at the
2006 FIFA World Cup Klose's consistency as a goal-scorer in
his first Bundesliga season at 1. FC Kaiserslautern earned him attention. In January 2001, then-head coach of the
Poland national team,
Jerzy Engel, travelled to Germany to persuade Klose to choose to represent Poland. This request was declined by Klose, who said, "I have a German passport, and if things are still running this way, I have a chance to play for
Rudi Völler." Klose's hopes were justified, as he would soon score for Germany. in the 73rd minute, Germany head coach Rudi Völler put him in as a substitute. Two minutes from time, he headed home the winner in a 2–1 victory for Germany, and celebrated with a front-flip. Four days later, in his second match, Klose helped Germany temporarily lead their
qualification group, as he came on in the 67th minute and scored in the 3–2 win against
Greece in the 82nd minute, making it two crucial goals in only 33 minutes on the pitch. Two
hat-tricks against
Israel and
Austria in friendlies prior to the upcoming World Cup were enough to establish him in Germany's starting line-up for the tournament. Klose came to international prominence at the
2002 World Cup in Korea–Japan with five headed goals for Germany, finishing as the joint second-highest goalscorer alongside
Rivaldo. Klose also became the
first player to score five headers in a
FIFA World Cup, and he
celebrated two of his goals with his trademark front-flip, earning him the nickname "
Salto-Klose" (German:
Salto = somersault). His goal tally included a hat-trick in Germany's 8–0 hammering of
Saudi Arabia, as well as one goal each against the
Republic of Ireland and
Cameroon.
Euro 2004 Klose participated in
UEFA Euro 2004 and came on as a substitute in two matches, against
Latvia and the
Czech Republic, but was not completely fit, since he had just recovered from a knee injury. He was not able to score and Germany was eliminated after the first round.
2006 World Cup In the opening match of the
2006 World Cup in Germany, Klose scored two close-range goals in a 4–2 win over
Costa Rica, and added a similar brace in the final group game to defeat
Ecuador 3–0 and make Germany the group winners. Klose scored an 80th-minute headed equaliser against
Argentina in the quarter-finals, and Germany won the resulting penalty shootout. With five goals, he finished as the top scorer of the tournament, taking home the
FIFA World Cup Golden Boot.
Euro 2008 At
Euro 2008, Klose started the opening
group stage match against Poland and assisted
Lukas Podolski's two goals in a 2–0 victory. He played the remaining two group games against
Croatia and Austria with no goals of his own. He finally broke his duck during the
knockout stages, scoring for Germany in the quarter-final and the semi-final against
Portugal and
Turkey respectively. In both matches, he scored Germany's second goal, and both games were won 3–2. However, Klose was unable to score during the
final against
Spain, which Germany lost 1–0. At the end of the qualifying campaign, Klose had achieved 21 assists and 63 goals while playing for Germany, trailing Gerd Müller's German goalscoring record by five (albeit playing almost twice as many internationals compared to Müller). At
the tournament, Klose came off the bench in all three of Germany's
Group B games, but failed to score a goal. In the quarter-final game against Greece, Klose started the match and scored Germany's third goal in a 4–2 win. Klose again had to come off the bench in the semi-final against
Italy, but failed to add to his goal tally as Germany were eliminated with a 2–1 loss.
2014 World Cup and retirement Prior to the tournament, Klose said the
2014 World Cup would be his final one for Germany, stating he wanted one more shot at trying to win the World Cup and having done that, he was content. On 6 June 2014, in Germany's final friendly before the World Cup against
Armenia, Klose scored his 69th international goal, thus breaking Gerd Müller's record of 68 goals and becoming Germany's record goalscorer. Klose scored his record-equalling 15th World Cup goal to help Germany to a 2–2 draw against Ghana on 21 June 2014, after entering the game as a 69th-minute substitute for
Mario Götze (who had scored Germany's first goal) with his team trailing 2–1. This tied him with the
Brazilian player
Ronaldo. With this goal, Klose became the
third player in history to score in four different World Cups. On 8 July, Klose scored a record 16th World Cup goal in the 23rd minute
against hosts Brazil in the semi-finals, his second goal of the 2014 World Cup. That goal gave Germany a 2–0 lead
en route to a 7–1 win over Brazil, and Klose surpassed Ronaldo's previous record of 15 World Cup goals. Klose set another record by becoming the first player to appear in four consecutive World Cup semi-finals. Klose started in the
World Cup final against Argentina and played until the 88th minute, when he was substituted for Mario Götze. Götze would score the 113th-minute goal which gave Germany a 1–0 victory over Argentina, earning Germany's fourth World Cup title overall and first as a reunited country. Klose announced his retirement from international football one month after the final. ==Managerial career==