Index  ›  sport  ›  Metro
sport · Metro ↗

Julian Naglesmann blunt on his Germany future after nightmare World Cup exit

Metro Published Jun 30, 2026 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Germany and Paraguay finished 1-1 in the last 32 of the World Cup before a penalty shootout.
1 · Germany1 · Paraguay
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Germany hammered Curacao 7-1 in their opening match of the tournament.
7 · Germany1 · Curacao
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Germany beat Ivory Coast 2-1 in their second match of the tournament.
2 · Germany1 · Ivory Coast
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Nagelsmann’s contract with the German FA runs until 2028.
2028 year · contract end
Julian Nagelsmann, head coach
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Nagelsmann took charge of the German national team in 2023.
2023 year · start of tenure
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Nagelsmann’s Germany lost to Spain in the quarter‑finals of Euro 2024.
2024 year · tournament year
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Nagelsmann noted that his side had only two strikers in the penalty area during the match.
2 · strikers
Julian Nagelsmann, head coach
View source ↗

Julian Nagelsmann did not step down after Germany’s shock World Cup exit at the hands of Paraguay, but left the decision in the hands of the German FA.

After a 1-1 draw in Boston the last 32 contest went to a penalty shootout, which provided plenty of drama in a short space of time.

Kai Havertz and Nick Woltemade saw their efforts saved by Orlando Gill, but then Antonio Sanabria and Fabian Balbuena both missed, sending the shootout to sudden death.

Jonathan Tah sent a terrible effort over the bar, allowing Jose Canale to step up and score the winning penalty.

While there was not great optimism in Germany over their chances of winning the World Cup, falling at the last 32 stage to Paraguay is a disastrous performance.

Use AI to go deeper into the stories you care about – powered by Metro and trusted publications.

The tournament started so well for Nagelsmann’s side when they hammered Curacao 7-1 and beat Ivory Coast 2-1 in their first two matches.

A surprise defeat to Ecuador followed in the final group stage and now the nightmare against Paraguay, which saw Julio Enciso open the scoring before a Havertz equaliser and then the nerve-shredding shootout.

It is hard to see Nagelsmann continuing in his role from here, but he will not be resigning, pointing to his contract which runs till 2028.

‘I’m available. If they want me to stay until 2028, I will. And if they don’t want me to, I’ll go,’ he said.

Analysing the game, he said: ‘Our possession was very slow overall. At some point, we resorted to a brute-force approach. In the end, you still have to beat Paraguay.

‘We had control, but we lacked the cutting edge. We had hardly any presence in the penalty area with our two strikers. Especially in the opening minutes, we didn’t win any duels in the opposition’s box.’

Jurgen Klopp is seen as the obvious successor to Nagelsmann as Germany boss and he was quick to criticise the performance.

‘You have to attack down the wings. There’s no alternative. We all know how well these guys can play, but they didn’t bring that to the pitch,’ the former Liverpool boss said in his role as a TV pundit.

He added that it could need structural change at the German FA, having exited at the previous two group stages.

‘We can talk about the DFB (German Football Association). We absolutely have to change a few things,’ said Klopp. ‘We can start with the U10s and wait a few years to see what the results are.’

Nagelsmann took charge of Germany in 2023, losing to Spain in the quarter-finals of Euro 2024 in his previous tournament at the helm.

Everything you need to know about the World Cup – England updates, the games to watch and stories you missed – in five minutes, at 1pm, every day.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy

This article was originally published by Metro ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error