Olympic qualification: Last chance for Popp and Co. to save face

Olympic Olympic qualification

The last chance for Popp and Co. to save face

As of: 7:21 p.m. | Reading time: 2 minutes

Alexandra Popp and her team have to defeat the Netherlands in order to compete at the Olympics

Source: dpa/Sebastian Gollnow

Alexandra Popp won Olympic gold with the DFB women in 2016. Before the very important game against the Netherlands for the ticket to the games in Paris, the captain warns: It’s about everything.

Captain Alexandra Popp took her team to task before the German footballers’ important international match against the Netherlands in Heerenveen. “We know what it’s about. It’s not just about qualifying for the Olympics, it’s about saving your own face,” said the 32-year-old from VfL Wolfsburg at the final press conference on Tuesday.

The selection of interim national coach Horst Hrubesch must win the game in the game for third place in the Nations League against the Oranje team this Wednesday (8:45 p.m./ZDF) in order to take part in the Olympic Games in Paris in the summer. The DFB women lost their first chance of getting a ticket to the Olympics with the 2-1 defeat against France last Friday in Lyon.

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Missing out on taking part in the summer games would be another serious setback for the German Football Association six months after the World Cup debacle in Australia with the elimination in the preliminary round. “To put it bluntly, we’re already used to it. Every game is fraught with pressure,” said Popp, who won Olympic gold in Rio in 2016, emphasizing: “We just want to put it on the record tomorrow, we have to put it on the record.”

Hrubesch: “We shook each other once”

The German national team won a test match in Sittard 1-0 against the Netherlands in 2023 – but was extremely lucky. Goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger “extremely saved the players’ butts,” said Popp. Basically, she admitted that the European vice-champions have had difficulties in away games in the recent past.

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“You know that home games always feel nicer with lots and lots of fans behind you. But it shouldn’t affect us,” said Germany’s “Footballer of the Year.” “We just have to learn that: how to deal with it when 20,000, 25,000 are against you.”

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According to Hrubesch, all players are fit. “We shook each other once, shook each other again yesterday. Now we have prepared ourselves for tomorrow’s game,” said the 72-year-old, whose term in office would end immediately if he missed participation in Paris.

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