Joachim Loew’s resurgent Germany side face their first test without Manchester City winger Leroy Sane when they renew their rivalry with neighbours the Netherlands in Friday’s Euro 2020 qualifier in Hamburg, reports AFP.
Sane, 23, is one of several German players missing through injury, including Julian Draxler and Thilo Kehrer, after he tore knee ligaments during City’s Community Shield win over Liverpool last month.
The twinkle-toed winger has been a key part of the national team’s recovery from their
World Cup debacle last year, scoring in five of Germany’s last six games.
Two of those goals have come against Friday’s opponents the Netherlands, who Germany
have faced three times since last October in a resumption of one of international football’s biggest rivalries.
Yet Sane’s team mates insis
ted this week that they would
be able to compensate for his absence.
“Leroy creates a lot of space and is very important for the team, but we have a lot of quality to
replace him,” said Borussia Dortmund player Marco Reus on Wednesday.
Sane is expected to be replaced by in-form RB Leipzig striker Timo Werner, who is hoping to fight his way back into the Germany first team.
“Leroy’s unfortunate injury means there is a space in attack. I believe I can show the same performances here as I have for my club,” said Werner, who has scored five goals in three games for Leipzig this season.
Having twice failed to beat the Dutch in the Nations League last year, Germany’s 3-2 win in Amsterdam in March marked a change in fortunes and left them six points clear of their rivals in qualifying Group C.
Victory in Hamburg would therefore represent a huge step towards qualification, adding further spice to the cross-border derby.
“Games against the Netherlands are always big, iconic games. You stand on the pitch and think: ‘awesome’,” said Reus.
For the Dutch in particular, the location of Friday’s match is a fateful one.
They currently sit in Group C’s play-off spot, nine points behind leaders Northern Ireland, albeit with two games in hand. Yet at a press conference Monday manager Ronald Koeman dismissed the notion that the match against Germany was a case of do-or-die for his team.
“The game against Germany is not crucial,” said Koeman.