Germany’s Klara Bühl: ‘You can see the sparkle in everyone’s eyes. We are ready’

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"Klara Bühl Prepares for Euros with Confidence and Reflection on Her Football Journey"

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Klara Bühl, a prominent left-winger for Bayern Munich and one of Europe's top talents, reflects on her journey in football, emphasizing the formative years spent honing her skills in Münstertal. She recalls her childhood, where football was a central part of her life, playing on a small astro pitch next to her school until training began in the evenings. Her dedication to the sport has paid off, as she now stands at the peak of her career at 24 years old, injury-free and ready for the upcoming Euros. Bühl's unique ability to use both feet effectively has been a point of admiration from her coach, Christian Wück, who noted her exceptional two-footedness, a rare trait in both men's and women's football. This skill, honed partly by emulating her left-footed brother, has made her a challenging opponent on the pitch.

Bühl's journey to the senior national team began with an early debut in the Bundesliga at 15, and she faced a setback during Euro 2022 when she contracted COVID-19 before the semi-final. Despite being in isolation during the final, she remained supportive of her teammates who ultimately lost to England. This experience taught her valuable lessons about cherishing every opportunity to play. As the German team prepares for the Euros in Switzerland, Bühl expresses confidence in their attacking style, having scored 26 goals in recent matches. While she acknowledges the team's potential, she emphasizes the need for everyone to perform at their best. As they face tough opponents in the group stage, including Denmark and Sweden, Bühl's focus remains on maintaining a positive atmosphere and building on their recent successes. Her lighthearted nature is reflected in her hobbies, such as crocheting team mascots, while she also prepares for potential matchups against familiar faces from her club. Overall, Bühl is eager for the tournament, hoping to play a pivotal role and contribute to Germany's success on the international stage.

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“Maybe I did the homework, but maybe I didn’t – the important thing was to get out on the pitch again.” Klara Bühl is describing her time at school when she would come home, eat, possibly do some schoolwork before heading out again.

“Football was everything for me. We played at school and then next to the school there was a small astro pitch. I played there until training began at five o’clock and so it was every afternoon.”

Bühl is one of Europe’s best, a left-winger who is as two-footed as she is electric. The Bayern Munich player is in form, without any injury concerns and looking forward to the Euros. “You can see the sparkle in everyone’s eyes. We are ready,” she says.

At 24, Bühl is reaching her peak years and believes her skills were honed during that formative period in Münstertal. “I learned everything I can there,” she says. “Shooting, with both my feet, dribbling because it was so small and also how to push through because I was always the youngest – and the only girl there.”

At the start of the year the Germany coach, Christian Wück, spoke to Kicker about Bühl’s capabilities with both feet, which makes her incredibly difficult to defend against. “I don’t know anyone who is as two-footed as she is,” he said. “For her it makes no difference if she takes a free-kick with her left or her right. There are only a few players, in men’s or women’s football, who are capable of doing that.”

So where did that come from? “My brother, who is a year and a half older than me, was left-footed and there aren’t that many left-footed players so I simply thought it was a bit cooler,” she says. “I was 10 or 12 so I thought about it and decided I would rather be left-footed. There were a few months when I went to training and just did everything with my left.”

Bühl stood out at an early age, soon swapping SpVgg Untermünstertal for Freiburg, where she made her Bundesliga debut at the age of 15. She rose through the German under-age teams before being called up to the senior squad in 2019. She was mainly used as a substitute at the World Cup in France that year asGermany went out in the quarter-finals, meaning that Euro 2022 was her first major tournament as a key player.

The showpiece in England, which had been delayed for a year because of the pandemic, had been going well for Bühl until, before the semi-final, disaster struck. She grimaces slightly as she describes what happened. “One evening I had a bit of a headache and then I could feel my throat as well so I went to bed early to sleep it off. Then in the middle of the night I woke up and thought ‘OK, this is not good’. The next morning I had a test and it was positive.”

Germanybeat France in the last fourand were looking forward to playing England at a full Wembley in the final. Bühl, however, was in isolation. “I spent a week on my own in a hotel room hoping that I’d test negative. Your only wish is that it is finally over. You see what the other girls are experiencing and you are there on your own.”

The negative test did not come soon enough for Bühl to play in the final, whichEngland won 2-1after Chloe Kelly’s extra-time goal. “I was just happy I could be in the stadium to take it all in. Even on the morning of the final I didn’t know whether I’d be able to be there so I just tried to use all the energy I had collected in that hotel room over a week and take it to the girls.”

Does she look back and think what could have been? “I knew it was important to work through what had happened and to do that quite quickly. I also learned you should always enjoy being on the pitch because you never know what is going to happen.

“The coronavirus was really something different but it could be an injury or something else. I learned to enjoy being able to play in a big tournament, so that was a lesson, and this time I hope to be able to play from start to finish.”

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Germanyare in a tough groupin Switzerland, facing Sweden, Denmark and Poland. They arrive in a confident mood having won five of their six games in 2025, scoring an impressive 26 goals along the way. Their final two warm-up matches were 4-0 and 6-0 victories against the Netherlands and Austria.

“We are a bit more carefree and think less about how the goals are going to come and then they seem to come naturally,” says Bühl. “We are a bit more attack-minded now as well. Scoring a lot of goals gives you confidence that you will score.

“Does that make us one of the favourites? I don’t think it is in our mentality to say that, but we have a lot of quality in the team and we have also built a good atmosphere. But the fact is that everyone has to be 100% on top of their game in every game, otherwise it won’t work.”

Bühl – who is alsoknown for her crocheting, having made the team’s mascots, a koala and an otter, for the past two tournaments – will come up against several Bayern teammates at the Euros. In the group phase there will be games against Pernille Harder’s Denmark and the Swedish trio of Magda Eriksson, Linda Sembrant and Julia Zigiotti Olme. Then, there may be a quarter-final against England and Georgia Stanway.

“Georgia is super honest, very direct,” Bühl says. “That is really the English mentality that she has got, very funny On the pitch she is very good in the one-on-one duels and is a fighter. She is a real playmaker. She always wants the ball and she distributes it all the time. That includes the dangerous balls that can cut through two lines of a defence.”

Stanway is also a budding tattooist. She has inked a few teammates, including Zigiotti Olme, so would Bühl let Stanway loose on her? Bühl laughs. “I have thought about maybe having one done. I would like a smiley here [she points to her left wrist]. But there hasn’t been the right moment yet. But I would say I can picture it happening. She does it really well.”

On a more serious note, does she feel England have improved or gone backwards since beating Germany three years ago? “It will be hard to top the last Euros as that was at home and there was an incredible hype around the team that took the players along with it. If you know what it can be like, and it is not like that, it can be hard to get in the same flow.

“Because of that I would say that they are not quite as good as with the 2022 Euros.” She pauses, then says, with a smile: “Without wishing to tread on any toes of course.”

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Source: The Guardian