You're reading: Greece seeks to win Germany’s respect at Euro 2012

GDANSK, Poland — Now for the really important business between Greece and Germany: Football.

On Friday, thousands
of fans from the two nations at opposite ends of the eurozone financial
crisis are converging on neutral Polish turf for a European Championship
quarterfinal match.

For Greece fans, Friday’s clash in rainy Gdansk inevitably mixes sports and politics, Euro 2012 and the euro currency.

They
seek respect for their country after its humiliating economic collapse —
and the German government’s role in imposing strict austerity measures.

“It’s
not good that sports and politics are together, but today we have no
other choice,” said Greece fan Michalis Kalotrapesis, wearing a white
national team shirt and tracksuit top. “We are playing for our country
and for our image in Europe and all over the world.”

Kalotrapesis, and three Greek friends who now live in Germany have driven through the night to support their native nation here.

Their
pride in performing what they see as a patriotic duty fits into
Greece’s favored national narrative: In football as in finance, Germany
is the traditional power and Greece the spirited underdog.

“We are
a little bit crazy, but it’s the Greek mentality,” said Nikos Barzas,
pointing out the bloodshot eyes of the group’s designated driver,
Georgios Kotiniotis.

They left Gifhorn, near Wolfsburg, at
midnight with 750 kilometers (about 465 miles) of road ahead of them. In
a city center cafe, the first coffees of the day were helping them
bridge the 10 hours to kickoff.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s
journey to Gdansk will surely be more comfortable. Merkel will attend
the match after morning economic meetings in Italy that were brought
forward to help fulfill her role as the supposed lucky charm of the
national team.

Barzas is glad she is coming — to further spur the team and 5,000 Greece fans expected to attend the match.

“(The
players will) fight a little bit more because (they want) to beat
Angela Merkel. (It would be) a little bit of a small kick in Germany’s
(backside),” he said.

About 15,000 Germans were expected to go to
the match, according to the Football Supporters Europe group. Many of
the Germans were arriving at Gdansk’s main train station, with scalpers
leading those without tickets to a nearby shopping center. The asking
price was €200 (about $250) for a ticket with a face value of €75 ($95).
There didn’t appear to be any Greek fans in the market for them.

Two days after being sworn into office, the prime minister of Greece’s new conservative-led coalition will stay at home to work.

Antonis
Samaras, a Harvard-educated former finance minister, is better employed
stabilizing the country after a tense election last weekend than
cheerleading at a football match, fan Thomas Nikolopulos said.

“I’m glad they are at home,” said Nikolopulos, who arrived with his son Daniel in Gdansk on a Friday morning flight from London.

Nikolopulos,
who is originally from Athens, said the feeling back home is that
“Germany has put them in the corner” over the euro currency crisis.

“This
is Greece’s opportunity to stand up and try to go back to being
historical wonders,” he said, with a blue-and-white striped national
flag draped across his shoulders.

Greece fans takes faith in their
team’s surprise run to be Euro 2004 champion, founded on the same solid
defense and dogged resistance shown by the current team in Poland.

For
three-time European champion Germany, the match seems more routine —
its fourth straight quarterfinal at each World Cup and Euro since
Greece’s golden year.

“For me, it’s a normal football match,” said
German fan Klaus Lehmkuhl, a technical consultant from Muenster. “I
don’t think the politics is important for the German team. They are
football players, not politicians.”

Still, some off-field tensions are expected when the German national anthem is played minutes before the match begins.

“We will respect it. But the (hardcore fans) from Greece, I don’t think they will,” Barzas said.

In
Berlin, a German deputy government spokesman was peppered with
questions about the match and asked whether, in view of the eurozone
crisis, Merkel would feel the need to tone down any goal celebrations.

“It’s
hard to assess that in advance,” Georg Streiter said. “I think it
depends a bit on how the game goes, but I think you will see that she is
glad if there’s a goal on the right side.”

Streiter also shrugged
off a question as to whether Merkel would consider herself partly
responsible if she doesn’t bring luck to the team and German loses.

“I
think you would be loading up the chancellor, who already has plenty of
packages to carry, with an unjustified package,” he said. “She’s a
spectator.”