Crazy slapstick penalty secures Hamburg’s victory against Cologne

There was a little surprise in the first serve of the DFB Cup. Hamburger SV beat Bundesliga club 1. FC Köln after 120 minutes. In Munich, meanwhile, the favorite won.

Hamburger SV caused a surprise in the DFB Cup and kicked out 1. FC Köln. The Rothosen won the Bundesliga club 4:3 (1:1, 0:0, 0:0) on penalties. There was a strange scene with the last penalty.

Cologne’s Florian Kainz scored the supposed 4:4 equalizer, but shot himself in the process, so referee Daniel Schlager disallowed the goal – and thus sent HSV into the quarter-finals in accordance with the rules.

“I had a bad feeling. I noticed that my foot had slipped. When the ball came in, it looked a bit strange. In the end, it was very bitter that we didn’t reward ourselves for the effort “, so unlucky Kainz after his “missed” penalty at “Sky”

“I looked briefly at the referee. He then immediately told me that it had been checked – then there’s nothing more you can do anyway,” continued the disappointed Effzeh player.

Robert Glatzel had previously given the guests the lead in extra time (92nd minute), Cologne only managed to equalize in the last second of the game with a highly dubious penalty (120+2).

That’s how the game went

Cologne’s Steffen Baumgart and his fellow coach Tim Walter greeted each other with a warm hug before kick-off. The FC coach expected an “open game, it’s not about the first or second division”. With six changes to the starting eleven compared to the 0:4 against Bayern, the Bundesliga ninth then determined the initial phase, Sebastian Andersson tested HSV goalkeeper Daniel Heuer Fernandes early on from close range with a header (7th).

In what was already the 108th competitive game between the two traditional clubs, the people of Cologne made too little of the available space. In addition, Mark Uth missed a huge chance in the 21st minute when he was unable to get the ball into the goal after a bad pass from Heuer Fernandes despite being in the best position in front of the goal. Goalscorer Modeste initially only sat on the bench, the 33-year-old came on in the 60th minute.

Heyer becomes the king of the posts

HSV, who started the new year poorly with a 1-1 draw in Dresden, initially made too many mistakes, especially when trying to build up the game with short passes in their own half. The second division team was only rarely able to develop dangerous scenes in the first half, Glatzel’s wasted chance came about more by chance than intended (35′). However, full-back Moritz Heyer was unlucky when he hit the post after a solo (45+1).

A minute after the restart, Heuer Fernandes thwarted another great Cologne chance against Jan Thielmann (46′). FC briefly increased the pressure, Andersson had the next good chance with a header (49′). But then HSV got into the game better.

Robert Glatzel: The Hamburg striker scored the first goal of the evening in Cologne. (Source: Thilo Schmuelgen/Reuters)Sonny Kittel tested FC goalkeeper Marvin Schwäbe with a free kick (72′), Heyer hit the post again after a free kick (83′). A little later it went into extra time, in which Glatzel scored an early header. The class difference was hardly recognizable as a result, the FC only managed a little. The penalty after a foul by Sebastian Schonlau saved Cologne from the point.

KSC celebrates in Munich

After a work win, Karlsruher SC is also in the DFB Cup quarter-finals for the first time in 25 years. The Karlsruhe team won 1-0 (0-0) against the strong third division team 1860 Munich on Tuesday evening, Marvin Wanitzek scored the decisive goal for the second division tenth with a penalty kick (70th).

It was the duel of the cup nightmares: KSC had sensationally won at European Cup participants Bayer Leverkusen, surprisingly knocked out the second division teams Darmstadt 98 and Schalke 04 in 1860.

In the ghost game in Giesing, KSC had more possession of the ball and won more duels, but initially did not have the better opportunities. For a long time there was little offensive from guests – the only serious advance in the first half was a free kick from Philip Heise (40th). Marcel Bär (10th) and Fabian Greilinger (13th), on the other hand, put Marius Gersbeck’s goal in greater danger for 1860.

After the break, KSC increased the pressure: Fabian Schleusener hit the goalpost from the left, and Lucas Cueto pushed the rebound over the line from a minimal offside position (51′). Karlsruhe now played more purposefully towards taking the lead, the hosts struggled to keep the game open. Greilinger finally jumped the ball on a KSC cross on the arm.

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