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25 Greatest German Players in Football History [Ranked]
Ranking the 25 greatest German players in football history, including Mesut Ozil, Franz Beckenbauer and Manuel Neuer…
Having previously worked and produced a variety of written content for Eurosport, 90min and UtdDistrict, Dan now works across the GMS site producing News and Feature content. He has also worked with the Exclusives team.
Dan graduated from the University of Winchester in 2020 with a degree in Sport and Exercise Science and stayed on to complete his MRes in Sport and Exercise, which finished in 2021. Sign in to your GiveMeSport account Germany are one of the most successful nations in football history with stars from every generation oozing out of Die Mannschaft’s ears. While the current crop in 2026 are yet to truly make a name for themselves on the international stage, it always seems that another triumph on the sport’s biggest stage for the talent-laced nation that is Germany is just around the corner.
Having been crowned World Cup champions on four occasions, Julian Nagelsmann will be looking to add to that tally at FIFA’s 23rd edition in 2026. They won their first World Cup title in 1954 and have followed that success with triumphs in 1974, 1990 and 2014, but that wonderful trophy has evaded them for a decade now.
boasted some of the sports' most eye-catching talent over the years. Taking the following into account, here is a look at the greatest players Germany have ever produced.
Longevity - Reaching the top is one thing, but staying there is even more impressive.
Silverware - A player's trophy cabinet offers a physical snapshot of their success.
Overall influence - The greatest talents have stamped their authority over sides at club and international level.
The likes of Ze Roberto and Franz Roth miss out in the star-studded list of Bayern Munich talent from over the years.
West Germany’s hero in the 1990 World Cup final, where his 85th-minute penalty saw off Argentina, the late Andreas Brehme has to go down as one of the greatest full-backs in football history. A world-class operator anywhere along the left flank and also more than capable in a defensive midfield capacity like another German much higher in this ranking, the set-piece specialist scored almost 100 goals for club and country combined.
Third in the voting for the 1990 Ballon d’Or, Brehme won league titles with Kaiserslautern, Bayern Munich and Inter Milan, as well the UEFA Cup with the latter. If there was ever reason to suggest he doesn't deserve a place among his nation's very best, take it from Lothar Matthaus, who described him as the most talented of his teammates.
FC Kaiserslautern, Bayern Munich, Inter Milan
A pivotal part of West Germany's golden era, the iconically-named Wolfgang Overath is unique in international football history for winning World Cup gold (1974), silver (1966), and bronze (1970).
Retiring as a rare and true "one-club man," Overath spent his entire professional career at 1. FC Koln (1962-1977), making over 500 appearances and winning the 1964 Bundesliga title, becoming an iconic leader for the club. A technically gifted playmaker in the same vein as his friend and rival Gunter Netzer, the left-footed midfield general was considered by many as one of Germany's finest players and one of the greatest engine room coal faces of his generation.
Up there with the finest defenders of his era, Jurgen Kohler won multiple major honours in club and international football. A 1990 World Cup winner and Euro 96 champion, he enjoyed league success with Bayern Munich, Juventus and Borussia Dortmund - also lifting the UEFA Cup with Juve and the Champions League with the latter in 1997, the same year he won German Player of the Year.
During his time in Italy, he showed significant technical developments, after initially being pejoratively nicknamed "Eisenfuss" ("iron foot," in German) in his home-country. It is there that he peaked, with his ability to balance his roles between a no-nonsense defender and a ball-playing transitional player making him one of the most unique footballers to ever grace Europe.
FC Koln, Bayern Munich, Juventus, Borussia Dortmund
World Cup, European Championship, Champions League
An excellent German winger isn’t always easy to come by throughout history, largely because the country has focused its philosophy on controlling central areas and has favoured physical, team-first superiority over individual technicality. But Helmut Rahn certainly went against the grain.
“Der Boss” was an elite, world-class right-winger and forced Die Mannschaft to change the way they played just for him. He is best known for scoring the winning goal in the 1954 FIFA World Cup Final - the “Miracle of Bern," as he helped boost Germany's post-WWII national identity against Hungary's heavily-favoured "Magical Magyars." A powerful, clinical forward, Rahn scored 21 goals in 40 international matches and was a dominant force in both the 1954 FIFA World Cup and 1958 FIFA World Cup, totalling 10 World Cup goals.
Imperious whether deployed in midfield or at left-back, Paul Breitner was among the finest players in world football during the 70s and early 80s, making the team of the tournament as West Germany triumphed at Euro 1972 and the 1974 World Cup.
Runner-up to compatriot Karl-Heinz Rummenigge for the 1981 Ballon d’Or, Breitner equalised from the penalty spot in the 1974 World Cup final against the Netherlands - before netting once more in defeat to Italy eight years later, making him one of a handful of players to score in two World Cup finals. A 1973/74 European Cup winner with Bayern Munich, he also claimed major silverware at Real Madrid.
World Cup, European Championship, Champions League
Unmissable on the pitch with his mullet and moustache combo, Rudi Voller is one of Germany’s all-time leading scorers, notching 47 goals in 90 caps between 1982 and 1994. A 1990 World Cup winner, the 1983 German Footballer of the Year enjoyed all of his club success abroad, lifting the 1990/91 Coppa Italia with Roma and the 1992/93 Champions League with Marseille.
A classic "goalgetter", he combined speed with technical skill to excel at holding up the ball and finishing chances with both feet, while also being renowned for his "flying headers" as, although he was below the 6ft average of his counterparts, his elite movement saw him win the ball 99 per cent of the time.
1860 Munich, Werder Bremen, Roma, Marseille, Bayer Leverkusen
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Source: GiveMeSport
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