The historically strong start of the German national team at the European Championship quickly faded into the background after the 50-minute basketball thriller against Lithuania.

When the 18,017 euphoric fans in the sold-out arena in Cologne were still celebrating the outstanding NBA professional Franz Wagner and his comrades, the debates were already running in the background as to whether that was 109:107 (96:96, 89:89, 46:41). two renewals.

The Lithuanians protested against the scoring because they were denied a free throw during the game after a technical foul against the German bench.

National coach Gordon Herbert admitted that he only noticed the faux pas of the officials a few seconds before the end of the game.

The one point the still-winless Lithuanians could have made from the free-throw in regular time could have been game-changing in the hard-fought thriller.

But instead of a big celebration in green, there was the next home win in front of a euphoric German audience.

Strong performance by Lo

And the key figure against Lithuania was Wagner, who with his 32 points was reminiscent of the young Dirk Nowitzki.

"I'm very proud of our players, it was a tough 50 minutes but we made it through somehow.

I don't know if we would have managed 55 minutes," said Herbert.

The 21-year-old match winner Wagner commented: “It was extremely fun.

The fans were really crazy.

The game went up and down.

Winning a game like that is unbelievable.” For Wagner it was only his eighth international match, he only made his debut in August.

Never before - not even in the Nowitzki era - had there been three victories at the start of a European Championship tournament.

"I have no idea what's coming next," said Maodo Lo, who was strong again, especially in extra time, about the Lithuanian protest.

"I think we deserved to win." President Ingo Weiss had shouted out of sheer euphoria at Alba Berlin's support player: "A lot of balls in his pants." Lo had converted several three-pointers in the final minutes and thus helped initiate the win.

Captain Dennis Schröder (25 points, eight assists) was also one of the guarantors despite the poor shooting rate.

“Dennis is our leader.

He is the lynchpin of our team – defensively and offensively.

He's also gotten more experience over the years," Lo said of Schröder.

"Basketball Germany is lucky to have a Dennis Schröder."

The other German professionals were also euphoric after the thriller with countless twists and turns.

"This is madness.

I'm a bit speechless because it was very, very intense.

But it was awesome," said center Johannes Voigtmann.

How intense it was could be seen in the Lithuanian press conference.

Center Jonas Valanciunas had to leave with cramps because the game in the Lanxess Arena had affected him so much.

Valanciunas was the second standout of the afternoon with 34 points and 14 rebounds.

Wagner was everywhere

It was heated and rousing from the start against the previously winless Lithuanians, who were again supported by thousands of green-clad fans.

Center Daniel Theis, who only recovered from a knee injury this week, contributed the first five points, Wagner was the most conspicuous player in the German jersey in the early minutes: he moved aggressively to the basket and also showed his ability on the defensive with a steal and a spectacular block whole repertoire.

It was impressive how the Germans held their ground in the zone against the two big players Valanciunas (2.13 meters) and Domantas Sabonis (2.11 meters).

Wagner was everywhere up front: The 21-year-old from the Orlando Magic scored from the middle distance, attacked the ring and then took over from the line of three.

“Franz was amazing,” praised Lo – almost all of the other teammates had expressed similar opinions.

In extra time it went back and forth: Sometimes Lithuania led, sometimes the Germans.

At the end of the 50 minutes, a last three from Arnas Butkevicius missed the target - and the game was decided.

The basketball enthusiasm around the multifunctional hall in Cologne is enormous.

Well over 100,000 spectators were already in the arena on the first three match days, in addition to the German fans in Schröder or Nowitzki jerseys, the Lithuanians were particularly represented in large numbers and even made the home field advantage disputed by the hosts on Sunday.

"It's awesome.

It really makes me want to play here.

The fans are unbelievable,” said Johannes Thiemann about the backdrop, which is rather unusual in Germany.

Tournament ambassador Nowitzki is also impressed by the event on the Rhine.

"Almost 19,000 fans in the hall, it's a bit tingling," said the 44-year-old former professional on Saturday evening in the ZDF "Sportstudio", where he spoke in detail about himself and the current mood around the EM.

So far, this has primarily been felt in Cologne and not nationwide, because the games of Schröder and Co. can only be seen in the live stream and not on television.