. Under a picture of Geoff Hurst’s controversial 1966 goal, it added: ‘Unless we are sh*t on again.’

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GERMAN BITE

And to show that they can fight back using our favourite weapon, here are some German jokes about the English:

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How do you double the value of a new Rover?

Fill it up with petrol.

Why didn’t the sun set on the British Empire?

Because not even God would trust an Englishman in the dark.

What do you call an Englishman who lies around in bed all day in the cold and dark?

An NHS patient.

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CHAPTER 5ANGLO– GERMAN

FOOTBALL TRIVIA

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The German side that played at White Hart Lane in 1930 was the first football team to arrive by aeroplane.

England’s Gordon Banks has a German wife, Ursula, whom he met while doing National Service. They were already married by 1966, when Banks won his World Cup winner’s medal.

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Germany never got revenge for their 1938 defeat in Berlin; a return match in England was scheduled for late 1939, but for some reason was never played.

On their 1938 tour, England legend Stanley Matthews came within a whisker of Adolf Hitler, when the dictator drove past the England striker, on walkabout with teammate Ber t Sproston. Sproston was way ahead of most when he told Matthews he thought Hitler ‘an evil little twat’.

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When England played Germany in 1956, they were most worried about right-half Rober t Schlienz, but only because they were embarrassed; the Stuttgar t player had only one arm.

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The same match produced the first mass following of English fans abroad; 10,000 in the stadium, most of them from the Royal Cheshire Regiment, stationed in Berlin at the time.

England also played four matches against East Germany, all friendlies, of which three were won by England, and the other match a draw.

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Pity ITV’s anchorman Hugh Johns, rival to the BBC’s Kenneth Wolstenholme, whose commentary from the 1966 World Cup final has been all but forgotten: ‘Here’s Hurst, he might make it three. He has! He has! So that’s it! That is IT!’ But somehow ‘He Has! He Has! ’ wouldn’t make quite such a catchy quiz show title.

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When the England and West Germany teams met in a Hannover friendly in 1967, a suppor ter ran onto the pitch, probably expecting to be chased away by police. Instead he was pushed in the face by the no-nonsense referee, and to add indignity to the proceedings, knocked down by a linesman before having the humiliation of being rescued by the police.

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After 1966, England would not finish above Germany in any European Championship or World Cup for the next 34 years. But when the day of glory did come, in the Low Countries Euro 2000 tournament, celebrations were slightly muted – England were knocked out by Romania and not even the nation’s triumphalist press could claim Germany edging us for the wooden spoon was a cause for champagne-popping.

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Modern football boots were invented in 1920 by German Adi Dassler who, along with brother Rudi, formed Adidas in 1924. The pair split in 1948, when Rudi went off to star t Puma.

The FA used The Farm’s ‘All Together Now’ as their 2004 anthem. The lyrics, which refer to the hopelessness of trench warfare in the First World War, could equally apply to England’s performances in major tournaments.

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The Christmas Truce of 1914 is also the inspiration for Truce International, a peace charity set up by Sven Goran Eriksson and gir lfriend Nancy Dell’Olio. The organisation helps children in war zones to learn football. (Details can be found at www.truce.net.)

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In 1996 the German squad inspired some grumblings from English fellow guests at their hotel in Macclesfield after going au naturel in the sauna. Coach Berti Vogts was baffled at the Brits’ modesty: ‘In Russia you just need a hat.’

Boris Becker had trials for Bayern Munich before choosing tennis.

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As if the new stadium hasn’t enough problems, Wembley ran an online poll last year to name a footbridge at the rebuilt stadium, assuming that Bobby Moore or some other English gentleman player of yesteryear would top the ballot. Instead the vote was almost won by Dietmar Hamann, scorer of the last ever goal at the old ground, with a suspiciously large amount of cyber traffic coming from Germany and, of course, Scotland, Ireland, Wales and Australia.

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The German team in Escape to Victory was actually made up of Ipswich Town’s reserve side, as manager Bobby Robson was a good friend of director John Huston.

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CHAPTER 6FANS SURVEY

Just what do supporters think? The author asked English fans on website www.myfootballforum.com, and football supporters in other countries, what they thought of the great Anglo– German rivalry.

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FANS SURVEY

Who do you think are historically England’s greatest football rivals?

Country %Country %

Holland 0

Italy 0

France 8

Argentina 16

Germany 78

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What attributes do you associate with German football?

Attribute %Attribute %

Flair 4

Luck 8

Success 11

Poor quality hairstyles 19

Teamwork 27

Efficiency 30

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FANS SURVEY

Do you find the constant references to the war found in newspapers every time England play Germany an embarrassment?

Yes 54% No 46%

Would you prefer Germany to win the final if it was against France or Argentina?

Yes 43% No 57%

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And finally, suppor ters of Ireland, Scotland and Holland were asked which they’d prefer to win in a final between the two nations. The Dutch voted 83–17% in favour of the English, while the Scots wanted the Germans to win by 94–6%, and the Irish opted 84–16% for the Germans, proving there’s nothing like good neighbours.

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CHAPTER 7

YOUR GUIDE

TO GERMANY

If you#re lucky enough to visit Germany in the summer of 2006, here is an easy guide to the cities you#ll be visiting.

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Frankfurtvenue for Paraguay game

Bear in mind Germany has two Frankfur ts, and this one is London’s main rival as economic capital of Europe, so ‘in your Frankfur t slums’ is never going to work.

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YOUR GUIDE TO GERMANY

Nuremburgvenue for Trinidad and Tobago game

The city greets England’s fans with leaflets giving a frank description of its role in Nazi days, pre-empting inevitable English war-based faux pas. Many fans will probably recognise the grand approach to the stadium from footage of Hitler’s famous rallies. The Führer planned to build the largest stadium in the world in Nuremburg, with a capacity of 400,000, so it’s a shame that

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other matters diverted his plans, as that might have actually seated all the England fans wanting to go to the game.

Colognevenue for Sweden game

Don’t ask any tour guide why most of the architecture post-dates 1945; Cologne, Latin for ‘colony’, had a long and rich history before it was firebombed in 1944, but like an urban phoenix it has risen from the ashes.

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YOUR GUIDE TO GERMANY

Munichpossible round two venue

The capital of Bavaria is arguably the world capital of beer, with respectable Bavarians seeing nothing uncivilised about having a brew over a 9 a.m. business meeting. They don’t, however, tend to finish a third bottle by 10 a.m., nor urinate in the street at the same time, so some English behaviour may still seem a little eccentric.

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Berlinvenue for the final

Don’t worry, there’s about as much chance of Englishmen drinking beer in Berlin in 2006 as there was in 1914. But if they do, Berlin is famed as the par ty capital of Europe, making Amster-dam look like an annoying teen-aged brother, and is home to the highest number of punks, hippies, techno freaks and acid casualties in all of Europe, who will no doubt get on with the England fans like a house in a flood.

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CHAPTER 8

SHADES OF

1966

And finally, as any Scotsman will tell you, it really doesn#t take much for a football commentator to make comparisons to 1966. If any of these spooky parallels crop up, you can bet the spirit

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of Sir Jeff etc. will quickly be evoked, or else that phrase so beloved of John Motson: And of course, the last time that happened, you know how the tournament ended, don#t you?#

England playing in red

a Russian linesman, or any official from the former Soviet Union

#

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SHADES OF 1966

England going 1– 0 down

England equalising

any player from West Ham, like the trio of

Moore, Peters and Hurst

any player who grew up in the same borough as one of the 1966 team

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any sightings of one of the 1966

team in the crowd

playing against Germany, or any other team that England

beat in 1966

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SHADES OF 1966

any member having their suit made by

Burton – the England team#s outfitters

in 1966#

any dodgy team selection, since Geoff Hurst was left out of England#s first game#

#

#

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some vague social, political or spiritual

parallel with the mid 1960s – Labour

in power, same animal in the Chinese zodiac,

Venus and Saturn being in alignment

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SHADES OF 1966

With any luck, another 40 years down the line and an elderly John Motson will be banging on about the spirit of 2006.

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CHAPTER 9ENGLAND VS

GERMANY

RESULTS

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ENGLAND VS GERMANY RESULTS

Overall statistics – England vs Germany (or West Germany):

Games 24England wins 11Draws 3Germany wins 10

In the following breakdown, note below what the abbreviations stand for:

F = friendlyWC = World CupEC = European Championships(Result given with England score first)

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10.05.30 F Berlin 3–3

04.12.35 F White Har t Lane 3–0

14.05.38 F Berlin 6–3

01.12.54 F Wembley 3–1

26.05.56 F Berlin 3–1

12.05.65 F Nuremberg 1–0

21.02.66 F Wembley 1–0

30.07.66 WC Wembley 4–2

01.06.68 F Hannover 0–1

14.06.70 WC Mexico 2–3

29.04.72 EC Wembley 1–3

13.05.72 EC Berlin 0–0

12.03.75 F Wembley 2–0

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ENGLAND VS GERMANY RESULTS

22.02.78 F Munich 1–2

29.06.82 WC Madrid 0–0

13.10.82 F Wembley 1–2

12.06.85 F Mexico 3–0

09.09.87 F Dusseldorf 1–3

04.07.90 WC Turin 1–1 (3–4 pens)

11.09.91 F Wembley 0–1

09.06.93 F Detroit 1–2

26.06.96 EC Wembley 1–1 (5–6 pens)

17.6.00 EC Charleroi 1–0

07.10.00 WC Wembley 0–1

01.9.01 WC Munich 5–1

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THE TEUTONIC

STEREOTYPES

DRINKING GAME

Whenever a group of Germans set foot on a field, a barrage of cliches are sure to follow. Down a pint of Becks every time a commentator uses one of these words or phrases in reference to the Germans.

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THE TEUTONIC STEREOTYPES DRINKING GAME

disciplined

ordered

efficient

grind out results

they fight to the end/the last man

any reference to battle

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anything relating to their lack

of flare

anything which is the opposite of being Latin and fanciful

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THE TEUTONIC STEREOTYPES DRINKING GAME

blitzkrieg (when describing an

attacking football)

vague allusions to the 1940– 44

Atlantic Wall (when talking about their defence)

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When Germany meet Poland in their group stage, you can down three shots in one go if someone like Big Ron makes a reference to lebensraum , or

that most famous match between the countries.

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THE TEUTONIC STEREOTYPES DRINKING GAME

Sung to ‘Who Do You Think You Are Kidding, Mr Hitler?’

Who do you think you are kidding Michael Ballack?

If you think we’re on the run

We are the boys who will stop your little game

We are the boys who will make you think again

’Cos who do you think you are kidding Michael Ballack?

If you think old England’s done?

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Sung to ‘Daydream Believer’

Cheer up Jürgen Klinsmann

Oh what can it mean?

To a sad German b***ard

And a s*** football team

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This must-have little book for serious fans of the beautiful game contains all of football’s favourite swear words and insults – all translated into four languages for use at most major international matches! Featuring classic football wit and cheap shots to put you at the top of your game, it has all you need to impress friends and guarantee enemies.

THE LITTLE BOOK OF

ESSENTIAL FOOTBALL SWEAR WORDS

Jeffrey Zwanka

£2.99 P/B

1 84024 514 X

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www.summersdale.com

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