Paraguay Coach Eyes Germany After Stunning Brazil and Argentina
Paraguay's coach is setting his sights on Germany after the national team pulled off wins against South American giants Brazil and Argentina, asking why not more?

Paraguay Riding High After South American Scalps
Paraguay's head coach has made clear that his side fears no opponent after the national team recorded victories over both Brazil and Argentina. With those two South American heavyweights already beaten, the coach has publicly raised the question of why Germany should be any different, according to a report by The Star.
The back-to-back results against Brazil and Argentina have injected fresh confidence into a Paraguay squad that has historically operated in the shadow of its more celebrated neighbors. Beating either of those sides would be a headline result in any era. Beating both, in close succession, shifts expectations considerably.
The coach did not shy away from the momentum. His remarks pointing toward Germany were not throwaway lines. They signal a deliberate attempt to frame Paraguay as a team capable of competing with any nation, not just within South America.
What the Wins Over Brazil and Argentina Mean
Results against Brazil and Argentina carry weight that goes beyond any single competition. Both nations rank among the most decorated football countries in the world. Argentina are the reigning World Cup champions, and Brazil remain one of the sport's perennial powerhouses with a record five World Cup titles.
For Paraguay, these victories serve as hard evidence that the team's development under the current coaching staff is translating into results at the highest level. It is one thing to perform well in qualifying or friendlies against lesser opposition. It is another to put points on the board against continental royalty.
The coach's confidence is rooted in that reality. His squad did not benefit from fortunate deflections or absentee opponents. They went out and won.
Germany as the Next Benchmark
The mention of Germany is significant. Germany sit among the elite on a global scale, with four World Cup titles and a tradition of producing technically sound, physically imposing squads. They represent a different kind of challenge from South American opponents, with a distinct tactical culture and depth of talent across the Bundesliga and beyond.
By naming Germany specifically, Paraguay's coach is drawing a line. The argument is simple: if this squad can beat the best in South America, the best in Europe should not be treated as an impossibility.
That framing matters for morale, for recruitment, and for how opponents prepare to face Paraguay. A team that believes it can beat anyone plays differently from one that sets its ceiling at regional competition.
Building a New Identity for Paraguay
Paraguay has a respectable footballing history, including a Copa America title in 1953 and 1979, and a run to the quarterfinals of the 2010 World Cup. But for much of the past decade, the team has struggled to consistently qualify for major tournaments and rarely entered fixtures against top nations as a genuine threat.
The current coach appears to be working to change that narrative. Results against Brazil and Argentina are the strongest possible evidence he can offer, and the willingness to look ahead to Germany rather than simply celebrate what has already been achieved suggests he is not interested in treating these wins as the peak of ambition.
For Paraguayan football fans, that attitude is a welcome shift. The confidence is earned, not manufactured.
Football Correspondent
Alex covers football and the global game with fast, sharp analysis.







