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Germans head to Euro 2012 in confident mood
Posted Monday, June 04, 2012 by YAHOO Sport

Germany are set to arrive in Gdansk for Euro 2012 on Monday with key midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger having received a clean bill of health and coach Joachim Loew in a confident mood.

Germany are based in the Baltic port of Gdansk, Poland, for the duration of Euro 2012, which starts on Friday with the final in Kiev on July 1, with all their Group B games taking place in Ukraine.

The Germans have had minor set backs in their final preparations after a weakened team suffered a shock 5-3 defeat to Switzerland last weekend, while midfield star Schweinsteiger is recovering from a calf strain.

The 27-year-old is in a core group of players central to Loew's hopes of bringing home a fourth European crown, having last lifted the title in 1996 after also winning the 1972 and 1980 tournaments.

Schweinsteiger strained his left calf a fortnight ago when Bayern Munich lost the Champions League final 4-3 on penalties to Chelsea as his missed spot-kick in the shoot-out helped the Blues seal victory.

Germany are amongst the pre-tournament favourites and open their campaign in Lviv, Ukraine, on Saturday against Portugal with Schweinsteiger having been given the green light to play.

"Bastian has no problems, no more pain," German team doctor Hans-Wilhelm Mueller-Wohlfahrt told Munich-based newspaper TZ after Schweinsteiger spent the weekend relaxing in Italy with his model girlfriend Sarah Brandner.

"He will be treated further and we assume he will train with the team for the first time on Monday.

"Of course, he has a bit of catching up to do, but I assume he will be fully fit to face Portugal."

After giving his players the weekend to relax before the three-week long tournament, Loew was set to board Monday afternoon's flight from Frankfurt in a confident mood.

"There is no reason not to look forward to these championships," said the 52-year-old, who will be looking to land his first trophy as German coach after taking them to the Euro 2008 final and the 2010 World Cup semi-finals.

"We're ready, we've trained well and we are happy that it's about to start.

"On Friday, we will decide who will play against Portugal with plenty of enthusiasm."

With the quartet of Borussia Dortmund midfielder Mario Goetze, Arsenal defender Per Mertesacker, Lazio striker Miroslav Klose and Schweinsteiger all returning from recent injuries, Loew still has a few decisions to make.

Should Schweinsteiger fail to be fit in time, Munich team-mate Toni Kroos is most likely to partner Real Madrid's Sami Khedira in the defensive midfield role.

As he did in last Thursday's 2-0 friendly win against Israel, captain Philipp Lahm is set to start on the left with his Bayern team-mate Jerome Boateng on the right.

Loew needs to choose between Dortmund's Mats Hummels, Bayern's Holger Badstuber and Mertesacker for the two places available at centre-back.

For the single striker berth, Bayern's Mario Gomez is vying with Lazio veteran Klose, who turns 34 on Saturday, and is just five goals short of Gerd Mueller's all-time record for Germany of 68 in 62 appearances.

Loew has promised his players an intense week of training with Holland and Denmark still to come in Group B after Portugal and several thousand German fans expected to watch Monday evening's training session here.

"We need to be very focused this week, there is still much work ahead of us," said Loew.

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