Julian Nagelsmann is not going anywhere — at least, not by choice. Germany's head coach has publicly refused to resign after one of the most humiliating results in the nation's football history: a last-32 exit at the 2026 World Cup, eliminated by Paraguay on penalties. 'I am not someone who runs away,' Nagelsmann said. Paraguay, meanwhile, declared Tuesday a national holiday. That tells you everything about the scale of what just happened.
Germany — four-time world champions, co-hosts of the continent's biggest sporting event in a generation — are out before the quarter-finals, beaten by a Paraguay side that will now be talked about in Asunción for decades. The penalty shootout was the final twist in what, according to The Guardian, was a genuinely significant upset at this stage of the competition.
For context: this is a Germany team that entered a home-continent World Cup with genuine expectations of going deep. Nagelsmann had rebuilt the squad after the Qatar disaster, and the 2024 Euros showed flickers of a side finding itself again. A last-32 exit to Paraguay is not a blip. It is a reckoning.
Nagelsmann's response to the fallout was defiant — almost confrontationally so. The quote lands differently when you sit with it. He didn't say the result was acceptable. He didn't offer a tactical explanation or lean on the cruelty of penalties. He simply said he won't leave. Whether that reads as conviction or stubbornness probably depends on whether you're German.
The question now is whether the DFB agrees with him. Nagelsmann can refuse to resign all he likes — his position ultimately rests with the German Football Association, and the internal temperature there following this exit is, at the time of writing, unclear. A public stance of 'I'm staying' is the opening move in what could become a very messy negotiation.
He didn't look like a man who thought he'd done nothing wrong. He looked like a man who'd decided that wasn't the point.
Flip the lens and this story is genuinely joyful. Paraguay beating Germany on penalties to reach the last 16 of a World Cup is the kind of result that rewires a football culture. The national holiday declaration is not hyperbole — it is a government acknowledging that something genuinely historic just happened.
For South American football, this is another reminder that the continent's teams arrive at major tournaments underestimated at everyone else's peril. Paraguay have now written themselves into the tournament's story in a way no one predicted.
The immediate pressure will build around Nagelsmann's position. A home-continent tournament exit at the last 32 is the kind of result that ends coaching tenures regardless of public statements — the DFB will face its own questions about the direction of the national team, the squad selection, the tactical setup, and whether the man in charge is still the right one to lead the rebuild.
Nagelsmann staying or going will define the next chapter of German football. His defiance buys him a news cycle. It does not buy him a contract.
Julian Nagelsmann is not going anywhere — at least, not by choice. Germany's head coach has publicly refused to resign after one of the most humiliating results in the nation's football history: a last-32 exit at the…
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The Guardian — Football
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
SELEÇÕESFour World Cup titles. Eight finals. A footballing identity built on never, ever going quietly. And yet — Paraguay. Germany are out of the 2026 World Cup, eliminated in what is already the defining sh
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
SELEÇÕESFour World Cup titles. Eight finals. A footballing identity built on never, ever going quietly. And yet — Paraguay. Germany are out of the 2026 World Cup, eliminated in what is already the defining sh