Chapter 176: Germany vs England U21 [I]
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
Stadion an der Grünwalder Straße, Munich
7:30 PM - First Half
Fweeeeeetttttttt!!!!!
The whistle's sharp blast cut through the Munich evening and Germany's striker touched the ball backward immediately, and the match was officially underway as eighteen thousand German supporters roared their approval while England's starting eleven spread across their defensive shape with practiced precision.
1' - 5' |
Germany's opening intent was obvious from the first pass as they moved the ball quickly through their midfield trio without rushing or overcommitting, and their pressing shape formed with coordinated discipline that suggested preparation rather than improvisation, and immediately the difference from Italy's passive approach became apparent because Germany weren't waiting to see what England would do, they were dictating terms from the opening seconds.
From the bench Demien sat forward with his elbows resting on his knees while his eyes tracked Germany's movement patterns, and beside him Owen Blake's jaw was set tight as they both watched England's center-backs Harvey Keane and Ben Rowe receive the ball under immediate pressure from Germany's striker Noah Richter who cut off the central passing lane to Whitmore with intelligent positioning.
England tried to play out from the back as Carsley had instructed because building possession through the press was part of their identity, and Keane played a short pass to the right-back Elliot Ford who took one touch before Germany's left winger Sebastian Krüger closed him down with aggressive body positioning, and Ford's return pass toward Keane came slightly underhit, the weight not quite right, and suddenly the space that had existed a second earlier was gone as Germany's midfield sensed vulnerability.
KingD2605 stepped forward from his deep position and arrived at the ball before Keane could adjust, and his first touch took possession cleanly while his second played it wide toward Germany's right-back Hezii_2G who had already pushed high up the flank, and the transition happened in three seconds flat, England's attempt to build from the back turned into Germany attacking down the right side with numbers committed forward.
Commentary Booth
"Early pressure from Germany here," the lead commentator observed, and his voice carried approval for the home side's intensity. "They're not giving England any time on the ball. Pressing high, forcing mistakes."
"Exactly what we expected, Martin," his colleague added. "Germany at home, they're going to make this uncomfortable for England from the first whistle. Look at the pace they're playing at—England haven't settled yet."
Hezii_2G received the ball near the touchline and drove forward with purpose while England's left-back Calum Price tracked his run, and the German right-back took three touches before cutting inside slightly which drew Price closer, and then the pass came low and hard down the channel toward the edge of the box where Germany's right winger Leon Weiss had peeled away from his marker.
The cross arrived fast and dangerous, skimming across the six-yard box with enough pace that England's defenders couldn't intercept, and goalkeeper Aaron Whitfield reacted quickly by diving forward to smother it before Richter could adjust his feet, and the save was routine but the message landed clearly because Germany had created danger within ninety seconds of kickoff.
The German section erupted with approving noise, not celebrating a goal but acknowledging the intent and the pressure their team was applying, and eighteen thousand voices created a wall of sound that pressed down on England's players while Demien watched from the bench and recognized the difference between this atmosphere and King Power Stadium's modest crowd because this felt like proper hostile territory where every England mistake would be amplified and every German success magnified.
6' - 10' |
England responded by deliberately slowing the tempo as Carsley had prepared them to do when Germany pressed aggressively, and Whitmore and Merrick dropped deeper into their own half to receive the ball from the center-backs, and possession circulated side to side through short passes that forced Germany to reset their pressing shape, and the German forwards had to retreat slightly because chasing the ball wasn't sustainable for ninety minutes.
Demien watched the tactical adjustment unfold and recognized Carsley's game plan executing exactly as designed because England weren't trying to match Germany's intensity, they were absorbing it and waiting for the moment to counter when Germany overcommitted, and the patience was professional rather than passive.
At the eighth minute England built their first meaningful attack as the ball moved from Keane to Rowe to Merrick who turned smoothly under pressure and played it forward into Kayden Muir between the lines, and Kayden's first touch was clean as he received with his back to goal before spinning away from his marker, and suddenly England had numbers pushing forward with Reece Darlow making a run down the right flank.
Kayden's pass found Darlow wide, and the Arsenal winger took one touch to control before cutting inside onto his left foot as Germany's center-back Jonas Kübler stepped out to close him down, and Darlow struck from twenty-five yards with good technique, the ball rising toward goal with power, and Kübler threw his body in front of it and blocked the shot cleanly, the ball deflecting out for a corner.
Darlow's frustration showed immediately in the way his shoulders dropped and his hands went to his hips, though his teammates clapped once in acknowledgment because the attempt was right even if the execution didn't produce a goal, and from the touchline Carsley remained motionless with his arms crossed while his eyes stayed fixed on England's shape rather than the blocked shot because outcomes mattered less than process.
"Good effort from Darlow," the commentator noted. "England showing they can create when given space. Germany will need to be careful not to commit too many men forward."
11' - 15' |
The rhythm shifted as both teams settled into their tactical approaches, and Germany continued pressing England's buildup play while England looked for moments to break through Germany's midfield pressure with vertical passes, and the match developed into a chess game where positioning mattered more than individual brilliance.
At the thirteenth minute Germany won the ball in midfield as England's center-back Keane took one touch too many while trying to find a forward pass, and Moritz Keller pressed him aggressively and the ball popped loose, and Krüger reacted first by collecting it and playing a quick one-touch pass toward Timo Hahn who had space twenty yards from goal.
Hahn struck immediately without taking an extra touch, and the shot skidded across the grass low and hard toward the bottom corner, and Whitfield dove to his right with full extension but the ball passed six inches wide of the post, and the German crowd groaned collectively because the chance had been clear and the execution nearly perfect.
"Ohhhh so close!" the commentary rose with excitement. "Germany should be ahead! Hahn caught that sweetly but just couldn't find the corner. England got away with one there."
From the bench Demien felt his chest tighten slightly because watching defensive mistakes happen was different from being on the pitch where you could influence outcomes, and he glanced at Carsley who remained calm on the touchline without shouting or gesturing dramatically because the coach understood that mistakes happened and panic wouldn't fix them.
England's defenders exchanged quick glances after the near-miss, no words needed, just acknowledgment that they'd been fortunate and needed sharper decision-making, and play restarted with Germany sensing vulnerability and pressing higher to force another mistake.
16' - 20' |
At the eighteenth minute the match's physical tone escalated as Leo Merrick stepped across Germany's midfielder during a transition and took the ball cleanly but his follow-through caught the German player's ankle, and the referee's whistle blew immediately while the yellow card came out without hesitation.
Merrick didn't protest because he knew the tackle had been late even if necessary to stop Germany's counter-attack, and he accepted the card with a brief nod before jogging back into position while Germany prepared to restart quickly, trying to catch England disorganized before they could recover their defensive shape.
"Smart foul from Merrick," the commentator observed. "Takes the yellow card but stops a dangerous counter. That's professional game management, though he'll need to be careful now for the rest of the match."
Germany's quick restart tested England's recovery speed as the ball was played forward before England's defenders had fully reorganized, and suddenly space opened on Germany's left flank where their right-back had pushed high, but England recovered just in time as Price tracked back aggressively and forced the cross to go wide where it ran harmlessly out for a goal kick.
Carsley clapped once from the touchline, sharp and brief, acknowledging the defensive recovery rather than criticizing the initial disorganization because adaptability mattered as much as perfect positioning.
21' - 25' |
England responded with their most fluid sequence of the half as the ball moved through five passes without Germany touching it, and Whitmore dropped deeper than usual which drew Germany's pressing midfielder forward and created space in behind, and when Whitmore turned and played a vertical pass into Kayden between the lines, the movement opened England's attack completely.
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