Germany kicked off their Group E campaign in devastatingly explosive fashion, dismantling World Cup debutants Curaçao 7-1 at a packed Houston Stadium. The four-time champions completely shattered their recent opening-day curse—having suffered defeats to Mexico in 2018 and Japan in 2022—with a ruthless tactical masterclass that put the entire tournament on high alert.

A Historic Moment of Hope for the Underdogs
The match began with relentless German intent, taking just six minutes to pierce through the Caribbean backline. Felix Nmecha executed a tidy one-two with Florian Wirtz before curling a crisp, low strike past Eloy Room.
Despite falling behind, Curaçao refused to stick to defensive damage control. In the 21st minute, the smallest nation to ever qualify for a men’s World Cup authored a timeless piece of football folklore. Launching a lightning-fast counter-attack down the middle, Livano Comenencia latched onto a loose rebound, driving a left-footed strike through a sea of bodies that deflected past a diving Manuel Neuer to make it an unbelievable 1-1.
The German Attacking Onslaught
The equalizer effectively woke up Julian Nagelsmann’s heavy artillery. Germany ramped up their high-pressing lines, forcing numerical overloads out wide that systematically pulled Curaçao’s defensive structure apart:
- 38th Minute: Left-back Nathaniel Brown floated a precise cross into the penalty area, allowing Nico Schlotterbeck to glance home an unmarked header.
- 45+5 Minute: A driving Nmecha was upended by Riechedly Bazoer in the box, prompting Kai Havertz to stepping up and calmly stroke away the ensuing penalty.
- 47th Minute: Just 69 seconds into the second half, Jamal Musiala received a defense-splitting pass from Joshua Kimmich and somehow squeezed a finish home from a nearly impossible angle to make it 4-1.
Writing the Record Books
With the tactical foundation secured, Germany turned the final half-hour into clinical shooting practice. Nathaniel Brown marked a stellar World Cup debut by volleying home a fifth in the 68th minute, before substitute Deniz Undav added a sixth ten minutes later. Havertz capped off his brilliant Player of the Match performance by dinking a fine chip over Room in the 88th minute to replicate the iconic 7-1 scoreline from the 2014 semi-final against Brazil.
Crucially, the scoring frenzy pushed Germany’s all-time tournament total to 239 goals, officially leapfrogging Brazil (238) to become the highest-scoring nation in World Cup history. Julian Nagelsmann’s rampant side will now travel to Toronto to face the Ivory Coast on Saturday, June 20, while Curaçao heads to Kansas City to square off against Ecuador.
