Nagelsmann hangs by a thread as Klopp becomes the name Germany keeps whispering
The World Cup has left German football gasping. Days after a brutal, humiliating round-of-16 exit to Paraguay, the country is already hunting for someone to blame. And, as it usually goes in these weeks, the first stare lands on the dugout.
Julian Nagelsmann is still Germany manager on paper. Off it, his future feels chained to a meeting that could redraw the whole national setup. The 38-year-old has no plan to walk. The pressure on him climbs by the hour anyway.
An exit that cut deeper than a scoreline
Germany did not just lose a football match. They looked soft at the exact moment the heavyweights are meant to stand tall.
One picture told the whole story. In the shootout, cameras caught Joshua Kimmich scanning his teammates for anyone willing to take the sixth penalty. Nobody rushed forward. A side unwilling to carry the weight when things turned ugly, captured in a single frame.
The fallout came fast. Manuel Neuer has confirmed he is done with international football for good. Others among the senior names could follow over the coming weeks, the first signs of a real reset. For a team already carrying the scars of two group-stage exits in 2018 and 2022, this one feels like the letdown that tips the balance.
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Nagelsmann won’t jump, so the DFB is deciding whether to push
His contract runs to Euro 2028, and after the defeat Nagelsmann made one thing clear. He will not resign.
That hands the German FA a blunt choice. If it wants a new man, it pays for one, several million euros in compensation on the table.
He still has heavyweight backing. Rudi Voeller keeps defending him, and Oliver Kahn has spoken up for him too, which is a strange twist given the former Bayern president is the man who ended Nagelsmann’s spell in Bavaria a few years back.
None of it may be enough. A meeting is expected within days at the DFB to settle his fate one way or the other. Inside the federation the knives are out. His management, his tactical calls, the way he talks to the outside world, all of it is under the microscope, with plenty convinced he has not dragged a proud team back to where it belongs.
Jurgen Klopp, the name already lighting up the country
When Germany needs rebuilding, one name floats straight to the surface. Jurgen Klopp.
The former Liverpool boss looks tailor-made to hand the Mannschaft a fresh identity. The charisma, the elite-level mileage, the knack for welding a group together, all of it appeals to a federation chasing a leader as much as a tactician.
There is a snag. Klopp is currently Red Bull’s global head of football, and that contract sits in the way. Rumours of an exit from the role have swirled for months, though, which is enough to keep the hope alive that this could move quickly.
Klopp himself is giving nothing away. He refuses to touch the subject out of respect for Nagelsmann, who is still in the job. He has also never bothered hiding that coaching Germany one day is the kind of challenge he would struggle to say no to.
A clean break may be coming
Other names are floating about. Mats Hummels even threw out Pep Guardiola, free again since his Manchester City chapter closed. That would be a colossal call, one that would tear up German football’s oldest habits.
Since the modern Mannschaft took shape, no foreign coach has ever led the national team. Handing it to one would break with tradition entirely.
The mood right now points elsewhere. The DFB seems sure it needs a figure who can reconnect the country with its team, and in the German imagination almost nobody fits that picture like Klopp. So the next few days carry real weight. This runs well past a simple change of coach. The direction of German football is what is actually on the table.
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