Germany v England
Germany 1-5 England
Saturday
1st September 2001
FIFA World Cup Qualifier
Michael Owen blasted a stunning hat-trick as
England came from behind to thrash
Germany in
Munich.
Sven Goran Eriksson's team are now on course to qualify for the
World Cup next year, following a result that will send shockwaves through the international game. Germany had only ever lost one World Cup qualifier at home in their history - but suddenly they were torn apart by an
England team playing slick football with a clinical edge up front.
Owen will win the headlines, but there were heroes all over the pitch for England - with captain
David Beckham and rejuvenated goalkeeper
David Seaman in particularly fine form.
The win means Eriksson's men are three points behind leaders Germany in
Group Nine - but they have a game in hand and, crucially, their goal
difference is now substantially superior. A win against
Albania next Wednesday would take them to the top of the group. Such a prospect looked fanciful when
Carsten Jancker fired the
Germans in front within six minutes. But
England's young
Lions roared back in menacing fashion to destroy Germany's proud record. And the much-heralded
German engine room was completely out-paced by Owen's go-faster stripes, as England moved into pole position in the race for World Cup qualification.
It looked bleak for the visitors when Germany took the lead,
Rio Ferdinand and
Sol Campbell allowing Carsten Jancker to steer home
Oliver Neuville's header.
But if England's defenders looked nervous together, then
Thomas Linke and
Jens Nowotny seemed nothing short of petrified. German goalkeeper
Oliver Kahn looked more flappable than anyone else on a night riddled with errors across the pitch. After all the pre-match German criticism of
Seaman and the claims heralding
Kahn as the world's number one, the home side's keeper was left with egg on his face. Only 12 minutes were on the clock when Kahn was caught horribly out of position from a teasing Beckham cross.
The German keeper flapped at thin air as
Nick Barmby cleverly cushioned a header into the path of Owen, who coolly slotted into an unguarded net.
At the other end, though, Seaman was silencing his critics with a brilliant one-handed save to turn away
Joerg Boehme's low shot and keep it at 1-1.
The home side were guilty of a glaring miss when
Sebastian Deisler fluffed his shot when completely unmarked - and that proved to be just the second warning that Eriksson's side needed. England punished the astonishing miss deep into first-half injury time when
Ferdinand headed down a Beckham cross for
Steven Gerrard to unleash an unstoppable 25-yard drive beyond Kahn's despairing grasp. The half-time boost lifted England's spirits, but few would have predicted the astonishing second-half blitz which was to follow. Owen gave England a vital two-goal cushion when he neatly tucked a shot inside Kahn's near post after Heskey had superbly headed down another Beckham cross. Owen was in deadly form and he did not have to wait long for his hat-trick. Gerrard sent him scampering clear with a superb through ball and the hungry striker ignored Heskey's call to blaze home a sensational shot into the top left-hand corner. On a night when some of England's finest triumphs were remembered, the timing of Owen's hat-trick clinching goal - 66 - was pleasantly significant. Heskey's moment did arrive, though, as the big striker put the seal on England's win 17 minutes from time.
Paul Scholes squared the ball into an empty German penalty area and Heskey held off Rehme's challenge to slot home and complete
Liverpool's three-man contribution to the scoring. The floodgates had long since been opened, but now the exit doors were thrown open too as German fans headed for home in their thousands. The England supporters stayed right where they were, pinching themselves and wondering whether it was all a dream.
- published: 23 Apr 2016
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