That's all for today, thanks for tuning into Sportskeeda's live coverage of a dramatic night revolving around Group F. It was a topsy-turvy array of events. We'll bring you all the previews, build-up and live coverage of a mouth-watering knockout stage in Euro 2020.
Until then, stay safe, good bye.
Germany are set to take on England next Tuesday, setting up an instant classic.
The Hungarians played at a serious tempo and desire; and one could admit they deserve a lot more. Germany were not as prolific as they are, but dug out a point to show for all the quality they ooze.
FT: Germany 2-2 Hungary
Germany come back from behind not once but twice to draw a point against Hungary and progress to the round-of-16 of Euro 2020. It was one of the most difficult nights for Joachim Low in what suddenly appeared as his final match as Germany boss at some point. Adam Szalai and Andras Schafar's goals were cancelled out by strikes from Kai Havertz and super sub Leon Goretzka.
After all, Germany, France and Portugal all progress to the knockout stages. But, one has to feel for Hungary. They pushed three top footballing nations to their limit. If seen from an angle, they took points of the last two world champions - France and Germany.
92' Germany are enjoying a slate of corners here. They are in no hurry to take it.
91' Four minutes of stoppage time to be added in Munich.
90' Kroos picks up a pocket of space in the midfield and drives through. As he attempts to poke it through to Goretzka, Germany win a corner through a deflection.
88' Final roll of the dice for Hungary. Nemanja Nikolic and Gergo Lovrencsics are coming on.
As it stands, Hungarian hearts will be broken, as Germany look set to go through.
84' Musiala does superbly well on the left, with a shimmy and then a fine square pass to the middle of the penalty area. Werner's initial shot is blocked, but Goretzka is there to power home the equaliser. What an extraordinary turn of events!
HUNGARY 2-2 GERMANY! GORETZKA!
83' Double substitution for Germany. Jamal Musiala and Kevin Volland are on for Gosens and Ginter respectively.
82' Goalscorer and creator Szalai is off. Kevin Varga takes his spot.
81' Chance for Kroos!
This is Toni Kroos at his very best. He prods forward with the ball, plays a quick one-two with Muller and then takes a swipe that is just off the far post. That was instinctive and inspiring.
80' After some sideways passing, Germany's Kroos plays a ball over the top for Muller, but the effort is well over the bar.
79' Sane tries to wriggle past the Hungary full-backs but is hunted down by not one but two players. This is heroic defending from the Hungarians.
77' Germany continue to recycle possession; their centre-backs are high up the pitch, accompanied by Kroos. A ball is played into Goretzka but Gluacsi gathers again.
71' Kimmich, once again, plays a long ball to the far post with Gosens in wait. Gulacsi clutches the header with ease.
Timo Werner is on for Kai Havertz.
69' Andras Schafer headed the ball beyond Neuer after being played in by Szalai with an audacios chip. He just wanted it more!
69' HUNGARY ARE BACK IN FRONT! IT'S ABSOLUTELY INSANE AT ALLIANZ ARENA.
67' Kai Havertz beats everyone in the air after Gulacsi fails to parry the ball away. Huge mistake, and Germany are level.
GOAL! GERMANY ARE BACK!
Another yellow card, this time it's Fiola for a challenge on Ginter.
65' Short corner from Kroos to Kimmich. The latter plays a ball into the box but Havertz is beaten in the air.
Yellow card for goalscorer Szalai, for a foul in midfield.
63' Twice in the space of one minute, Gosens receives the ball on the left wing but loses out as many times.
61' Sane lunges into Fiola and stops the ball with his hand. Receives a yellow card.
60' Kimmich picks out Havertz with a gorgeous ball over the top for Havertz, but uncharacteristically, the Chelsea man's first touch is extremely disappointing.
59' The free-kick is smashed at a frenetic pace, and Neuer is there to punch it away.
58' Szalai drags the ball into the corner and is taken down by Ginter. Promising free-kick position for Hungary.
57' Leon Goretzka is the first of many predicted changes for Germany. He is receiving his instructions on the touchline. Gundogan off.
54' Germany's free-kick is lifted into Hummels' territory, but in the attempt to win the second ball, Gnabry fouls Kleinheisler.
53' Sane receives the ball on the right and tries to weave his way in, but is fouled. Germany free-kick.
50' Havertz receives a pass from his deep-lying midfielders and tries to bend one with his left foot from the right channel. His shot is a sign of promise but straight to the hands of Gulacsi.
49' Szalai drops in deep and plays a lob over to the right-hand side to his overlapping wing-backs. Gosens, however, slides in to prevent the danger.
48' Sane and Havertz play a nice little one-two down the right flank but a robust pack of white shirts wins the ball back after closing them down.
47' Sane's first bit of contribution in the second-half is a cross fizzed into the six-yard area. Gnabry's heavy touch means Hungary can clear.
Second-half is underway, with 45 minutes left for Hungary to escape from Group F.
A moment of sheer brilliance from Adam Szalai handed Hungary an unlikely lead against Germany inside the opening 10 minutes. The ball from Sallai was technically perfect. Meanwhile, Germany's performance leaves a lot to be desired, as they are probing but lacking the quality in their final pass. Hummels was denied by the post and Ginter almost broke the deadlock from close range. Big second-half coming up for Group F's permutations.
Did you know?
Germany have never been defeated twice in the group stages of a major competition. Could Hungary pull off a miracle?
HT: Hungary 0-1 Germany
46' Gosens receives a diagonal and tries to bring Havertz into play. The latter, making a run in behind, doesn't receive it due to alert defending. That's been the story of the half for Germany.
45' Two minutes added at the end of first-half.
41' Germany are only churning passes after passes out. Gundogan tries to find Gnabry inside the penalty box, but the ball is intercepted.
39' Long way out, but on target. Szalai gets the ball from Fiola, tries to run into space and then launch one from distance. That's eat-and-drink for Manuel Neuer, who gathers with ease.
38' Kroos lifts the ball into the box waiting for a runner. Hungary, though, win the first ball.
Hungary are defending well, but what is highly pertinent is the way they are going about their business with the ball. There's a specific methodology behind their crossing and every attacking foray. Although they may not have anything close to the quality Germany possess, the hosts are having a lot to think about in dealing with Hungary.
33' Szalai, the man of the moment, uses the space in behind the Germany full-backs to run at the empty ground. He tries to cut inside and whip something into a dangerous territory, but a certain Hummels is there to thwart a possible second.
29' This is heating up, as now it's Gundogan's turn to enter the referee's book for scything Kleinheisler.
28' Botka picks up a yellow card for a clumsy challenge on Gundogan.
27' Kroos arrows a cross into Hummels at the far post, but this time his header is too high to test the Hungarian goalkeeper.
24' Germany continue to win possession back, and if this is the case, Hungary only are inviting trouble. Sane wins the ball back and plays it to Kimmich out wide. His cross is just above the black shirts in the box.
22' Hummels is still inside the box, and Ginter finds himself in a goalscoring position from three yards out. His scuffed effort is straight at Gulacsi.
21' GINTER! Again, Germany almost with an equaliser!
20' OFF THE BAR! GERMANY COME CLOSE!
Hungary switch off in the box and a mismatch of man-marking results in Hummels rising above the rest. Only the bar stands between him and an elusive European championship goal.
19' Havertz finds space on the right, dances and twists before his cross is blocked for a corner.
What Hungary are doing ever so well is keeping a rigid shape off the ball where players are close to each another, helping each other out and using their wing-backs to maraud forward in turnover of possession.
16' Chance for Germany!
That is some run for Kai Havertz, who just drops into this pocket of space on the edge of the area, darts forward and then whips in a delicious low cross into the dangerous area. Gosens was diving in, but he couldn't get a touch due to a strong palm away from Gulacsi.
15' Hand-ball given against Germany. Hungary can play with composure and time on their side now.
13' Germany move higher up the pitch, but are struggling to break Hungary down. Rudiger ventures forward, lays it for Gosens who then finds an accurate pass into Sane. The Bayern Munich man, who is yet to sort his feet out this game, misplaces another pass.
It was a stunning cross from the right, but there was still a lot to be done. And Szalai implemented the finishing touches, diving in to power a header past Neuer. A captain's goal! As it stands, Germany are set to finish last in Group F.
10' Adam Szalai, the man who plays in Germany for Mainz, scores against Germany at Allianz Arena, courtesy of one smashing ball into his path from his strike partner Rolland Sallai.
Fasten your seat belts, as mentioned before, this is the first of many turns and detours Group F promises to provide.
GOAL! HUNGARY 1-0 GERMANY!
7' Fiola catches Kimmich from behind Germany's defensive zone. Kroos' resulting free-kick almost brings Rudiger in, but the ball comes too quick for Rudiger.
5' A long ball threated through for Sallai. He was in there with the goal gaping, but an important touch from Hummels takes it away.
4' First corner of the game for Hungary. Rudiger blocks it and concedes.
3' CHANCE FOR GERMANY!
That's an early alarm bell from Germany. A 50-yard pass is played into a proactive Kimmich, who was looking to run in behind and cause problems. He controls the diagonal beautifully and lashes at it, only to be denied by an outstretched hand from Gulacsi. Strong hand, that.
1' Hummels and Rudiger are the only ones at the back for Germany. The wing-backs are already stretching the Hungarian defence.
We're underway in Munich!
Germany and Hungary's players are out, and we are ready to stand up for the national anthem; starting with Hungary.
Here's a take on the five surprise packages so far in Euro 2020, by our expert columnist Paul Merson in his weekly Sportskeeda column. Who do you think has left jaws on the floor thus far?
Kick-off in under 10 minutes! Are you ready for a roller coaster Group F finale?
Fabrizio Romano updates on the latest transfer news
Should he find the back of the net against Hungary, Kai Havertz will become the fourth-youngest player to score in back-to-back major tournament appearances for Germany.
Germany substitutes: Florian Neuhaus, Bernd Leno, Kevin Trapp, Emre Can, Robin Koch, Thomas Muller, Niklas Sule, Leon Goretzka, Jamal Musaila, Timo Werner, Marcelo Halstenberg, Kevin Volland
Hungary substitutes: Kevin Varga, Denes Dibusz, Roland Varga, Adam Bogdan, Gergo Lovrencsics, David Siger, Szabolcs Schon, Filip Holender, Bendeguz Bolla, Akos Kecskes, Adam Lang, Nemanja Nikolic
Germany and Low are lining up for this game with their strongest XI. Once again, there's no space for Leon Goretzka or Timo Werner in the starting XI. The width provided by the wing-backs will cause all sorts of problems to Hungary. Add that to the form Serge Gnabry and Kai Havertz are, and one can only imagine how deadly the 2014 FIFA World Cup champions can be.
Hungary are clear in their mindset, five at the back enveloped with three midfielders in front. They'll have their task cut out against Germany.
Hungary confirmed XI (3-5-2): Peter Gulacsi, Loic Nego, Endre Botka, Willi Orban, Attila Szalai, Attila Fiola, Laszlo Kleinheisler, Adam Nagy, Andras Schafer, Roland Sallai, Adam Slazai
Germany confirmed XI (3-4-2-1): Manuel Neuer, Matthias Ginter, Mats Hummels, Antonio Rudiger, Joshua Kimmich, Ilkay Gundogan, Toni Kroos, Robin Gosens, Leroy Sane, Kai Havertz, Serge Gnabry
TEAM NEWS IS IN!
Group E is all done, with Sweden topping courtesy of a late winner. Spain's 5-0 rout of Slovakia means they qualify for the last 16 as well. Meanwhile in Group F, the line-ups will be out in just under a couple of minutes.
Read what out expert columnist, and former Liverpool FC goalkeeper David James has to say on the favourites to lift the coveted Euro 2020. <Insert Caption>
Germany, France, Portugal and Hungary are set to battle it out against each other tonight to complete the Euro 2020 group stages. The Germans take on Hungary, having won one and lost their first two matches in the competition. With Portugal lurking as well, the Germans know they have to claim all three points in order to comfortably go through to the knockout stages. Joachim Low's side regained momentum with a stunning 4-2 win against Portugal in their previous outing.
Hungary too, have shown promise in their 1-1 draw versus France. Only a win here, though, can possibly give them a chance of escaping from the group of death.
Hello and Welcome to Sportskeeda's live Euro 2020 coverage of another highly-anticipated Group f clash between Germany and Hungary from the Allianz Arena. This is your host, Akarshak Roy, providing you all the build-up and live updates from the game.
We'll bring you all the previews, build-up and live coverage of a mouth-watering knockout stage in Euro 2020.
Until then, stay safe, good bye.
Germany come back from behind not once but twice to draw a point against Hungary and progress to the round-of-16 of Euro 2020. It was one of the most difficult nights for Joachim Low in what suddenly appeared as his final match as Germany boss at some point.
Adam Szalai and Andras Schafar's goals were cancelled out by strikes from Kai Havertz and super sub Leon Goretzka.
After all, Germany, France and Portugal all progress to the knockout stages. But, one has to feel for Hungary. They pushed three top footballing nations to their limit. If seen from an angle, they took points of the last two world champions - France and Germany.
This is Toni Kroos at his very best. He prods forward with the ball, plays a quick one-two with Muller and then takes a swipe that is just off the far post. That was instinctive and inspiring.
Meanwhile, Germany's performance leaves a lot to be desired, as they are probing but lacking the quality in their final pass. Hummels was denied by the post and Ginter almost broke the deadlock from close range.
Big second-half coming up for Group F's permutations.
Germany have never been defeated twice in the group stages of a major competition. Could Hungary pull off a miracle?
Hungary switch off in the box and a mismatch of man-marking results in Hummels rising above the rest. Only the bar stands between him and an elusive European championship goal.
That is some run for Kai Havertz, who just drops into this pocket of space on the edge of the area, darts forward and then whips in a delicious low cross into the dangerous area.
Gosens was diving in, but he couldn't get a touch due to a strong palm away from Gulacsi.
The Bayern Munich man, who is yet to sort his feet out this game, misplaces another pass.
That's an early alarm bell from Germany. A 50-yard pass is played into a proactive Kimmich, who was looking to run in behind and cause problems. He controls the diagonal beautifully and lashes at it, only to be denied by an outstretched hand from Gulacsi. Strong hand, that.
Here's a take on the five surprise packages so far in Euro 2020, by our expert columnist Paul Merson in his weekly Sportskeeda column. Who do you think has left jaws on the floor thus far?
Also read: Fabrizio Romano's Transfer Roundup: Barcelona acting decisively in the transfer market, Manchester United working on Sancho and more
Should he find the back of the net against Hungary, Kai Havertz will become the fourth-youngest player to score in back-to-back major tournament appearances for Germany.
Hungary substitutes: Kevin Varga, Denes Dibusz, Roland Varga, Adam Bogdan, Gergo Lovrencsics, David Siger, Szabolcs Schon, Filip Holender, Bendeguz Bolla, Akos Kecskes, Adam Lang, Nemanja Nikolic
Hungary are clear in their mindset, five at the back enveloped with three midfielders in front. They'll have their task cut out against Germany.
Meanwhile in Group F, the line-ups will be out in just under a couple of minutes.
Euro 2020: Ranking the top 5 favorites to win the tournament
The Germans take on Hungary, having won one and lost their first two matches in the competition. With Portugal lurking as well, the Germans know they have to claim all three points in order to comfortably go through to the knockout stages.
Joachim Low's side regained momentum with a stunning 4-2 win against Portugal in their previous outing.
Hungary too, have shown promise in their 1-1 draw versus France. Only a win here, though, can possibly give them a chance of escaping from the group of death.