The records were overshadowed by the overwhelming victory achieved by the German national team over its Scottish counterpart, 5-1, at the Allianz Arena.
The lead goal came early for Germany in the 10th minute through Florian Wirtz, then Jamal Musiala scored the second goal in the 19th minute.
Ryan Porteous received a red card due to a violent intervention against Ilkay Gundogan, which resulted in Germany receiving a penalty kick, which Kai Havertz converted into the net in the last minute of the first half.
The German team became the first to score 3 goals in the first half of the group stage since France against Belgium in the 1984 edition.
Wirtz became the youngest player to score a goal for the German national team in the history of the German German national team at the age of 21 years and 42 days, followed by Musiala at the age of 21 years and 109 days.
In the second half, Niklas Volkrug, 5 minutes after coming on for Havertz, was able to score the fourth goal, and with it huge celebrations in the stronghold of Bayern Munich.
This became the first time in Germany’s history that it led by 4 goals throughout its participation in the Euro competition, but Antonio Rudiger’s own goal stopped this historic record before the fifth goal from Emre Can restored it.
It is noteworthy that Julian Nagelsmann has become the youngest coach to lead a national team in the history of European nations, at the age of 36 years and 327 days.
With Germany’s victory, Germany’s balance rises to 3 points at the top of the group, awaiting the match between Hungary and Switzerland on Saturday for the same group.
Now we leave you with Germany’s five against Scotland…