With three world titles to their name, Germany are one of the great football nations of the world. A German team has played in every FIFA World Cup™ finals, except the 1930 and 1950 tournaments, and they boast an outstanding record of success.
In 1954, the famous 'Walter's Eleven' raised the trophy for the then West Germany for the first time, defeating seemingly invincible Hungary 3-2 in the final in the Wankdorf Stadium in Bern, Switzerland. Fritz Walter, Helmut Rahn and the rest of the team became idols and standard bearers for a whole country.
Twenty years later Franz Beckenbauer and Gerd Muller led the West Germans to FIFA World Cup glory again, this time on home turf. 'Kaiser' Beckenbauer captained the hosts in a riveting final against a brilliant Netherlands side. Johan Neeskens put the Dutch ahead, but Paul Breitner equalised, paving the way for Muller, the greatest German striker of all time, to score the winning goal in a 2-1 victory. It was magical stuff for German supporters and football fans everywhere.
Germany's third and most recent FIFA World Cup triumph came in 1990 in Italy after successive defeats in the finals of 1982, when they lost 3-1 to Italy in Spain, and 1986, when Argentina saw them off 3-2 in Mexico. Beckenbauer played a key role again, this time as coach to the squad captained by Lothar Matthaus. In the final, Andreas Brehme converted a penalty against Argentina, giving Germany a 1-0 win and restoring honour after their defeat by the Gauchos four years earlier.
An unremarkable decade on the world stage followed before Germany bounced back with a vengeance at the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan™, battling to the final only to go down 2-0 to Brazil. The runners-up spot still represented a sensational achievement for Rudi Voller's men just two years after a dismal UEFA EURO 2000 campaign in Belgium and the Netherlands.
The 1996 European champions fared poorly at EURO 2004 in Portugal and Voller resigned following his side's ignominious group stage exit, making way for a new coaching crew headed by Voller's former international strike partner Jurgen Klinsmann, who set his sights high right from the start. "Our target is to win the World Cup," the new man declared on taking the helm.
German hopes rest squarely on the shoulders of Bayern Munich playmaker Michael Ballack, as the national captain seeks to inspire the youngsters around him with his experience and class. Rising stars such as Bastian Schweinsteiger and Lukas Podolski impressed at the FIFA Confederations Cup 2005, unleashing a wave of euphoria among the home faithful. Germany finished third after a narrow 3-2 defeat by Brazil in the semi-finals, boosting hopes of stirring performance at the 'main event' in summer 2006.
http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/06/en/w/team/index.html