The U.S. got a goal by Jozy Altidore (then playing with Dutch team AZ Alkmaar) and an own goal by the German goalkeeper, Marc-Andre ter Stegen (of Borussia Mönchengladbach), and were up 2-0 in the 16th minute. I was in the upper deck, behind a corner, in what would have been center field in RFK’s baseball configuration, surrounded by German fans, and they were stunned.
They were stunned, but not distressed: After all, this was not a competitive match, nor was it a full-strength Germany team. Of the 20 players on their roster, 17 of whom they sent into the game, only 3 would appear for them in the 2014 World Cup Final: Benedikt Höwedes (Schalke 04 of Gelsenkirchen, Germany), Miroslav Klose (Rome team SS Lazio), and, very briefly at the end of that final, Per Mertesacker.
(In addition to Mertesacker, Lukas Podolski played in this game. It marked the 1st time I had ever seen current Arsenal players play. I had seen Mesut Özil play live at Yankee Stadium the previous Summer, but he was with Real Madrid at the time. The following Summer, I saw Arsenal play the New York Red Bulls at Red Bull Arena in Harrison, New Jersey.)
Heiko Westermann (Hamburger SV) scored in the 51st minute, but Clint Dempsey (North London team Tottenham Hotspur) scored in the 60th, and again in the 65th, to make it 4-1. Max Kruse (SC Freiburg) scored in the 78th, and Julian Draxler (Schalke) scored in the 81st, to get Germany to within 4-3, but the U.S. hung on to win.
Ironically, the U.S. manager was one of Germany’s greatest players, Jürgen Klinsmann. The legendary player for VfB Stuttgart had this habit of guiding the U.S. team to big wins in friendlies, including away to Germany, the Netherlands and Italy; but not in games that actually counted for something.
RFK Stadium, built in 1961 as District of Columbia Stadium (or "D.C. Stadium"), and renamed for the assassinated Presidential candidate, U.S. Senator, and former U.S. Attorney General in 1969, had been home to baseball's Washington Senators (1962-71) and Washington Nationals (2005-07); the NFL's Washington Redskins (1961-96) and the USFL's Washington Federals (1983-84); and the football teams of George Washington University (1961-66) and Howard University (1974-76), and the Military Bowl (2008-12).
More to the point, it was home to these professional soccer teams: The Washington Whips of the North American Soccer League (1967-68), the Washington Diplomats of the NASL (1974, and again 1977-81), Team America of the NASL (1983), a new version of the Diplomats in the American Soccer League (1988-90), D.C. United of Major League Soccer (1996-2017), and the Washington Freedom of the Women's United Soccer Association (2001-03). It hosted more U.S. national team matches than any other facility, 25; 5 matches of the 1994 World Cup; and 9 matches of the 1996 Olympics (with most sports held in Atlanta).
But with every team that had played there having moved out, it was scheduled for demolition in 2022, so that a new stadium for the NFL team, now named the Washington Commanders, could be built on the site, so they can get out of their unpleasant stadium in the suburbs of Landover, Maryland. (UPDATE: The stadium was demolished in 2023.)
*
June 2, 2013 was a Sunday. This was also the day the HBO series Game of Thrones aired the murder scene known as "The Red Wedding." I have a separate entry for that event.
American-style football was out of season. The NBA Playoffs were approaching a climax. The next day, the Miami Heat beat the Indiana Pacers to win the Eastern Conference title, and went on to beat the San Antonio Spurs in the Finals.

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