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Germany coach Hansi Flick looks dejected after their 2-0 defeat to Colombia.
Germany coach Hansi Flick looks dejected after their 2-0 defeat to Colombia. Photograph: Thilo Schmülgen/Reuters
Germany coach Hansi Flick looks dejected after their 2-0 defeat to Colombia. Photograph: Thilo Schmülgen/Reuters

Germany’s Hansi Flick on thin ice as questions mount for Euro 2024 hosts

  • Team have won only three of last 11 games under head coach
  • ‘The coach and his team have lost all orientation,’ write Kicker

The Germany head coach Hansi Flick had started his tenure in 2021 with an eight-game winning run and a promise to fans to get the four-time world champions back on the right track. After Tuesday’s 2-0 shock home loss to Colombia, however, Flick looks to have used up almost all of that early credit, with the hosts of Euro 2024 having already lost to Poland and drawn 3-3 with Ukraine in their internationals this month.

“Is he the right man for the job?,” asked several German media outlets in their online polls on Wednesday. “A year before the Euros, it looks like the coach and his team have lost all orientation,” Kicker football magazine wrote in a comment.

Germany, who have less than a year to build a battle-hardened team for the tournament and shore up enthusiasm in the country, had needed two late goals to draw with Ukraine before Friday’s 1-0 loss to Poland in Warsaw. They delivered an even worse performance against Colombia in Gelsenkirchen, with Flick’s players lacking urgency in their game and any punch up front.

Germany players walk off after the loss to Colombia.
Germany players walk off after the loss to Colombia. Photograph: Thilo Schmülgen/Reuters

Germany have won just one of their last five matches since their shock World Cup group-stage exit in December. They have also won only three of their last 11 games.

When Flick took over two years ago, Germany had just suffered a last-16 exit at the Euros in 2021, following their first World Cup exit in the groups for more than 80 years. Flick looked to be the perfect man for the job after his six-trophy run with Bayern Munich in 2020 and his years-long work with Germany predecessor Joachim Löw as his assistant coach, which was capped by the 2014 World Cup triumph in Brazil.

But now his back is against the wall despite Flick’s assurances that the team will be completely different in their next set of internationals in September. “We will see a different team,” he said. “We will stabilise the team and we will fine-tune it. We are positive for September because we are convinced we have a good team and good players.”

Germany host Japan on 9 September before entertaining France three days later. They then travel to North America to face the United States on 14 October.

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German fans, however, are quickly running out of patience, having failed to see any clear signs of any recovery in recent months. “Flick’s announcement that things ‘will be different in September’ now only sounds like a morale-boosting slogan,” Kicker said. The one-year countdown for the Euros has started as has the countdown for Flick to start delivering by September.

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