Germany erupted in ecstasy, with fans dancing the night away, after the World Cup final win against Argentina that handed the country its historic fourth title.
Fireworks exploded across Berlin yesterday as delirious supporters cheering the 1-0 victory thronged the streets and honking cars snaked their way through crowds, with black, red and gold German flags flapping in the wind.
More than 250,000 fans jumped for joy in the heart of the capital, many singing “Oh, it’s beautiful!” and chanting.
“Super Deutschland’’.
“We’re going to party all night,” said Bianca Hoffmann, 35, who travelled to Berlin from the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia to join in the country’s biggest World Cup gathering.
The city closed the so-called Fan Mile to traffic behind the Brandenburg Gate, the symbol of national unity, to make way for revellers basking in the German side’s glory in its thrilling showdown against Argentina.
“This victory is hugely important — it’s my first!” said Carsten Glaser, 20.
While the Germans were a “team”, he said, “Argentina only had (Lionel) Messi.”
On nearby Potsdamer Platz, cleaved in two by the despised Berlin Wall until its fall a quarter-century ago, one young man jumped on the roof of a public bus as raucous supporters blocked the streets for traffic.
And on the chic shopping avenue Kurfuerstendamm in the west of the capital, traditionally a venue for major sports celebrations, fans set off firecrackers and waved giant flags.
Many supporters saw the victory as having a deeper historical resonance, coming a long 24 years after West Germany beat Argentina in 1990, just months before the country overcame its Cold War division.
“This victory is important for reunified Germany,” Thorsten Kinscher, a 34-year-old employee in the shipping industry, said.
“It shows we are really in this together,” behind a team of players from the former west and the ex-communist east, he said.