It was 20 long years ago, back in the halcyon days of France '98, that reigning world champs Germany finished lower than third place at a FIFA World Cup.
Having qualified for Russia with a perfect record, Joachim Low's new-look team are primed to waltz their way through Group F. So who will join them in the knockouts? It's a closely-matched three-way fight between well-drilled Sweden, regular performers Mexico and a South Korea side with a track record for springing a surprise.
Brush up on your pub facts here...
1 HOSTS WITH THE MOST
Group F is unique in that all four nations have previously hosted a World Cup finals tournament. Sweden were first to do so in 1958, and reached the final before succumbing to a Brazil side inspired by a 17-year-old Pele. Mexico hosted what is widely regarded as one of the all-time best World Cups in 1970, South Korea shared the honour with Japan in 2002 and Germany was the setting in 2006, with West Germany having hosted and won the 1974 edition.
2 DRESS REHEARSAL
It’s fair to say the Germans have done their prep - 10 wins out of 10 in qualifying, well sure, that’s one thing, but their Confederations Cup win last year means they’ve even had a trial run for ticker tape celebrations on Russian soil. They faced Group F rivals Mexico in the semi-finals of that campaign and comfortably swept them aside - Leon Goretzka’s brace putting them two-up inside eight minutes on the way to a 4-1 win. Same again lads, just like we practiced…
3 BREAKING NEW GROUND
Group F sees the first match of the tournament to be played at the newly-opened Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, as Sweden and South Korea kick off their campaigns on Day 5. Situated at the joining point of the rivers Oka and Volga, five further games will be played at the blue-and-white 45,000 seater venue, after which local second-tier club FC Olimpiyets will become the permanent tenants. Remarkably, Olimpiyets were only founded in 2015 - the same year that construction on their gleaming future home began.
4 ALL CHANGE
The Germany squad travelling to their training base in the south-west suburbs of Moscow has a very different make-up to the triumphant one that took so well to the beaches of Bahia four years ago - legendary stalwarts Bastian Schweisteiger, Lukas Podolski, Per Mertesacker, Philipp Lahm and Miroslav Klose have all retired from the international fold. Indeed, only Podolski is still playing at all. The baton’s been handed to the fresh faces of Joshua Kimmich, Leroy Sane and Timo Werner. Can they maintain the sky-high standards set by their predecessors on football's greatest stage?
5 HOME SWEDE HOME?
Apparently not. Sweden join Group H contenders Senegal as the only squads in the competition without a single player selected from their domestic league. Coach Janne Andersson’s 23 are registered to clubs from 12 different countries, stretching from USA (midfielder Gustav Svensson) to the UAE (well-travelled striker Marcus Berg), with a mixed bag of European nations in-between.