By Temi Kings
HOUSTON, Texas Germany emphatically shattered their recent opening-match hoodoo at the FIFA World Cup, putting on a clinic in a 7-1 demolition of tournament debutants Curaçao in front of a heavily pro-German crowd of 68,021 at Houston Stadium. The four-time world champions, who stumbled out of the blocks in both 2018 and 2022, left no room for doubt this time around, replicating their iconic 2014 semi-final scoreline against Brazil to plant a firm flag in Group E.
Yet, on a night defined by tactical dominance and clinical finishing, the narrative spun a gorgeous thread of raw emotion and history. Before a ball was even kicked, Curaçao’s 78-year-old veteran manager Dick Advocaat was moved to tears during the national anthems. Advocaat, the oldest manager in World Cup history, went head-to-head with Germany’s 38-year-old Julian Nagelsmann—the tournament’s youngest boss—marking a record-breaking 40-year age gap on the touchline.
Early magic and a historic shockwave
Germany wasted no time flexing their muscle through the middle of the pitch. In just the 6th minute, Borussia Dortmund’s Felix Nmecha orchestrated a brilliant one-two with Florian Wirtz before curling a delightful, low effort into the far corner past Curaçao goalkeeper Eloy Room.
Germany pinned the Caribbean side deep, but Goliath was momentarily stunned in the 21st minute. Against the run of play, a swift switch unlocked the German backline. Livano Comenencia latched onto a deflected ball and hit a low, left-footed bullet past a diving Manuel Neuer. It was Curaçao’s first-ever World Cup goal, prompting Comenencia to hit John Cena’s iconic “You Can’t See Me” celebration as the small pocket of Caribbean fans exploded into absolute delirium.
The momentum killer?
The ecstasy was shortly interrupted by a highly debated “hydration break” called despite Houston Stadium being a fully enclosed, climate-controlled environment. Pundits and fans criticized the mandated intermission for completely freezing Curaçao’s newfound attacking rhythm.
Germany awakes: The first half response
The break allowed Germany to shake off their slumber. In the 38th minute, left-back Nathaniel Brown whipped an inviting corner into the box, allowing an unmarked Nico Schlotterbeck to power home a commanding header.
Just before the halftime whistle, Nmecha drew a foul inside the penalty area from Riechedly Bazoer. Kai Havertz coolly stepped up to the spot, rolling it into the net five minutes into first-half stoppage time to give Die Mannschaft a comfortable 3-1 lead at the break.
The second half blitz
If Curaçao harboured any dreams of a historic comeback, it took Germany exactly 69 seconds into the second half to erase them. Joshua Kimmich carved open the defence with a beautiful ball, finding Jamal Musiala, who swept a majestic finish into the bottom corner from an angle.
From there, it resembled a shooting gallery as Germany peppered Room’s goal, finishing the match with 26 total attempts.
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68th Minute: The impressive Nathaniel Brown capped off a stellar World Cup debut, advancing up the pitch to volley home a sequence of beautiful German passes.
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78th Minute: Substitute Deniz Undav joined the party, sliding home a close-range finish on his own tournament debut.
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88th Minute: Kai Havertz put the final stamp on the performance, capitalizing on a Curaçao turnover to chip a delicate dink over Room, completing his brace.
By the numbers: match statistics
| Match Statistic | Germany | Curaçao |
| Goals | 7 | 1 |
| Total Shots | 26 | 6 |
| Shots on Target | 11 | 2 |
Record-breaking Neuer and the road ahead
Aside from the scoreline, the history books required another rewrite. At 40 years and 79 days old, Manuel Neuer officially became the oldest German player to ever feature at a major tournament, surpassing Lothar Matthäus’s long-standing record. Recalled out of international retirement just a month prior, Neuer made one crucial save in a steady performance.
With three points secured in devastating fashion, Germany takes firm control of Group E. They will fly to Toronto next to face a physical Ivory Coast team on Saturday, June 20. Meanwhile, Dick Advocaat’s Curaçao side must dust themselves off quickly before heading to Kansas City for a crucial clash against Ecuador.