
It happened again. Germany — four-time world champions, the country that once made tournament football look like a birthright — have been knocked out of the 2026 World Cup in the round of 16, beaten by Paraguay on penalties. The DFB president has now broken his silence, per Foot Mercato and BBC Sport, and the word circulating in German football circles, per Foot Mercato, is not 'disappointment'. It's 'fiasco'.
Two years after the 2022 group-stage exit in Qatar — a humiliation that was supposed to be the low point, the moment that triggered a proper reset — Germany have gone out at the last-16 stage to Paraguay. On penalties. At a World Cup they were meant to be rebuilding towards.
The full details of the shootout are still being confirmed, per Foot Mercato, but the headline writes itself: one of the most decorated nations in the history of the sport, eliminated before the quarter-finals, again, by a side they would have been expected to beat on paper. BBC Sport has also reported the elimination, confirming Germany's exit at the round-of-16 stage.
The DFB president has spoken publicly in the aftermath — per Foot Mercato, though the full content and precise framing of those comments have not yet been independently corroborated — but the fact that the governing body's chief felt the need to address the nation at all tells you everything about the scale of what just happened.
Germany in 2018: group stage. Germany in 2022: group stage. Germany in 2026: round of 16, on penalties, to Paraguay. The graph is not trending upward.
There have been structural conversations in German football for years — about the Bundesliga's intensity relative to the Premier League and La Liga, about youth development pipelines, about tactical identity at international level. Those conversations are about to get considerably louder. A DFB president breaking his silence after a result like this is not a press conference. It's the opening statement of an inquiry.
Per Foot Mercato, the DFB chief speaking out signals that even those at the top of German football cannot frame this as bad luck or a penalty lottery anomaly. Paraguay did not steal this. Germany handed it over.
The questions now are structural and they are urgent. Who coaches Germany going forward? What does the player pool actually look like without the tournament pressure masking its limitations? And is the DFB willing to make genuinely uncomfortable decisions — or will it reach for the familiar comfort of a high-profile name and call it a rebuild?
Germany hosted Euro 2024, and that felt like a turning point. It wasn't. The 2026 World Cup was supposed to be proof of progress. Instead it has become proof that the problem runs deeper than any single tournament cycle.
Somewhere, a Paraguay squad that just knocked out Germany is celebrating. They should. They've earned it.
It happened again. Germany — four-time world champions, the country that once made tournament football look like a birthright — have been knocked out of the 2026 World Cup in the round of 16, beaten by Paraguay on…
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“Stays on Germany — different angle, same beat.”
INTIt keeps happening. Different tournament, different opponent, same gut-punch ending — according to Foot Mercato, Germany are out of the 2026 World Cup, beaten by Paraguay on penalties in the round of
“Stays on Germany — different angle, same beat.”
INTIt keeps happening. Different tournament, different opponent, same gut-punch ending — according to Foot Mercato, Germany are out of the 2026 World Cup, beaten by Paraguay on penalties in the round of