The football world has been saddened by the death of German football legend Andreas Brehme at the age of 63.
Brehme scored the decisive late penalty as West Germany defeated Argentina to win the World Cup in 1990 and enjoyed a distinguished club career with Bayern Munich, Inter Milan, Kaiserslautern and others.
His death on Monday night - from a cardiac arrest - comes just a few weeks after the coach of that 1990 team, Franz Beckenbauer, passed away aged 78.
It was a West German side that beat England on penalties in the semi-finals, with Stuart Pearce and Chris Waddle infamously missing their spot-kicks.
But what became of the Italia '90 World Cup winners?
Coach - Franz Beckenbauer
The ultimate German football legend, who joined the Brazilian Mario Zagallo that night in winning the World Cup as both player and coach. France's Didier Deschamps joined the club in 2018.
Beckenbauer died on January 7 this year at the age of 78, prompting an enormous outpouring of grief across the football world.
His health had declined following the death of his son Stephan from a brain tumour aged 46 in 2015 and Beckenbauer had largely withdrawn from public life after losing sight in his right eye and suffering heart problems.
Goalkeeper - Bodo Illgner
The keeper who saved from Pearce in the semi-final shoot-out in 1990 retired from international football after the 1994 World Cup and later won the Champions League with Real Madrid.
After retiring in 2001, he worked as a pundit for Sky Deutschland and beIN Sport, while splitting his time between Miami and Spain with wife Bianca.
Sweeper - Klaus Augenthaler
Augenthaler was the ultimate one-club man, racking up well over 400 appearances for Bayern Munich and later worked as youth team and assistant coach there.
He was a coach until 2011, taking charge of Nuremburg, Bayer Leverkusen and Wolfsburg among other clubs.
Augenthaler returned to Bayern as a youth coach in the club's International programme last year and works as an expert for in-house channel FC Bayern-TV.
Central defender - Guido Buchwald
Buchwald, a Stuttgart player at the time, was assigned the unenviable task of marking Diego Maradona out of the 1990 final, which he performed very well.
In 2015, he returned to Stuttgart as a scout and worked there until 2019. Today, he is a member of the board of trustees for the Youth Football Foundation and sponsors a hostel for seriously ill children and their families.
Central defender - Jurgen Kohler
Kohler played for a number of leading clubs, including Bayern Munich, Juventus and Borussia Dortmund, as well as amassing 105 appearances for Germany.
As well as success in 1990, he lifted the European Championship trophy in 1996 and won the Champions League with Dortmund a year later.
Kohler has worked as a coach since retirement and was most recently youth coach at German third division club Viktoria Cologne. He was recently linked with the vacant Ghana national team job.
Right wing-back - Thomas Berthold
The German player who infamously made Paul Gascoigne cry. Berthold was the man tackled by Gazza to earn the yellow card that would have ruled him out the final.
Berthold has been a pundit on football show on the Sport1 network and for Deutsche Welle.
During the Covid pandemic, Berthold was outspoken about the German government's lockdown measures and was associated with conspiracy theories.
Left wing-back - Andreas Brehme
Brehme was the man who scored the winning goal in the 1990 final from the penalty spot, just one of several high points in a successful career for club and country.
After a brief coaching career, Brehme worked as an ambassador for the German Football Association and as a television pundit and newspaper columnist. He also work as an advisor to the Serbian club Vojvodina Novi Sad.
Brehme died of a cardiac arrest at the age of 63 on Monday night.
Central midfielder - Thomas Hassler
The midfielder was part of Germany's victorious team at Euro 96 and played for several top clubs including Juventus, Roma and Borussia Dortmund.
Entering coaching, he was assistant manager for the Nigeria national side and German club Cologne. Hassler is currently in charge of the sixth-tier club BFC Preussen.
Central midfielder - Lothar Matthaus
The captain of the winning West Germany team and it's most high-profile name. Matthaus had been part of the side that won the 1980 European Championship and scooped many major honours with Bayern Munich.
Matthaus coached for around a decade, including the Hungary national side, and is now a prominent pundit and commentator on German television.
Matthaus has been married five times and has four children. He was 47 when he met his fourth wife, the 21-year-old Ukrainian model Kristina Liliana Chudinova at Oktoberfest in Munich.
His last marriage, to Anastasia Klimko, ended in 2021.
Central midfielder - Pierre Littbarski
1990 spelt the end of Littbarski's international career though he played club football for another seven years, ending his career in Japan.
He then became a coach, taking charge of sides in Germany, Japan, Australia, Iran and Liechtenstein.
Littbarski is a member of the board of trustees of the Youth Football Foundation in Germany and in 2021, appeared on the German version of The Masked Singer as 'Hammerhead Shark', lasting two episodes.
Centre forward - Rudi Voller
A eventful Italia '90 saw Voller infamously spat at by Frank Rijkaard before being sent off, before he won the penalty in the final from which Brehme scored.
Voller later coached the German team and guided them to the 2002 World Cup final, losing to Brazil.
Latterly, he has been part of a 'task force' set up by the German FA ahead of their hosting of Euro 2024. Voller was then made sports director of the national team and served as interim boss for a game last year before Julian Nagelsmann took over.
Centre forward - Jurgen Klinsmann
Klinsmann is well known of course to English football fans not only from 1990 but his two memorable stints with Tottenham in the Premier League.
He too would coach the German national team, as well as Bayern Munich, the United States and Hertha Berlin.
His most recent posting with South Korea came to an ignominious end last week after they crashed out of the Asian Cup to Jordan in the semi-finals.
It came after a brawl between Spurs' Son Heung-min and PSG's Lee Kang-in over younger team-mates wanting to play table tennis. Son was left with a dislocated finger.
A 'failure to demonstrate leadership' was one of the reasons given for Klinsmann's dismissal.