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Euro 2025: Schüller strikes again as Germany beat Denmark – DW – 07/08/2025

Euro 2025: Schüller strikes again as Germany beat Denmark – DW – 07/08/2025

DW4 days ago
Lea Schüller scored the winner as Germany beat Denmark 2-1 to all-but qualify for the knockouts. The Bayern Munich striker hasn't always had it easy for Germany but may be peaking at the right time.
For the second game in a row, Lea Schüller was substituted with 20 minutes remaining. This was not a reflection of poor performance. It was, instead, Germany coach Christian Wück's way to protect his striker, who had done her job once again.
Schüller scored the second, just as she had against Poland in Germany's opener, to complete a comeback against Denmark. Until fairly recently, it has been the Bayern Munich star who was the one coming on. But the retirement of Alexandra Popp last year has made Schüller Germany's undisputed starting striker.
"To be honest, it's more of a media thing," Schüller told the Web.de website before the tournament. "I didn't feel that way before, when Poppi was still there, that she was the focus of attention and I had to take a back seat. Our team always knew that Poppi was one of our most important players. I still felt like I was important too; that hasn't changed. I'm one of the older players now. In addition, I'm now expected and want to be a leader. That's the difference."
Though the 27-year-old is now one of her country's most experienced players, Schüller isn't the most obvious leadership figure on the pitch, even with captain Giulia Gwinn ruled out for the tournament. On Tuesday, she was close to anonymous until she suddenly found space to the left of the penalty spot in the 66th minute after some dreadful Danish defending to sidefoot home her goal and send Denmark to the brink of elimination. Sjoeke Nüsken had scored a penalty 10 minutes earlier to equalize after Denmark led at halftime.
Schüller found the same sort of space to score with her head against Poland on Friday. Though she is quick, good in the air and a natural finisher, it's that movement in the box that perhaps contributes most to a record of 53 goals in 75 German games, a ratio comparable to the very best.
It was this tournament that turned Schüller's attentions to football as a child, as she told DW ahead of the 2019 World Cup.
"I took a holiday in France in 2004 and watched the European Championship. After that, I desperately wanted to play football so I joined a club," she said. From that local club, she joined SGS Essen before moving to Bayern in 2020, making her Germany debut in 2017 along the way.
She has won four Bundesliga titles with Bayern but international success has so far proved elusive. Schüller caught COVID midway through the 2022 Euros, when Germany lost to hosts England in the final. She was a surprise starter in that match after Popp picked up a last-minute injury and struggled to make an impact.
"I'd avoided it [COVID] for two and a half years, and then at the Euros of all times. That was really galling," she told Bayern's website later that year. Schüller also suffers from endometriosis, a long-term, painful condition where tissue similar to the lining of the womb grows in other places.
'It is an illness that sucks," she told Vogue in 2023, when she became the first German footballer to feature on the cover. "You don't think about training and especially not playing games," she added about when the illness strikes.
Despite that, and a hectic schedule with Bayern and Germany, Schüller is considering her post-football career. Though she will be relatively well paid as one of the world's top female footballers, both in terms of wages and sponsorship deals, women's salaries in football lag way behind their male counterparts.
"Of course I can put some money aside, but it won't be enough for a whole life after football," she told Sky in 2022. As a backup plan, Schüller is studying industrial engineering on a distance learning course but added she is "afraid of not starting until I'm 35. That will be more difficult than at 24."
If she can carry on her goalscoring form against Sweden, in Germany's final group game on Saturday, and beyond, those endorsement contracts may just get a little bump.
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"If the men's team qualifies, people will look more at Congo, to come and invest and help the kids," Ricardo Eluka, founder of Espoir Football Academy in Kinshasa, which he set up to help young people fulfil their dreams, told DW. There is enough natural ability in the country to shine and join continental teams that often appear at the big tournaments. "Congo has the same level of talent as the Nigerian team, Ghana and Senegal. We have these kinds of players but we don't have the money to come and invest," said Eluka. "If we had more money coming, football in Congo would be huge." More investment at grassroots, in facilities and in the clubs would help the country produce more players such as Chancel Mbemba who has appeared almost 100 times for the national team and played at prestigious European clubs such as Newcastle United, Porto and Marseille, as well as forward Cedric Bakambu. "Qualification for the World Cup would have a very positive and structuring impact on Congolese football on several levels: sporting, economic, social, and even political,' said Mulonga. "The DRC would benefit from global visibility, which could improve its diplomatic, cultural, and economic image. It could also facilitate the export of Congolese players to top-tier foreign clubs." The women have longer to go, however, and were eliminated from the WAFCON with a game left to play. Here the natural resources are just as great but the infrastructure and support, according to national team captain Fideline N'goy, is lacking. "There is great talent and a desire among young girls to play the sport, but there is no decent coaching to develop their talents: no training centers, no fields, and no projects from the federation," N'goy told DW. The goalkeeper contrasts the situation with Cameroon and Morocco where, she says, FIFA prize money goes back into the women's game and South Africa where the women are paid almost as much as the men. "In our country, the winners of the women's championship earn US $10,000 (€8500), while the men's earn US$150,000." It may be left for the women to do it themselves, to achieve international success in order to help those back at home. "If the women play well, we will have more female students," Eluka said. "The problem in Congo, there is no investment made, no facilities for the ladies to practice and get better." It remains to be seen how the men getting to the World Cup would help the women's game but it would certainly be celebrated in a country that has not had much to celebrate in recent years. "Football is almost a national religion in Congo," said Mitiga. 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