• Germany manager Joachim Low following the 6-0 Uefa Nations League defeat to Spain in Seville, in November 2020. Reuters
    Germany manager Joachim Low following the 6-0 Uefa Nations League defeat to Spain in Seville, in November 2020. Reuters
  • Spain's Alvaro Morata scores their first goal. Reuters
    Spain's Alvaro Morata scores their first goal. Reuters
  • Alvaro Morata celebrates with teammates. EPA
    Alvaro Morata celebrates with teammates. EPA
  • Spain's Sergio Ramos and Rodri remonstrate with the referee. Reuters
    Spain's Sergio Ramos and Rodri remonstrate with the referee. Reuters
  • Alvaro Morata in action against Jonathan Tah of Germany. EPA
    Alvaro Morata in action against Jonathan Tah of Germany. EPA
  • Germany defender Niklas Suele vies with Spain midfielder Ferran Torres. AFP
    Germany defender Niklas Suele vies with Spain midfielder Ferran Torres. AFP
  • Ferran Torres celebrates the first of his three goals against German. EPA
    Ferran Torres celebrates the first of his three goals against German. EPA
  • Spain's Ferran Torres scores their fifth goal. Reuters
    Spain's Ferran Torres scores their fifth goal. Reuters
  • Spain's Ferran Torres celebrates scoring their fifth goal. Reuters
    Spain's Ferran Torres celebrates scoring their fifth goal. Reuters
  • Spain's midfielder Ferran Torres scores his third goal during the UEFA Nations League match against German. AFP
    Spain's midfielder Ferran Torres scores his third goal during the UEFA Nations League match against German. AFP

Shellshocked manager Low unable to explain Germany's historic 6-0 defeat to Spain


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Germany coach Joachim Low was at a loss to explain his side's humiliating 6-0 loss to Spain in the Uefa Nations League on Tuesday which caused them to miss out on a place in the competition's final four.

"I really don't know what happened to the team," Low told reporters after Germany's heaviest defeat in 89 years and their worst in competitive football.

"We had hardly any chances and we didn't win a single individual battle out on the pitch."

Germany have been on a downward path since crashing out in the group stage at the 2018 World Cup and have won only three of their last eight internationals.

They went into Tuesday's decisive game top of League A4 after beating Ukraine 3-1 and a draw would have booked their place in the final four, but they fell three goals down by half-time and performed even worse in the second half.

"In the second half we tried to press them high up the pitch to score and get back into the game but Spain played far better than us, they were much faster and played with more precision," Low added.

"We said before the game that we trusted in the players in our squad and that we were on the right track, but today we saw that we are not progressing as well as we had thought after our last few games."

Midfielder Serge Gnabry added: "Nothing worked for us tonight. We couldn't control them, they deserved to beat us as they did.

"Spain did everything well and we did nothing right. We don't know what level we're at right now. It's not normal to lose a match by so many goals."