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ICE HOCKEY

German ice hockey team stuns US

A sudden-death winner by Felix Schutz gave hosts Germany a shock 2-1 win over Vancouver Olympics runners-up the United States in the world championship's opening match on Friday.

German ice hockey team stuns US
Photo: DPA

Michael Wolf scored Germany’s first goal while goal tender Dennis Endras recorded 31 saves to give his side a morale-boosting win.

“It’s an unbelievable feeling when you’re playing in front of a 76,000 home crowd,” Wolf said. “Such fantastic support drives you crazy and boosts your performance a lot. We just couldn’t play badly today.”

Teammate Sven Butenschon added: “It felt more like a World Cup soccer game than a hockey game. When you hear the roar of (so many) people, it is a different noise.”

US team captain Jack Johnson praised German keeper Endras but added that his team had plenty of time to make amends for the shock defeat.

“I don’t think we played poorly,” he said. “It was their goaltender who played really great today. It’s a long tournament. We can still walk out of here with a gold medal. And that’s our attitude.”

Championship organizers relocated the opening game to the Veltins-Arena in Gelsenkirchen, home venue of the Bundesliga football club Schalke 04.

The 76,152-seat arena was transformed into an ice-hockey venue and was sold out to set a world record attendance for an ice hockey match, breaking the previous best of 74,554 spectators, set in the United States at a 2001 game between Michigan State University and the University of Michigan.

The previous highest figure for the world ice hockey championships was 55,000 spectators set in 1957 in Moscow at the deciding game between the Soviet Union and Sweden.

Germany started in a lively style trying to take the US team’s goal by storm, creating a set of scoring chances when St Louis Blues forward T.J. Oshie was sinbinned for hooking, but the visitors defended well and kept their net clean.

The Americans soon took the initiative back. They outshot their rivals 8-7 in the opening period keeping Endras under pressure but also failed to find the net before the first intermission.

But it was Wolf who netted the opeining goal 5:20 into the second period wristing home a rebound from the right face-off circle after Marcel Muller’s sharp-angled shot.

US players rushed ahead seeking an equalizer but the German defence played without any noticeable mistakes to stifle the Americans’ attacks at the far approaches to their net.

In the third period the US team stepped up a gear and began peppering Endras with shots and Ryan Carter of Anaheim Ducks pulled the score level at 48:28, sweeping the puck in between the ‘keeper’s pads despite tough physical opposition from defender Nicolai Goc.

The Americans dominated play in the remaining regular time but failed to score a winning goal. Schutz stopped the time just 21sec into the overtime tipping teammate Constantin Braun’s shot from the blue line past US netminder Scott Clemmensen.

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JUDAISM

Ancient Jewish settlement to be brought back to life in Cologne

No city north of the Alps has been home to Jews for as long as the Roman settlement of Cologne. A recently discovered Jewish quarter is now being brought back to life.

Ancient Jewish settlement to be brought back to life in Cologne
The site of the construction in Cologne. Photo: DPA

If you are a tourist walking through the centre of Cologne, sooner rather than later, you'll come across a construction site located in the very best position, in the middle of the town hall square.

At the beginning of this millennium, the people of Cologne dug into the earth directly in front of their historic city hall and found a treasure from another millennium: the Jewish quarter.

Complete with a dance hall, a hospital, a bakery and a synagogue, the quarter contains the ruins of a settlement from the Middle Ages. It is a city within a city, a miniature world of houses huddled together. 

Of course, all that is left is ruins – one needs a bit of imagination to picture how the whole thing once looked. But experts from Germany and abroad agree: there's nothing like it anywhere else in the world.

Ancient tradition

No other German city has been associated with Jewish history for so long as Cologne. 

The first documented Jewish community dates back to the year 321, making it the oldest north of the Alps. 

But in 1349, the neighbourhood was destroyed and its inhabitants were murdered or expelled. Local Christians blamed Jews for the outbreak of the plague.

Currently, a museum is being built over the site on the town hall square. It will be a parallel world underground: visitors will be able to relive life in the Jewish quarter in the era of knights and minstrels on a 600-meter-long trail. The trail also visits the governor's palace from Roman times, which was rediscovered in the 1950s. 

The museum is called MiQua after the name for the Jewish ritual bath, Mikveh.

Exhibits will include artifacts found during the excavations; among them is a crescent-shaped, gem-set gold earring from the 11th century. 

The researchers also discovered a tablet dating back to the Middle Ages with the inscription “yt in ys neyt anders.” This could be translated as “Et is wie et is” (It is as it is) – a classic Cologne saying. 

The museum is scheduled to open in 2024, but through the panorama windows on the third floor of the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, also located on Rathausplatz, one can already follow the progress of construction work.

This year Jewish life will be celebrated across the country – the anniversary year '1,700 years of Jewish life in Germany' will be celebrated nationwide. 

Hamburg is organising a themed week entitled 'More than Little Jerusalem'; in Nuremberg the photo exhibition 'Germany's Emigrants' will be opened; and in Herxheim in Rhineland-Palatinate the play Judas by Lot Vekemans will be staged.

READ MORE: 9 hilarious gifts Judaism gave the German language

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