BERLIN, July 4 - Germans were stunned by their team's abrupt exit from the
World Cup on Tuesday, with two late goals from Italy dashing the host nation's
dreams of reaching the final and denting its rejuvenated national pride.
"It just leaves you with this empty feeling," said student Jan Kelger, 28, as
he stood in a Berlin beer garden with the German flag draped over his shoulders.
"I was just sure that we were going to go all the way to the final."
Fans in open-air viewing areas fell silent and stared in disbelief at giant
video screens as one Italian goal was followed by a second in the final two
minutes of extra time.
The late goals stopped dead the chants of "Deutschland Deutschland" and
halted Germany's World Cup ride in its tracks.
"It feels like crap to lose like this but you can't say that they (Italy)
didn't deserve to win. They had lots of chances," said Simon Raiser, a
32-year-old lecturer from Berlin.
Buoyed by a recent outburst of national pride, German fans had set out for
Tuesday's match dressed in Ballack, Klose and Podolski shirts and decked out
with the black-red-gold German flags worn like togas, emblazoned on hats and
painted on faces.
But after the match, flags disappeared and car drivers even began to remove
the pennants they had hung from their windows in the early stages of the
tournament as Germany made strong progress through the group matches.
Despite the disappointment, however, fans vowed to continue the party for the
remainder of the event, which culminates with the final on Sunday between Italy
and the winner of Wednesday's semi-final match between France and Portugal in
Munich.
SUMMER SOCCER
"The summer of soccer would have been over by Sunday anyway ... but it is
still really sad," said Raphael Gassmann, 28, a trainee lawyer.
An estimated one million viewers crammed into the newly-extended Berlin Fan
Mile viewing area, in the shadow of the central Brandenburg Gate, while tens of
thousands more sprawled out in the capital's parks and beer gardens.
No major violent incidents were reported and organisers were hoping for
spectators to show similarly good post-match behaviour as has been seen
throughout the four-week event.
In Dortmund, where the match was played, some 200,000 visitors swelled the
local population. Despite the support, Germany could not emulate the "Miracle of
Bern" in 1954 when they beat favourites Hungary to lift the World Cup.
"I am gutted. I am going to support whoever plays Italy in the finals. This
is the worst night of my life," said tearful 21-year-old student, Daniela
Trenker.
Germany exceeded expectations on the pitch and as host nation, presenting a
welcoming side to the million foreign visitors who were lured to the country by
the World Cup.
No one had expected Germany to get so far nor had they predicted such an
outpouring of patriotic fervour from a country generally at pains to avoid overt
displays of nationalism, making defeat all the more difficult to bear.
"We'll probably only take it in when we wake up in the morning," said Markus
Algermissen, a 37-year-old civil servant.
(Additional reporting by Andrew Grey, Louis Charbonneau, Dave Graham and
Karin Strohecker in Berlin)