In the spirit of the shocking football match between Brazil and Germany, which left Brazil in an emotional state, let's take a look at seven sporting events that stunned the sports world at least as much as Tuesday's historic defeat.
The World Cup creates so many different stories every day that sometimes it's hard to find the funniest, saddest and most shocking ones. They are like things in a woman's purse, we know they are there, but they are hard to find. And that's exactly what we found.
"I love to kick" is no ordinary handball table. Its frame is made of cardboard, and its most exposed parts are made of wood. This means that after the end of her career she can be 'retrained' or 100% recycle. Because it has a dual identity, it can turn itself into a portable folder in a few moves, which are otherwise not as superb as those of Messi, which indirectly takes away its long-standing status as an innkeeper.
Each World Cup in football serves up delicacies and glorious moments, but on the other hand, also with incidents, the number of which seems to only increase over the years, both in terms of quantity and 'quality'. Or not. Once upon a time, there were not so many cameras, so many lenses, and many things could remain hidden. But not the following ten moves that have put their main players on the blacklist of footballers.
Despite the advantage of the home field, the Brazilian national team did not convince throughout the entire World Cup, and when they unfortunately lost their talisman Neymar in the quarter-finals, it exploded in the semi-finals. Instead of Jesihar's boy, the entire German national team screamed like Jesihar what everyone already knew: "Well, Cesar is naked!" "Cesar is gooooool"! And Julio Cesar stepped down from the goalkeeping throne.
No, it was not Mary or Jesus the Redeemer who appeared to him, but the Brazilian national team appeared to him. Miracles come in all shapes and forms and they don't require a higher power to do so. Sometimes two friends are enough, as was the case with deaf-blind Carlos.
The German club Union Berlin, which comes from the second German league, turned its stadium "An der Alten Forsterei" ("At the old forester's house") into the world's largest living room, where matches can be played on the sofa, during the World Cup in Brazil followed by over 13 thousand football fans.