BERLIN: Germany take on neighbors Holland in an international friendly on Wednesday with head coach Joachim Loew facing an injury headache after losing four of his stars over the weekend.
Loew has a few injury concerns after Bayern center back Jerome Boateng injured his groin in Munich’s 2-0 win over Frankfurt on Saturday, while Dortmund left-back Marcel Schmelzer damaged his foot in their 3-1 win over Augsburg.
There was more bad news for Loew on Sunday as vice-captain Bastian Schweinsteiger cried off with a virus, while Toni Kroos has stomach problems, ruling them both out.
Holland, under former Bayern Munich coach Louis van Gaal, host the Germans in Amsterdam with the guests determined to prove last month’s 4-4 draw with Sweden, having thrown away a four-goal lead, was just a blip.
“From an educational point of view, it would be the wrong approach if we spend a few hours talking about the Sweden game,” said Loew, who will consider calling up extra players once the weekend’s Bundesliga program finishes.
“We will certainly look at it as part of our preparations, but I won’t look at it for too long.” “But dealing with the last 30 minutes is a continuous process.” Despite a cold, Bayern forward Thomas Mueller insists this is one game he does not want to miss.
“This is a class event, which we are all looking forward to,” said Mueller.
“We’ll be representing our country will complete passion and doing what we were born to do: play football for Germany.” But not everyone shares Mueller’s passion for the friendly: Bayer Leverkusen boss Rudi Voeller has questioned the logic of a meaningless international in the middle of the Champions League and Europa League program.
“The problem is the players have a lot of demands on them at the end of the year,” admitted Loew, who has said he will use his bench.
Schalke 04 defensive midfielder Roman Neustaedter could make his debut, especially with Real Madrid’s Sami Khedira and Schweinsteiger injured.
Also, Hamburg goalkeeper Rene Adler has forced his way back into the squad after some impressive displays in the Bundesliga and is battling Bayern’s Manuel Neuer for Germany’s Number One shirt.
“We will deliver a high-intensity game,” said Loew.
“Matches against the Netherlands are always special, even if it is a friendly match only. There is a lot of prestige on this fixture.”