Defender Philipp Lahm’s late strike put three-times European champions Germany in Sunday’s Euro 2008 final and sealed a 3-2 win to knock out injury-ravaged Turkey on Wednesday night.
Lahm’s 90th-minute goal made sure Vienna will be Germany’s final destination after Turkey’s Semih Senturk had forced an equaliser just four minutes from time to make it 2-2 to set up another dramatic finish.
Germany striker Miroslav Klose had nudged his side into the lead on 79 minutes after Bastian Schweinsteiger’s first-half goal had cancelled out Ugur Boral’s early strike as Turkey had taken a shock lead.
This was Germany’s first win over Turkey since May 1992 and Fatih Terim’s battered side used their never-say-die spirit forced the Germans to work hard.
Having reached Basel’s St Jakob-Park semifinal by forging a reputation as the tournament’s come-back kings with last-gasp wins over Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Croatia, Turkey threatened Germany with the same treatment.
Coach Fatih Terim had said he wanted to put his team on the map and their battling spirit has reminded the footballing world again what Turkey can do, having reached the 2002 World Cup semifinal.
Turkey were without the banned quartet of goalkeeper Volkan Demirel; Middlesbrough’s Tuncay Sanli; Arda Turan, who scored their last-gasp winner against the Swiss; and Emre Asik.
Captain Nihat Kahveci, whose pair of late goals sank the Czech Republic, was missing with a thigh injury.
In contrast, Germany had all 23 men fit and ready to go, having responded to their shock 2-1 defeat by Croatia in the group stages by knocking out much-fancied Portugal with an impressive 3-2 defeat here last Thursday.
Germany coach Joachim Loew played the same line-up and 4-5-1 formation he had used against Portugal for the semifinal, but it was the Turks who dominated the first-half chances with Kazim Kazim driving a shot against the bar on 14 minutes.
Turkey took a deserved lead when Kazim again hit the cross-bar before Fenerbahce’s Ugur Boral fired at Jens Lehmann who watched helplessly as the ball trickled over the line on 22 minutes.
Germany’s reply was immediate as attacking midfielder Lukas Podolski slid in a cross that Portugal’s tormentor Bastian Schweinsteiger flicked into the net on 26 minutes for his second goal in two games.
Lehmann was in action again as he punched clear Hamit Altintop’s free kick just after the half-hour mark — one of nine first-half chances Turkey created compared with Germany’s one.
At the break Simon Rolfes made way for Torsten Frings in Germany’s midfield, and match-winner Lahm was unlucky not to have won a penalty when he was brought down on the edge of the area by Sabri Sarioglu on 52 minutes.
In a much tighter second half, Turkey kept the pressure on with Altintop bossing the midfield against his Bayern Munich colleagues in Germany’s ranks.
The breakthrough came in the 79th minute when Bayern striker Klose rose above three Turkish defenders and goalkeeper Recber Rustu to score his second goal in two games.
Turkey pulled a late goal out of the bag for the fourth time in succession when Semih slipped marker Per Mertesacker to stab home Sabri Sarioglu’s cross on 86 minutes to equalise.
But Lahm put German fans in seventh heaven with his 90th-minute strike to send his side to Vienna. — Sapa-AFP