A few snippets from Raph Honigstein's article for The Athletic about Germany, interesting to get the view from their side.
Thomas Muller had warned the German public and his team-mates about being overly exuberant after beating Portugal at the weekend. There won’t be any need to repeat that particular message in the wake of one of the worst matches in recent German history on Wednesday night.
RE last night: There were aimless crosses and abortive combinations galore, but no depth, no change of pace, no invention. A painfully languid, eternal build-up game delivered one solitary dangerous situation before the break...
The Nationalmannschaft’s historic strength has been to play like a team with a plan, overcoming individual shortcomings with collective endeavour. This Germany are the opposite.
Against England, you cannot help but think the usual roles will reversed. Gareth Southgate’s are a side entirely defined by game plan, somewhat dull but extremely controlled and coldly functional, whereas Low’s men will arrive in north west London as an entirely unpredictable ensemble of skilful players feeding off willpower rather than any clear blueprint.