Lightning, hailstones, YMCA and 36 minutes of football: Inside the chaos at Euro 2024’s Dortmund fan park

Germany fans sing You'll Never Walk Alone before Euro 2024 match

germany football, euro 2024, denmark football, dortmund, uefa, lightning, hailstones, ymca and 36 minutes of football: inside the chaos at euro 2024’s dortmund fan park

If you believe lightning can’t strike twice, ask Joachim Andersen. The unfortunate Danish defender was twice left to rue VAR interventions in the space of a few minutes, firstly for a miniscule offside call to rule out his goal and then for a flick of his fingers by the ball to give Germany their penalty and the lead.

And if you think lightning can’t strike about 500 times, ask the tens of thousands of supporters gathered in the Westfalenpark fan zone to watch the game, evacuated from the area and told the match screening would not resume, as the electrical storm rapidly approached, then lit up the night sky across much of western Germany for the ensuing four hours.

You have to get to the Euro 2024 fan zones pretty early to get a decent location; Dortmund’s has two screens but awkward placing and some questionable locations for the bratwurst stands means it’s almost in three sections when it comes to choosing your spot.

Fans were there for upwards of three hours before the match kicked off to ensure they got a decent view; barely half an hour after it started, though, they were told to give up for good: out of the park within minutes as the rain came teeming down, thousands of fans were then streaking back toward the stadium and, in turn, the town centre when rain turned to enormous hailstones and plenty broke for cover.

And so an evening that began with YNWA in the open air ended up with the YMCA under a glass roof.

But that was later. First, there was sunshine. There was expectation. There was optimism, boosted by the fact that several trains actually ran on time and arrived into Dortmund as expected.

When it comes to football, that station and this city is usually associated with a sea (or a wall) of yellow, but on Saturday it was white, white and white, interspersed with green and speckled with red.

germany football, euro 2024, denmark football, dortmund, uefa, lightning, hailstones, ymca and 36 minutes of football: inside the chaos at euro 2024’s dortmund fan park
Fans leaving Dortmund station... (Karl Matchett)
germany football, euro 2024, denmark football, dortmund, uefa, lightning, hailstones, ymca and 36 minutes of football: inside the chaos at euro 2024’s dortmund fan park
...and gathered at the Dortmund fan park hours ahead of kick-off (Karl Matchett)

A handful of retro classic shirts and some visiting Denmark fans aside, the hordes gave the impression the current Germany shirt must be the best-selling one on the planet of all time.

The stand-out names of the current crop adorned most: Wirtz, Kroos, Musiala – but there were also icons and, well, names (to be kind) from yesteryear: Voller, Klinsmann, Schurrle, Odonkor.

And as the bratwurst was consumed and the pilsner tanks emptied over the next few hours, the pre-match entertainment threw out some football classics (Three Lions got an airing), some apparently much-loved-locally tunes (a super-extended version of John Denver’s Take Me Home, Country Roads may well still be going on) and the songs we’ve all heard many times while watching or following the German national side (99 Luftballons the gold standard here).

Yet while all this Uefa-approved revelry was going on, one event was conspicuous by its absence: with surely over 10,000 fans in place by mid-afternoon at this Euro 2024 fan park, the actual match taking place was nowhere to be seen in any outside area. Italy’s defeat to Switzerland was invisible, and surely feels a wild oversight considering people are there...for the football. For the tournament. But the second, smaller outdoor screen remained stubbornly blank (or branded) throughout.

One treat for the locals remained before the big game: a rousing rendition of You’ll Never Walk Alone, anthem of local side Borussia Dortmund and sung by all on this occasion, even the few wearing club shirts of other Bundesliga sides. It wasn’t the last time fans would sing together tonight, but it was the best one.

germany football, euro 2024, denmark football, dortmund, uefa, lightning, hailstones, ymca and 36 minutes of football: inside the chaos at euro 2024’s dortmund fan park
The calm before the (literal) storm at the Dortmund fan park (Karl Matchett)

The match started.

Confusion immediately reigned when Germany “scored” but didn’t, with nobody sure of the reason until a replay was shown a little while later. The giant screen received plenty of boos for that – but nothing compared to the stage manager coming on after 36 minutes, the sound cutting out first to yet more puzzlement... and then the announcement that the screen would be turned off, and everyone had to leave. Immediately.

The incoming storm – the thunder had been heard and lightning seen for quite a while at this point – meant the fan park viewing was abandoned, not to return even if the match continued or resumed, which of course it did.

Amid fury and thrown beers, thousands immediately started to stream out of two narrow exits onto the road outside which led up towards the stadium, taking cover where they could when the hail began – including a small, plastic-or-glass covered structure near the Westfalenstadion. The match itself had been paused by this point and everyone was utterly drowned or bedraggled, so some took the only sensible option: start some music and have a mini party. No matter where you are in the world, doing the YMCA seems to be a universal feel-better catch-all.

But there was still a game to watch. There was still the matter of Germany reaching the quarter-finals on home soil to settle.

And so the thousands continued out, back into town along the “green carpet” - a 3km stretch of thin astroturf-style carpeting, mapping a route from station to stadium – to find whatever pubs and bars still had space, cramming inside where they could, peering inside when they couldn’t.

It was a night when the off-pitch action certainly offered more of a spectacular show than the on-pitch action did, and it felt at times as though every obstacle possible was being produced to stop the game being seen for so many.

Yet supporters always, always find a way to see their team, to beat the odds, to do whatever is required. And in the end, of course, Germany always win.

OTHER NEWS

8 minutes ago

Who are the real sellouts?

8 minutes ago

Our tip Afentra is up 112% - can investors still profit? MIDAS SHARE TIPS UPDATE

8 minutes ago

Kai Cenat heads to Compton with MrBeast credit card, "giving back to da hood"

8 minutes ago

Gold prices in Qatar Today Tuesday, July 2, 2024

8 minutes ago

Dozens injured by turbulence on flight diverted to Brazil

8 minutes ago

Ten Cambodian environmental activists receive prison sentences of 6-8 years each

8 minutes ago

Is Starmer right to stop work for his family at 6pm on Fridays? Join The Independent Debate

8 minutes ago

Judi Dench and Siân Phillips become the first women members of Garrick Club

8 minutes ago

Consumer, real estate slump under shadow of RBA rate hike fears

8 minutes ago

Joanna Cherry: Nicola Sturgeon put a ‘target on my back’ on trans issue

8 minutes ago

Why Grant Shapps could be facing his Portillo moment

8 minutes ago

Celebration time for Diageo as it turns the sod on new €200m beer plant

8 minutes ago

In a class of their own: three Olympic sportswomen talk about overcoming war, hardship and the Taliban

8 minutes ago

Ex-British Museum chief wants foreigners to pay to see UK cultural treasures

8 minutes ago

Scottish Conservatives say twelve seats are key to beating SNP

8 minutes ago

Town of Hinton declares health-care crisis over doctor shortage

8 minutes ago

Egypt’s gas production at 5.7 billion cubic feet per day, says petroleum ministry official

8 minutes ago

Dubai's expanding metro boosts its '20-minute city' ambitions

8 minutes ago

Liverpool blow as ONLY transfer link with 'real substance' expected to move to Real Madrid

8 minutes ago

A big Labour majority would be ‘better for the country’, Starmer claims

8 minutes ago

Who is the new 2024 Minister of Social Development?

8 minutes ago

Labour Court to formally intervene in Aer Lingus pilot pay dispute

8 minutes ago

Coco Gauff and Emma Raducanu lift the lid on WTA ‘cheaters’ – ‘They just have the habit’

8 minutes ago

Katherine Jenkins' fans all tell her same thing ahead of David Beckham reunion

11 minutes ago

Labor accused of signing off on NBN pay hike

11 minutes ago

US dollar climbs to new 38-year peak vs yen; euro rises after French elections

11 minutes ago

A stranger seems to have taken over our address

11 minutes ago

Romania XI vs Netherlands: Confirmed Euro 2024 team news, predicted lineup and injury latest today

11 minutes ago

UK election: Sunak and Starmer to face off in final bid for votes

11 minutes ago

King and Queen to host events in Scotland during Holyrood Week

11 minutes ago

Tories label Starmer 'part-time Prime Minister' after diary confession

11 minutes ago

Joe Biden slams US Supreme Court presidential immunity ruling as Donald Trump seeks to overturn hush money convictions

11 minutes ago

Royals who got Self-Portrait's style memo: Since Kate debuted British brand in 2016, Princess Beatrice, Meghan and Pippa have all got in on the act - and Carole Middleton showed off floral number at Royal Ascot

11 minutes ago

How to finance a used car: Your options and how to save money

11 minutes ago

Conor McGregor places another eye-watering bet on Argentina to win the Copa America after lumping £60k on Cristiano Ronaldo to win the Golden Boot at Euro 2024!

11 minutes ago

Hungary's Orbán in Kyiv for talks with Zelenskyy in first visit since the war began

31 minutes ago

Ridley Scott 'never told or asked' about Alien sequels

34 minutes ago

Round 1 Highlights: Carlos Alcaraz vs Mark Lajal

34 minutes ago

MLS side St Louis sack former Kaizer Chiefs star

34 minutes ago

ITV Coronation Street mystery hospital visitor leaves Roy Cropper's family concerned