Classy Germany rout 10-man Scotland 5-1 for dream home Euros start

Germany's Emre Can (C) celebrates scoring his side's fifth goal with teammates during the UEFA Euro 2024 Group A soccer match between Germany and Scotland at Munich Football Arena. Christian Charisius/dpa

Hosts Germany delivered in style in a 5-1 demolition of 10-man Scotland on Friday for a dream start into the Euro 2024 tournnamet which should spark the desired frenzy in the whole country.

Florian Wirtz opened the scoring in the 10th minute, fellow youngster Jamal Musiala made it 2-0 in the 19th, Kai Havertz converted a penalty in first-half stoppage time, and substitutes Niclas Füllkrug ad Emre Can wrapped up matters in the 68th and stoppage time, respectively.

Scotland defender Ryan Porteous was sent off for a reckless challenge against German captain Ilkay Gündogan in the incident that led to the penalty and ended the game as a contest, although they got a late consolation from an Antonio Rüdiger own goal.

Germany end opening game rot

The big victory ended a run of defeats in Germany's first games at the previous three big events which led to group stage exits at the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, and a last-16 elimination at the last Euros in 2021.

Julian Nagelsmann and the team will now have the nation behind them for the other group games against Hungary and Switzerland, and beyond, similar to the 2006 home World Cup where Germany reached the semi-finals in what is remembered as the "summer fairytale."

Steve Clarke's Scotland famously beat Spain at home in qualifying but have only one win from their last 10 games and face a uphill battle to get out of the group stage for the first time in their fourth Euros after a harmless display.

The match came after a short opening ceremony which also paid tribute to German icon Franz Beckenbauer, whose widow Heidi carried the trophy to be awarded after the July 14 final into the Munich stadium, and then blew a kiss into the evening sky.

Beckenbauer, who captained Germany to the first Euro title in 1972, would have been proud of the class of 2024 which rebounded in style from modest showings in the final tune-up matches against Ukraine (0-0) and Greece (2-1).

Rampant hosts strike early

Germany started full of purpose with Wirtz from domestic double winners Bayer Leverkusen denied by goalkeeper Angus Gunn inside the opening minute.

Wirtz may have been offside but there was no doubt when he found the net in the 10th minute.

Playmaker Toni Kroos, who will end his trophy-laden career after the tournament, fed Joshua Kimmich with a long ball to the right, and the ball came to Wirtz who fired a low drive from the edge of the area which Gunn only managed to push against the left post from where it went in.

Nine minutes later Gündogan split the defence to Havertz who laid the ball back to Musiala who moved past a defender and smashed into the roof of the net of his Bayern Munich home stadium.

Germany thought they had a penalty when Musiala went down in a duel with Ryan Christie and Kieran Tierney a review showed that Musiala was fouled just outside the area, and a free-kick was awarded which Gunn saved from Havertz.

Red card and penalty decide match for good

But there was no doubt about the penalty - and the red card - when Gündogan's header was denied by Gunn but Porteous then crashed into the Barcelona midfielder's ankle on the rebound.

The one-way traffic continued in the second half. Wirtz fired over in the 58th before Füllkrug then smashed the fourth into the top right corner 10 minutes later, shortly after coming on for Havertz.

Füllkrug had a another goal nullified for offside while a freak goal put Scotland on the scoreboard in the 87th, Scott McKenna's header off a free-kick hitting Rüdiger's head and going in.

However, Germany had the last laugh when Can, who only joined the squad on Wednesday for ill Aleksandar Füllkrug, drilled the fifth into the bottom right corner.

Germany's Emre Can (R) celebrates scoring his side's fifth goal with teammate Thomas Mueller during the UEFA Euro 2024 Group A soccer match between Germany and Scotland at Munich Football Arena. Christian Charisius/dpa