After Raheem Sterling, Fabian Delph and Jordan Henderson joined Harry Kane in withdrawing from the squad on Tuesday, England manager Gareth Southgate's options look thin.
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England’s chances of success against the world champions suffered another huge blow with the news that Manchester City duo Delph and Sterling and Liverpool captain Henderson had pulled out.
With Spurs trio Dele Alli, Harry Winks and Kane already sidelined though injury, England manager Gareth Southgate is faced with a worryingly depleted squad for friendlies he’d hoped would help him fine-tune his team ahead of next year’s World Cup finals in Russia.
Of greatest concern will be his midfield. Of those fit and available for the upcoming games against Germany and Brazil, only Eric Dier can realistically expect a starting place when England play their first group game of next summer’s tournament.
Of his other options, three - Jesse Lingard, Jake Livermore and Ruben Loftus-Cheek - have eleven senior international appearances combined. The other, Ashley Young, collected the last of his thirty caps over five years ago; his last kick of a ball a missed penalty as England lost to Italy at Euro 2012.
Visitors have a wealth of options
Germany meanwhile, have pretty much their entire squad available, with world-class talents such as Toni Kroos, Mesut Özil and Julian Draxler unlikely to find life too difficult when the teams meet in London.
Coach Joachim Löw claims he will use the England game, as well as next Tuesday's clash with France in Cologne, to help him make some "tough decisions" as he prepares his squad list for Russia.
"If you want to be world champion, you need world-class players." Löw told news agency AFP. "We have to have an incredibly strong squad where every player is in top shape - every day and every minute."
Among those decisions will be the question of whether or not to grant the returning Mario Götze and Ilkay Gundogan a seat on the plane. The upcoming friendlies should also give Marvin Plattenhardt and Marcel Halstenberg the chance prove their credentials in place of the injured left back Jonas Hector.
Germany vs. England: A football rivalry in pictures
It's sparked celebrations, caused controversy, forced tears and lost elections. Following England's visit to Munich in June 2022, we look back at some of the fixture's best moments.
Image: Marvin Guengoer/GES/picture alliance
1909: England's amateurs on cloud nine
Some claim this 1909 game to be England's biggest ever win over Germany, although it doesn't exist in the official record books because of its amateur status. Hat tricks from Thomas C. Porter and Cyril E Dunning helped England to an emphatic 9-0 win at the long-since-demolished Oxford City ground.
Probably the most famous of all the meetings between the sides. Played at Wembley, the 1966 World Cup final was a thriller settled in extra time by one of the most controversial goals ever. More than 50 years have passed since England's 4-2 win and still the debate rages about whether England's third goal – the second of Geoff Hurst's hat trick – actually crossed the line.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Empics Barratts
1968: A measure of revenge for West Germany
With several players remaining from the 1966 World Cup final lineups, this friendly –played in Hanover – was seen as a chance for the West Germans to get their own back. A scrappy and overly physical encounter was settled in the 80th minute when Franz Beckenbauer's effort was deflected past England keeper Gordon Banks. It was England's first loss in continental Europe since 1963.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
1970: West Germany stage Mexican comeback
The sides were drawn together in the quarterfinals of the 1970 World Cup in Mexico. England took a 2-0 lead but soon capitulated without goalkeeper Gordon Banks. Goals from Franz Beckenbauer and Uwe Seeler drew the Germans level before Gerd Müller settled the game in extra time for a 3-2 win. Four days later, British Prime Minister Harold Wilson blamed Labour's election loss on the defeat.
Image: Sven Simon/picture alliance
1972: West Germany outclass England twice
Another year, another quarterfinal meeting, this time at the European Championship. At the time knockouts were played over two legs, home and away. West Germany won 3-1 at Wembley thanks to a 26th Minute strike from Uli Hoeness and late goals from Günter Netzer and Gerd Müller. The sides drew 0-0 in the second leg in West Berlin and West Germany would go on to win the tournament.
Image: Getty Images
1982: Knockout blow for England
In a tournament that employed a format with two separate group stages, a 0-0 draw was enough to knock England out and see West Germany through to the semis. They defeated France on penalties to make the final, but would fail to lift the trophy. West Germany would lose 3-1 to Italy at the Bernabeu in a final best remembered for Marco Tardelli's passionate celebration.
Image: picture-alliance/Baumann
1990: Penalties, tension and tears in Turin
England's first semifinal since their triumph in 1966 saw them produce their best performance of Italia '90. Andreas Brehme put Germany ahead before Gary Lineker leveled for England late on. Then came Paul Gascoigne's tears after a yellow card that meant he would have missed the final. It went to penalties, and misses from Chris Waddle and Stuart Pearce (pictured) fatefully sent England home.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
1996: It's coming home... to Germany
In their first home tournament since 1966, England met their rivals in the semifinal having seemingly exorcised their penalty demons against Spain in the previous round. An entertaining and even game, featuring the likes of Matthias Sammer and the imperious Germany captain Andreas Möller, somewhat inevitably came down to penalties. This time Gareth Southgate was the Englishman who missed.
Image: Imago/Werek
2000: Didi's farewell gift to Wembley
England had grand plans to mark the last game at their famous old stadium. The scene was a qualifying match for the 2002 World Cup, but it turned into a miserable farewell. A long-range strike from Dietmar Hamann was the only goal of a drab game. The defeat had far-reaching consequences for the hosts, with coach Kevin Keegan resigning immediately afterwards.
Image: picture-alliance/Sven Simon
2001: The miracle of Munich?
After the misery of their Wembley display earlier in the same qualifying group, England produced arguably their finest performance of the 21st century under Sven-Goran Eriksson in Munich. After Carsten Jancker opened the scoring, the visitors roared back into the game. Michael Owen (l.) bagged a hat trick while Steven Gerrard (r.) and Emile Heskey also notched goals in a 5-1 wolloping.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/G. Copley
2010: Crossbar controversy reigns again
A young and skillful Germany side overran England in this World Cup last-16 game in Bloemfontein, South Africa, but only led 2-1 heading towards halftime. Frank Lampard then unleashed a strike from distance that struck the underside of the bar and seemed to bounce down at least a meter over the line. But Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda failed to award the goal. Germany went on to win 4-1.
Image: AP
2016: Comeback Lions hit three
It was only a friendly, but ahead of Euro 2016 a new-look England team came from two goals down to defeat Germany in Berlin. Deli Alli, aged just 19, stole the show as Harry Kane, Jamie Vardy, and an injury-time winner from Erik Dier sealed a 3-2 win. England would crash out to Iceland in the round of 16 at the European Championship, Germany would lose to hosts France in the semifinal.