Germany will this week issue a World Cup victory postage stamp, five million of which were printed before the final was even held, officials said.
"This year I dared to hope very early on that our team would take the title," said Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble yesterday.
"It's wonderful that the team turned this dream into a reality. I hope that this stamp will remind many citizens of the immense joy the team has given us."
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Graphic designer Lutz Menze told German national news agency DPA that the image shows footballers running, but not their faces in order to honour the whole team, not an individual.
Menze said that producing a stamp usually takes six months, but that he was only contacted by the government after the tournament had already started.
At a press conference Monday, a journalist asked a finance ministry spokeswoman what would have happened to the print run if Germany had lost.
The ministry spokeswoman replied simply: "We always firmly believed the German team would win."
She said she did not know how much had been paid to print the stamps but the news conference moderator noted that had the Germans lost, "their value probably would have gone through the roof".