This is probably NSFW, so I won't post the photo, but there were some absolutely ludicrous scarves being sold outside the ground in Gelsenkirchen, ha!
Excellent!
If we'd really gone at them, we might indeed have exposed and been able to exploit further weaknesses. They were missing quite a few game-changing names. Could we have taken better advantage of that? Could we have won the game, like Poland did, if we'd gone on the front foot from the outset? It's hard to say really. I mean, they'd have had more space to play closer to our goal, so maybe we'd have been simply leaving ourselves open and vulnerable to more incisive penetration. Kroos and Durm showed what they could do when given the slightest bit of space around the edge of our box. Their media thinks they're a team in crisis. I'd like to think not. I'd rather think it was a brave performance and point won, rather than a cowardly two dropped, against a team who had a few injuries, of which we took advantage, but who will return to their best by going on to crush our main competition (Scotland and Poland) in the remaining games. Before bottling it again against us in Dublin, of course!
Having trumped Scotland's result in Germany by a point, the Scots are already playing catch-up in the group. And they still have to go to Georgia too. That one has "banana-skin" written all over it. Let's hope such pressure shows in Celtic Park. I'd been saying before the game that I was hoping we'd give it a proper go like Scotland did. We didn't, but I'm ecstatic. I'd rather come home with a last-gasp point having played anti-football for 75 minutes than have played plucky and direct counter-attacking football and ended up losing 2-1. The result certainly justified the means.
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