Germany vs. Ivory Coast: Live Score Updates and Match Analysis
L'essentiel
- Ivory Coast takes a 1-0 lead against Germany at halftime in a thrilling World Cup match.
- Captain Franck Kessié scored the decisive goal, while Germany had two goals disallowed.
- The match has been evenly contested with both teams showing strong attacking intent.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Germany and Ivory Coast face off in a crucial World Cup group stage match. Germany is a four-time champion, while Ivory Coast, managing the youngest squad in the tournament, aims for an early qualification.
60'- Germany build sustained pressure and win a quick pair of corners down the right flank. The first is played short but is immediately deflected out. For the second attempt, Joshua Kimmich drives a powerful cross directly into the mixer, but goalkeeper Yahia Fofana commands his area beautifully, rising above the crowd to claim it with ease.
Moments later, play pauses as Kai Havertz goes down holding his head after absorbing a heavy knock to the back of the skull from his marker while contesting a long ball.
57'- The Ivory Coast are defending brilliantly in a compact block, completely suffocating space in the final third and successfully relegating the Germans to desperate, long-range efforts so far in this half.
Frustrated by the lack of options, center-back Antonio Rüdiger decides to take matters into his own hands and unleashes a powerful drive from well outside the box. However, he doesn't get his over the ball and sends it sailing harmlessly over the crossbar.
52'- The Ivory Coast are playing with absolutely zero fear right now. Amad Diallo and Christopher Oulai link up beautifully on the right side of the penalty area, cutting through the German defense with sharp, confident passing.
Oulai shifts the ball onto his foot and tries to pick out the top-left corner, but he can't quite keep his composure and sends the powerful strike sailing over Manuel Neuer's crossbar.
45+7'- The referee blows the whistle to signal the end of a breathless, highly entertaining opening 45 minutes at Toronto Stadium.
It has been an incredibly evenly matched contest, but the African champions head into the tunnel with the crucial edge thanks to a clinical, close-range finish from captain Franck Kessié. Julian Nagelsmann's side will feel hard done by after having two separate goals ruled out for fouls, but they have struggled to handle the sheer zippiness and swagger of the Ivorian counters since going behind.
45+4'- As the first half winds down, it is becoming increasingly clear that Felix Nmecha holds the key if Germany are to pick this Ivorian lock. He is such a silky, elegant player on the ball, and Die Mannschaft desperately need his creativity to link up the midfield and the attack.
Moments later, Jamal Musiala goes down dramatically just inside the penalty area following a heavy challenge from Amad Diallo. The German players look to the official, but the referee waves play on immediately and rightly so, as Diallo timed his tackle beautifully to win the ball cleanly.
40'- More absolute heartbreak for Germany as they have a second goal ruled out tonight!
Just as the ball breaks loose on the edge of the box, Jamal Musiala accidentally trips Odilon Kossounou. The ball rolls perfectly into the path of Kai Havertz, who ruthlessly slams it into the back of the net.
However, the referee saw the infringement clearly and blew his whistle immediately, chalking the goal off before the celebrations could even start. VAR checked the incident in the background, but they agreed with the on-field decision—the foul stands.
33'- The opening goal has completely changed the energy of this match, instantly galvanizing the African champions. There is a beautiful, confident zippiness to the Ivory Coast's passing now, with players executing sharp one-touch combinations and moving off the ball with absolute swagger.
Suddenly, the tables have completely turned. Germany, who had comfortably bossed large periods of the early game with dominant possession, now find themselves completely under the cosh as they struggle to handle the sheer intensity and speed of the Ivorian attack.
30'- Unbelievable scenes in Toronto! Right after the water break, the African champions strike!
It is the skipper Franck Kessié who breaks the deadlock. The Ivory Coast catch Germany out, and inside a crowded penalty box, the captain reacts quickest. He manages to fight off his marker and squeeze the ball home into the back of the net from incredibly close range.
The stadium has completely erupted into orange celebrations! Emerse Faé promised they came to beat the Germans, and right now, they are delivering on that promise.
22'- Germany won their first corner of the match, with Nathaniel Brown taking it short from the right side. Joshua Kimmich then floated a dangerous, looping ball deep into the penalty area. Goalkeeper Yahia Fofana jumped high to claim it, but under intense aerial pressure from Aleksandar Pavlović, the ball ended up in the back of the net.
For a brief second, it looked like the goal would stand. However, Pavlović’s wild celebrations were cut short instantly. The referee blew his whistle and ruled that the young midfielder had fouled Fofana while fighting for the ball in the air. A massive let-off for the Ivory Coast!
15'- We have a major moment of concern here at Toronto Stadium as German center-back Nico Schlotterbeck goes down in immense distress. The defender is flat on his backside, clutching his leg, and look in significant pain as the German medical staff rush onto the pitch to attend to him.
On the sidelines, a worried Julian Nagelsmann is already mobilizing options, alerting his substitutes on the dugout bench as play comes to a complete halt.
Schlotterbeck eventually manages to get back to his feet, gingerly walking off the field to receive further treatment on the sidelines. Play resumes once more, but Germany are forced to navigate this crucial phase temporarily down to 10 men.
10'- We have the first big chance of the match! Germany are really turning up the pressure now, passing the ball around the opponent's penalty area.
Kai Havertz receives a brilliant, looping cross from the right flank. He connects well, directing a sharp header right toward the bottom-left corner of the net. However, Yahia Fofana shows incredible reflexes, diving quickly to his right to pull off a fantastic diving save and parry the ball away. That is easily the closest either team has come to breaking the deadlock tonight!
8'- It honestly feels like a home game for Germany tonight. The incredible traveling support from the German fans has completely taken over Toronto Stadium, filling the air with non-stop chanting.
On the pitch, Die Mannschaft are showing great maturity and thoughtfulness with their passing. They are completely dominating the tempo but are playing with extreme patience, carefully knocking the ball around to find a gap. However, the Ivory Coast defense is staying incredibly compact and disciplined, refusing to give Julian Nagelsmann's attackers any room to breathe.
4'- Germany have dominated all the early possession, knocking the ball around confidently. However, the moment they turn it over, the Elephants look primed to pounce with explosive speed.
The African champions get their first real chance to counter-attack as Yann Diomandé bursts down the left flank. He chases the ball all the way to the byline and whips a dangerous cross into the box, forcing a nervous German defense to quickly scramble the ball away. For those watching closely, Diomandé looks sharp and completely fine after a brief pre-match injury worry.
Germany’s historic national anthem, Deutschlandlied (Song of the Germans), blasted majestically over the venue's loudspeaker system first. The German starting XI linked arms in the center circle, singing with immense pride alongside thousands of traveling fans as a massive wave of passionate vocal support cascaded down from the packed white-and-black sections of the stands.
Immediately following, the beautiful, soaring notes of the Ivory Coast's national anthem, L’Abidjanaise (The Song of Abidjan), echoed through the rafters. The Ivorian players joined in for good measure, singing with maximum passion alongside a loud, vibrant block of traveling supporters clad in bright green and orange. It was a truly spine-tingling backdrop that perfectly framed the immense mutual respect between these two footballing titans.
Tonight's blockbuster is much more than just a football match for German center-back Jonathan Tah. The dominant defender is set for a deeply emotional milestone as he steps out on the pitch to play against his father's birth country for the very first time in his professional career.
Tah, whose father was born in the Ivory Coast, admitted that seeing the green and orange shirts across the tunnel will make this an unforgettable evening.
"This is going to be something special, that is true, to play against the Ivory Coast team," Tah shared ahead of the game. "Of course, I’m excited about the opportunity, and it’s definitely going to be more extraordinary than playing against any other team."
Ivory Coast manager Emerse Fae is not hiding from the immense pressure of tonight's heavyweight clash. Despite managing the youngest squad out of all 48 teams at 2026 World Cup, Fae made it crystal clear that his boys are ready to play on the front foot and attack Germany from the very first whistle.
Speaking to the press ahead of kick-off, a confident Fae dismissed any idea of playing defensively against the four-time champions.
"We are not coming here just to stand around and watch the Germans play football," Fae said boldly. "We are coming to beat them. We are coming to get that early qualification for the second round."
The Ivorian boss has his eyes set completely on the biggest prize in Group E. He wants to ensure his young squad leaves Toronto Stadium not just with a ticket to the knockouts, but with total control of the group.
"Above all, we want to go back to our tournament base camp in Philadelphia with six points in our bag, and the absolute certainty that we will finish top of the pack," he added.
The official starting lineups are out for tonight's massive Group E clash at Toronto Stadium, and both managers have thrown very different tactical cards onto the table. Julian Nagelsmann has opted for complete stability. Germany will field the exact same, lethal starting eleven that absolutely dismantled Curaçao 7-1 in their tournament opener.
The mesmerizing, fluid creative hub of Jamal Musiala and Florian Wirtz remains intact right behind lone striker Kai Havertz, while Aleksandar Pavlović anchors the midfield. In stark contrast, Ivory Coast boss Emerse Faé has dropped a massive selection bombshell, ringing the changes with five major tactical adjustments to the side that scraped past Ecuador 1-0.
Germany XI (4-2-3-1): Manuel Neuer (GK); Joshua Kimmich, Jonathan Tah, Nico Schlotterbeck, Nathaniel Brown; Felix Nmecha, Aleksandar Pavlović; Leroy Sané, Jamal Musiala, Florian Wirtz; Kai Havertz.
Ivory Coast XI (4-4-2): Yahia Fofana (GK); Wilfried Singo, Odilon Kossounou, Emmanuel Agbadou, Ghislain Konan; Amad Diallo, Franck Kessié, Ibrahim Sangaré, Yann Diomandé; Ange-Yoan Bonny, Christ Inao Oulaï.
He is 19 years old. He plays in the Bundesliga. And he tormented Ecuador so badly that Germany captain Joshua Kimmich personally called him out at a press conference as the danger man to watch.
Yan Diomande, Ivory Coast's electric young winger who lit up RB Leipzig's 2025-26 Bundesliga season and won the competition's Rookie of the Year award , is the wildcard that has Germany's defence most concerned.
"A year ago, hardly anyone knew him. He's had an outstanding season, even though RB Leipzig had a few problems. His dribbling is exceptional, a bit like Kingsley Coman at Bayern back in the day," Kimmich said at a press conference.
Diomande was outstanding against Ecuador while several of his team-mates showed some early nerves in their tournament debut. And pairing him with Amad Diallo, who came off the bench to score the winner against Ecuador, gives Ivory Coast one of the most exciting wide pairings at this entire World Cup.
Julian Nagelsmann is not sitting back after a 7-1 opening-day demolition job. He knows the real test begins tonight and he has made that crystal clear to his players.
"It's a beautiful stadium we're playing in tomorrow. We are excited and believe it's going to be a really good match-up," Nagelsmann said at his pre-match press conference, before making his intentions clear: "We want to win tomorrow and that's the goal. There is no real reason for me to change anything about the lineup, but I'm also not going to tell you every single one of my thoughts right now."
The Germany coach is well aware of what Ivory Coast bring. Nagelsmann and Germany face the far sterner prospect of an Ivorian team possessing plenty of attacking talent. The Elephants came into the tournament having beaten France 2-1 in a pre-tournament friendly, a result that sent a loud message to every team in this draw.
Germany has never won against Ivory Coast before and the only time the two countries faced each other was back on 18 November 2009, when Lukas Podolski scored a brace to rescue a point for the Germans in a 2-2 draw.
A historic first win over the Elephants is what Germany want tonight. But Ivory Coast? They have very different ideas. Follow every moment on Germany vs Ivory Coast Live Score on TOI Sports!
They beat France. They beat South Korea. They beat Ecuador at the 2026 World Cup with a 90th-minute Amad Diallo sucker punch. Now Ivory Coast are coming to Toronto with their eyes set firmly on Germany and coach Emerse Fae is making absolutely no secret of it.
"We're not coming to watch the Germans play. We're coming to beat them, we're coming to get that qualification for the second round," said Fae.
"We didn't come here to visit the United States and go home. We beat France and we've made a good start to this tournament against Ecuador, a very tough side. The next match against Germany? It will be a difficult match. Germany have a wealth of experience. But we'll go out to challenge them, win and secure our qualification," the Ivory Coast coach added defiantly.
This will be the first-ever World Cup meeting between the two sides — their only previous encounter was a 2-2 friendly draw in 2009. All 26 players in Fae's squad have never played in a World Cup before.
Seven goals. Five different scorers. One devastating statement. Germany announced themselves to the 2026 FIFA World Cup with a hammer blow against Curaçao, and tonight in Toronto, they come for something far bigger - Ivory Coast and all but certain qualification for the round of 32.
At the heart of Germany's terrifying attack is a trio that keeps opposition coaches awake at night. Florian Wirtz. Jamal Musiala. Kai Havertz. The Liverpool winger, the Bayern maestro, and the Arsenal striker combined, they have scored goals at every level of European football, and the World Cup has already seen Havertz net twice and Musiala add another.
Wirtz has been unambiguously clear about his ambition here: "I'm someone who likes to aim very high. Winning the World Cup remains the goal."
He was denied a World Cup debut at Qatar 2022 with an ACL injury. He has waited four years for this. And Ivory Coast's defence is the next test in front of him.
Germ
Questions ouvertes
- Will Germany be able to break down Ivory Coast's compact defense in the second half?
- Can Ivory Coast maintain their attacking intensity and secure a win?
- How will the disallowed goals affect Germany's morale?