Compare full coverage across 4 outlets
Sports11:07 · 54m ago

Jürgen Klopp Set to Become Germany National Football Team Coach After Nagelsmann Resignation

Now 14Right
Translated & summarized from Now 14 by baba
The story · English

Jürgen Klopp is poised to take over as head coach of the Germany national football team following the resignation of Julian Nagelsmann. According to journalist Fabrizio Romano, Klopp, 59, will soon sign a long-term contract after the German Football Association activated a release clause in his contract with Red Bull, allowing him to leave his current role. Klopp, who ended his successful tenure at Liverpool two years ago and has since worked as a football director at Red Bull, is expected to bring stability to the national team after a series of disappointing results.

Nagelsmann resigned last Friday after Germany's humiliating early exit from the 2026 World Cup, where they were eliminated in the round of 32 by Paraguay. Despite initially refusing to step down and asserting he was "not the type to run away," Nagelsmann faced intense pressure from the association's leadership, including CEO Andreas Rettig, who made it clear his contract would not be renewed. Nagelsmann will receive an estimated severance package of around 7 million euros. German Football Association president Bernd Neuendorf praised Nagelsmann as "a responsible and honest person," but acknowledged the need for change after Germany's historic penalty shootout loss at the World Cup.

Germany's early World Cup exit capped a decade of underperformance since their 2014 World Cup victory, including embarrassing group stage eliminations in 2018 and 2022. Nagelsmann's appointment had been intended to restore Germany's footballing prominence, but results fell short. The German Football Association now hopes Klopp's experience, charisma, and winning mentality will revive the national team's fortunes. Klopp's appointment marks his first role as a national team coach after a distinguished club career with Mainz, Borussia Dortmund, and Liverpool.

The article also includes detailed World Cup group standings, highlighting the teams' performances, but the main focus remains on Germany's coaching change and the implications for the national team moving forward.

Read the original at Now 14
Full coverage · 4 outlets
75% centerFirst: Ynet · Jul 4

The same event, reported separately by each outlet. Open a few to compare what different newsrooms emphasize — and what they leave out.

Center 3Right 1
Related stories · 5

Not the same event — other stories that share this one’s people, places, or theme: background, reactions, and follow-ups.

Open the live terminal