England will play just their second competitive fixture at Berlin’s Olympiastadion when they meet Spain on Sunday with Euro 2024 glory at stake.
Five of the team’s previous visits to the venue and its predecessor on the same site, the Deutsches Stadion, have been for friendly encounters, but this time, the stakes could hardly be higher.
Here, the PA news agency takes a look at England’s record in Berlin.
England needed a late equaliser from David Jack to claim a draw at the Deutsches Stadion despite Joe Bradford’s first-half double. Richard Hofmann had levelled twice before completing his hat-trick to give the hosts a 3-2 lead, but Jack ensured the spoils were shared.
Playing at the Olympiastadion, which had been rebuilt for the 1936 summer Olympic Games, in front of Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess and Joseph Goebbels, but not Adolf Hitler, the England players had been controversially ordered by the Foreign Office to give the Nazi salute before kick-off in an effort to further Anglo-German relations. On the pitch, the visitors stormed to victory courtesy of a double from Jackie Robinson and goals from Cliff Bastin, Frank Broome, Len Goulden and a fine solo effort from the great Stanley Matthews with Rudi Gellesch, Jupp Gauchel and Hans Pesser replying for the Germans.
A 19-year-old Duncan Edwards got his side, managed by Walter Winterbottom and captained by Billy Wright, off to the perfect start against the reigning world champions with a first-half opener. Further goals from Colin Grainger and Johnny Haynes secured victory for England over a German team featuring five of the men who had started the 1954 World Cup final victory over Hungary in Bern with one of them, Friedrich Walter, claiming a late consolation strike.
Trailing 3-1 from the first leg at Wembley, in which Uli Hoeness, Gunter Netzer and Gerd Muller had scored for the visitors and Francis Lee for Sir Alf Ramsey’s men, England needed something special in Berlin. In the event, they did not get it as a German team marshalled superbly by Franz Beckenbauer held out amid a physical assault later described by manager Helmut Schoen as “brutal” in torrential rain to deny World Cup winners Gordon Banks, Bobby Moore, Alan Ball and Martin Peters a trip to the tournament, where their conquerors would prevail.
John Terry was England’s hero as Fabio Capello’s men eventually clinched a deserved friendly victory at the Olympiastadion. Terry’s central defensive partner Matthew Upson had poked the visitors into a first-half lead, but a mix-up between the Chelsea player and keeper Scott Carson had allowed Patrick Helmes to level before he made amends with a late header from Stewart Downing’s free-kick.
Eric Dier did the damage as the visitors came from behind to snatch a memorable victory over the 2014 World Cup winners. Goals from Toni Kroos and Mario Gomez appeared to have put the Germans in the driving seat, but Harry Kane and, with his first international goal, Jamie Vardy dragged the visitors back into it before Dier headed them to a victory later soured by the news that starting keeper Jack Butland had fractured his ankle.
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