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Position Playing positions are listed according to the player's primary position while playing for the national team. [23]Caps and goals Caps and goals comprise those in the qualifying and final tournaments of the FIFA World Cup and UEFA European Championship, as well as the Summer Olympics (pre-World War II), FIFA Confederations Cup, UEFA Nations League and international friendly matches.
Paul Gehlhaar (27 August 1905 - 30 June 1968) was a German international footballer. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He was part of Germany's team at the 1928 Summer Olympics , but he did not play in any matches. He was born in Königsberg .
A Germany squad at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Germany was reunified in 1990, and the 1992 Olympics saw another rule change: football squads would be made up of players under the age of 23, with three overage players allowed. On 23 June 2015 Germany was qualified for the first time after reunification for the 2016 Olympic games.
Berger has been Germany's hero for these Olympics despite not being the primary goalkeeper. The 33-year-old keeper saved two penalties in a shootout against Canada, and then hit Germany's final ...
Jean-Paul Danneberg (born 8 November 2002) [1] is a German field hockey player who plays as a goalkeeper for Bundesliga club Rot-Weiss Köln and the German national team. He represented Germany at the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Position Playing positions are listed according to the player's primary position while playing for the national team. [4]Caps and goals Caps and goals comprise those in the qualifying and final tournaments of the FIFA World Cup and UEFA European Championship, as well as the Summer Olympics (pre-World War II), FIFA Confederations Cup, UEFA Nations League and international friendly matches.
Germany. UEFA European Women's Championship: 2013, runner-up: 2022 [18] Summer Olympic Games: Gold medal, 2016; Algarve Cup: 2012, 2014; Germany U20. FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup: 2010; Germany U17. FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup: third place 2008; Individual. IFFHS World's Best Woman Goalkeeper: 2014 [19] IFFHS World's Best Woman Goalkeeper of the ...
Angerer was Germany's second choice goalkeeper behind Silke Rottenberg for almost a decade, winning six major titles as a reserve player without having played in a single game, including the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup, two Olympic bronze medals in 2000, 2004, and three UEFA European Championships in 1997, 2001 and 2005. [10]