As chance after chance went begging in the first half against Greece in the Euro 2012 quarter-final on Friday Germany coach Joachim Loew became so agitated that he almost dashed down the tunnel for a shot of caffeine.
It all turned out well in the end, though, as Germany roared into the semis with a 4-2 victory that set up a clash with Italy or England in Warsaw.
- Germany trounce Greece to enter Euro semis
"I tried to go and get an espresso but then we missed another chance and I got angry," said the 52-year-old renowned for his love of coffee.
With Greece holding on at 0-0 one horrible Marco Reus slice wide was greeted with a roar of disapproval and manic gesticulations by Loew who had gambled on a much-changed line-up for the match on a damp and cool night in Gdansk.
It was a brave decision but despite taking 39 minutes to make the breakthrough, courtesy of Philipp Lahm's swerving shot, it ultimately proved a good one.
"After three matches and three victories it was hard not to be satisfied," Loew, whose side were congratulated by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, told reporters when asked about his surprise team selection.
"But I thought we had to unpredictable. I knew they would be ready for us because they know our players well. I thought I would freshen things up.
"In the end it worked out very well. Our three attackers were great and Klose scored and Reus scored."
Greece equalised on the counter-attack through Giorgos Samaras early in the second half but three goals in 13 minutes by Sami Khedira, Klose and Reus underlined Germany's superiority.
Despite conceding a late penalty after Jerome Boateng hand-balled, Loew could hardly disguise his pleasure at the form of his side who have won four out of four matches at the tournament and are on a 15-match winning streak in competitive matches, a national record.
"Greece scored two goals from one attack," Loew said.
"I'm very proud of the players. There is no question we deserved to win the match. The only thing that worried me was that we were missing so many chances.
"But even after they scored we didn't get hassled. We were much better than the Greeks and we asked too much of them."
Photograph: Bartosz Jankowski/Reuters
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