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Germany's Loew set to go through to Brazil 2014
Posted Thursday, August 11, 2011 by YAHOO Sport

Regardless of his team's performance at Euro 2012, Germany coach Joachim Loew is set to coach the national side to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, DFB president Theo Zwanziger said Wednesday.

With Germany set to face Brazil in a friendly in Stuttgart on Wednesday, German Football Federation (DFB) boss Zwanziger has given his full backing to Loew and says he expects the coach to fulfill his contract until 2014.

The 51-year-old Loew has coached Germany since July 2006 and under his tenure the Germans have reached the Euro 2008 final and finished third at last year's World Cup in South Africa.

Germany are currently ten points clear at the top of their qualifying group for Euro 2012, to be hosted by the Ukraine and Poland next year, and are set to finally confirm their place later this autumn.

Zwanziger has said he trusts Loew and has not set any goals for the coach other than producing consistently good performances.

"I'm certainly not making the mistake of putting Jogi Loew under pressure by saying: 'You have to win the European Championships'," Zwanziger told German magazine Sport-Bild.

"We are certainly one of the teams that could win Euro 2012, but the demand for a European title does not exist, otherwise we wouldn't have extended the contract of Loew and his coaching team early."

Zwanziger has said he is against setting goals for national teams after Germany's women failed to win a third consecutive World Cup title and were eliminated in the quarter-finals when the DFB hosted the tournament last month.

Japan won the women's World Cup final in Frankfurt on July 17, but Germany's women struggled to cope with the pressure of being both hosts and favourites.

Standings
    Rank Team W/D/L Pts

    Cities & Stadiums

    The Top 3 Teams of Previous Tournaments

    Year Winners Runner-up Third place
    2008SpainGermanyRussia / Turkey
    2004GreecePortugalNetherlands / Czech Republic
    2000FranceItalyNetherlands / Portugal
    1996GermanyCzech RepublicFrance / England
    1992DenmarkGermanyNetherlands / Sweden
    1988NetherlandsSoviet UnionItaly / West Germany
    1984FranceSpainDenmark / Portugal
    1980West GermanyBelgiumCzechoslovakia
    1976CzechoslovakiaWest GermanyNetherlands
    1972West GermanySoviet UnionBelgium
    1968ItalyYugoslaviaEngland
    1964SpainSoviet UnionHungary
    1960Soviet UnionYugoslaviaCzechoslovakia