Nagelsmann Says He Will Not Quit After Germany's World Cup Exit
What happened: The Guardian reports that Julian Nagelsmann will not resign after Germany's World Cup exit against Paraguay in the last 32. Germany were eliminated after a penalty shootout, and Nagelsmann said he is not someone who runs away and would love to continue if the German football association wants him to stay.
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The result is severe because of the stage and opponent, but the immediate news is managerial. Nagelsmann did not frame the loss as a resignation moment. He acknowledged that things need to change, while also saying he understands the mechanics of football and that many people will want him gone.
Tournament impact: Germany's elimination is already a defining event of the World Cup knockout rounds. A last-32 exit removes one of the tournament's major football nations before the deeper knockout phase and turns Paraguay's win into a national moment; The Guardian also reports that Tuesday was declared a national holiday in Paraguay.
Why it matters: Nagelsmann's position now becomes a governance question. He has made clear that he wants to continue, but he also placed the decision with the DFB. That distinction matters. This is not a coach walking away after a shock defeat. It is a coach asking to remain while accepting that the football association must decide whether the performance and direction justify another cycle.
For Germany, the consequences are bigger than one shootout. A penalty defeat can be random in its final act, but an exit at this stage forces scrutiny of preparation, selection, game management and the team's broader trajectory. Nagelsmann's quote that there are things that need to be changed signals that he knows continuity alone will not be enough to calm the reaction.
What to watch: The next step is the DFB's response. If the association backs him, the story becomes about what changes he makes and how quickly Germany can rebuild credibility. If it moves against him, the search for a replacement begins under the pressure of a high-profile tournament failure. Paraguay, meanwhile, carry both momentum and national celebration into whatever comes next in the competition.
Confidence: Confirmed by the supplied Guardian story: Germany exited the World Cup last 32 against Paraguay on penalties, Nagelsmann said he will not resign, he wants to continue if the DFB wants him, and Paraguay declared Tuesday a national holiday. Not confirmed: tactical details, penalty takers, scoreline, internal DFB discussions, or any final decision on his job.
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