Key Points

Germany is really struggling to find goalscorers ahead of their important match. Their coach admits the team doesn't have its best attacking options available right now. Even their recent win required defenders to score instead of forwards. This is quite a change for a country that used to produce world-class strikers regularly.

Key Points: Germany's Striker Shortage Tests Nagelsmann Ahead of Northern Ireland

  • Germany missing 28 goals from injured forwards like Füllkrug and Havertz
  • Recent win over Luxembourg saw all goals scored by team defenders
  • Young strikers Woltemade and Burkardt remain goalless internationally
  • Historical contrast to Germany's golden era of Klose and Völler
3 min read

Football: Germany burdened by striker shortage ahead of duel in Northern Ireland

Germany faces a goal-scoring crisis with key forwards injured ahead of their World Cup qualifier. Can Nagelsmann's squad overcome the striking drought?

"We don't always have a top squad to our disposal - Julian Nagelsmann"

Berlin

, Oct 12 (IANS) Ahead of their 2026 World Cup qualifier against Northern Ireland on Monday, Germany face a striker shortage that is testing the depth of the 2014 FIFA World Cup champion. While Newcastle's Nick Woltemade, Frankfurt's Jonathan Burkardt, and Dortmund's Maximilian Beier continue to search for their first national team goals, a series of injuries and setbacks have limited coach Julian Nagelsmann's options.

"We don't always have a top squad to our disposal," the German coach said, as Niclas Fullkrug, Kai Havertz, Jamal Musiala, Tim Kleindienst, and Deniz Undav remain sidelined ahead of the trip to Belfast.

Twenty-eight of the 51 goals Germany have scored in Nagelsmann's 25 games in charge came from the missing forwards. That three of the four goals in the recent win over Luxembourg came from set pieces tells its own story, as Germany's golden era of box-striker dominance appears to be fading. All three goals were scored by defenders, reports Xinhua.

Kleindienst was the last traditional striker to score for Germany, finding the net in a 3-3 draw with Italy in March 2025.

Once known as a country of prolific strikers -- from Miroslav Klose, Rudi Voller and Jurgen Klinsmann to Gerd Muller and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge -- Germany now appear caught in a rare drought.

Woltemade has been in form for Newcastle with four goals in six club matches, but the 23-year-old has yet to score in five appearances for the national team. Burkardt (three) and Beier (four) have also been productive at the club level but remain goalless internationally.

"Germany is meeting its limits," newspaper Welt wrote, while tabloid Bild called the situation a fatal shortage of a "goal puncher."

Nagelsmann hopes now rest on the shoulders of available options such as Serge Gnabry -- the only forward currently in form -- Brentford's Kevin Schade and Dortmund's Karim Adeyemi, alongside Woltemade, Burkardt, and Beier.

Despite scoring a free-kick goal against Northern Ireland in September, Liverpool forward Florian Wirtz has yet to rediscover his rhythm following his move from Bayer Leverkusen.

Nagelsmann urged patience with both Wirtz and Woltemade. "I am sure it will happen soon; he will score," the German coach said of the Newcastle striker.

German record international Lothar Matthaus commented, "he is not Messi, he is not Ronaldo, he is a 23-year-old Woltemade, still a young player without extensive experience."

Former Liverpool coach Jurgen Klopp also backed Wirtz, saying he had "exceptional quality and that soon will be visible in all his games for the Reds."

Ahead of the 2026 World Cup, Nagelsmann remains cautious but optimistic, saying he will continue to rely on the "goal hunger" of his entire squad.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As a football fan from Mumbai, this is surprising! Germany used to produce world-class strikers like assembly line. Maybe they need to look at their youth development system like we're trying to improve in Indian football.
A
Arjun K
Woltemade is only 23! Give the boy some time yaar. Even our young Indian players take time to settle in international matches. Patience is key in sports development.
S
Sarah B
Respectfully, I think Nagelsmann is being too optimistic. When 28 of 51 goals come from injured players, that's a systemic problem, not just bad luck. Germany needs to seriously rethink their attacking strategy before the World Cup.
V
Vikram M
Defenders scoring goals shows the team is still fighting! Reminds me of when our hockey team adapts to different situations. Team spirit matters more than individual stars sometimes. 🇩🇪
M
Michael C
Watching from Delhi - this striker crisis reminds me how Germany always finds a way to bounce back. They're like the Germany cricket team of football - always competitive even when not at their best!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50