
Bartlomiej Zborowski / EPA
Greek fans cheer for their team in downtown Gdansk, Poland, before their match against Germany on Friday.
Greeks were hoping against hope that their national soccer team would triumph over mighty Germany in the Euro 2012 championship, restoring lost pride to the debt-stricken country by getting one over its economic paymaster.
Friday night's quarterfinal fixture, in the Polish port of Gdansk, pits two nations against each other whose ties have rarely been so sour, so bristling.
Greece fans are seeking respect for their country after its humiliating economic collapse and Germany’s predominant role in lending bailout money – along with strict austerity measures.
"It's not good that sports and politics are together, but today we have no other choice," said Greece fan Michalis Kalotrapesis, wearing a white national team shirt and training top. "We are playing for our country and for our image in Europe and all over the world."

Frank Augstein / AP
An artist, himself painted in German colors, paints the face of a soccer fan with the colors of the Greek national flag in Gdansk on Friday.
Germany will be cheered on at the game by Chancellor Angela Merkel, a hated figure in Greece, who for many personifies the painful bailout conditions and the euro zone's strict approach to the debt-strapped state.
Merkel loves football and loves the German team. Earlier in the tournament, she went to visit their training base. She attends high-profile matches and was once photographed with bare-chested midfielder Mesut Ozil in the changing room.
'Bye-bye Greeks'
A crunch meeting between Merkel and other European leaders in Rome on Friday was moved up to an earlier start time so that she could attend the game.
"Bye-bye Greeks, we can't rescue you today!" Germany's top-selling Bild proclaimed on its front page on Friday in the colors of the Greek flag.

Thomas Peter / Reuters
A man takes a copy of the German "Bild" newspaper from a stack in a newsagent in Berlin Friday. The headline reads, "Bye, bye Greeks. Today we won't be able to save you!"
"Bankrupt THEM," blared leading Greek paper Sport Day.
Even the respected Greek daily Kathimerini drummed home to Greeks that this match is against a foe popularly blamed for saddling Greece with a punitive austerity program, chronic unemployment and years of deep economic recession.
"Whoever thinks today's match is just a game is wrong," the paper wrote, vowing it was "politics (maybe even war) by other means."
More from NBC Sports on Euro 2012:
-
Euro zone battle moves to pitch in Germany-Greece
-
Greece seeks to win Germany's respect
-
Topless protest shocks Euro 2012 psychic pig
-
Shaken France must find a way to stop Spain
"To many Greeks, victory will represent the triumph of the weak against the wealth, might and arrogance of the powerful -- the victim would humble his executioner… If the Germans win, they'll see it as confirmation of their diligence, strategy, talent and thrift," it added.
Some German car manufacturers, like Volkswagen and Daimler, are making special arrangements that will allow their workforce on shift to watch the match.
Greece has never beaten Germany
Officials from Volkswagen told NBC News that employees will be able to leave early on Friday, but that workers will have to make up for the free time at a later point.
Greece have never beaten Germany but now would be the ideal time to do so in order to cheer up the public back home and give them hope that Greece can repeat their amazing run to the European Championship crown in 2004.
The chances are slim to say the least. The Germans, among the favorites to take the tournament title, go into the match on the back of 14 consecutive competitive victories stretching back to the 2010 World Cup.
For Germany, playing in Gdansk, which prior to World War Two was the German- and Polish-inhabited free city of Danzig, will feel like a home game.
Thirty thousand Germans are expected to travel to watch the game. Only 6,000 Greek supporters are expected. Most Poles say their hearts beat for the underdog.
Back in Athens, not everyone was drawn into the spirit.
"I couldn't care less," Said Panagiotis Pappas, 22, a chemistry student. "We're on the brink of disaster and all they care is about is football for Christ's sake."
More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:
- Mexico captures suspected son of most wanted drug lord 'El Chapo'
- Reports: West may offer Syria's Assad immunity if gives up power
- Norway prosecutors ask court to declare mass murderer Breivik insane
- Mass grave found of 'giant wombats' the size of a rhinoceros
- South African couple released by Somali pirates after 20 months
Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world
Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

I heard Merkel bet all the money on the greeks.
Boo Who? Greece made its own bed of problems and expects everyone else to bail them out including the Germans who have keep their economy on the straight and narrow. Greece has lost its history by its lack of Spartan like reliance on hard work and oneself. The great Greek leaders of past history must be rolling over in their graves by the lack of a spine in what passes for Greece today.
"I couldn't care less," Said Panagiotis Pappas, 22, a chemistry student. "We're on the brink of disaster and all they care is about is football for Christ's sake."
There's a little film called Victory, Starring Sylvester Stalone, Max Von Sydow, and Michael Kane. It's a good film, and highly reckomend our greek counterparts to watch it sometime.
Sometimes a game is more than a game when lives ARE at stake.
Who would you bet on? Germany with all of the money? or the Greeks with NOTHINg but greed? Go to hell Greece! LIke in WW2. Who would you rather have on your side? the Greeks, the French , or the Germans? AS Patton said: I would rather have the Germans in front of me, than the French(and Greeks) behind me!"
The Germans are not Greece's "economic paymasters" They simply work hard, spend wisely, and rightfully wonder why they have to pay for someone who does neither of the above.
And Greece gets beat up by Germany. Germans totally dominated the game. Not this time, Greece...
Deutschland uber Greek.
Germany 4 Greece 2. If I wasn't a teatotaler I would cry into my beer.
Germany is a very obnoxious nation. They want to severly punish a poorer neighbor nation for minor faults when they have much worse faults themselves. The governing party in Germany calls itself "Christian Democrat" but Germany isn't willing to treat others the way they would want to be treated if the situation were reversed, the most basic teaching of Jesus.
Live beyond one's means and over spent is hardly minor faults. You reap what you sowed and Germany has no financial nor normal obligation to bail out troubled nation like Greece to the detriment of German people.
Yes compared to Germany's faults, over spending is a minor fault. Unfortunately my own country (USA) has some of the same faults (as both Germany and Greece).
Arrogance, lack of respect for other's sovereignty, austerity demands in time of depression (at least USA isn't guilty of this); these are all a lot more serious faults than over spending.
Germany is behaving like the rich man in the parable who was forgiven a huge debt by the king and then oppressed a poor man who owed him a little. Yet Her leadership claims to be Christian?
The 'Have Nuts' versus the 'Have Nots.'
Germany wins again
Greece to the garbage bin.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lW1cej00UIw&feature=related
The Greeks should be mad at themselves as they are the ones to blame for their own mess. I think the Greek soccer players should stand face to face and kick each other in the crotch for an hour.
The Acronym for the final four teams is PIGS.