On Saturday, Hungary secured a point at the Puskas Arena by holding Germany to a 1-1 draw for the third time in the Nations League.
Zsolt Nagy's early goal was shortly cancelled out by Jonas Hofmann, but despite dominating possession, the visitors were unable to find a winner.
For the most part, Hansi Flick's team lacked creativity and finished third in Nations League Group A3, behind Hungary and Italy.
Marco Rossi's team, on the other hand, may be happy with their performance and consider themselves unlucky not to have taken all three points.
After a good start, Hungary seized the lead after just six minutes when a long pass down the right found Attila Fiola on the run. Roland Sallai headed his cross goalward, and Manuel Neuer only palmed the ball as far as Nagy, who controlled and fired into the roof of the net.
Three minutes later, Germany drew level when Hofmann raced onto a long ball from Nico Schlotterbeck and prodded past the onrushing Peter Gulacsi to score his second goal in as many games for his country.
Jamal Musiala's clever movement set up an opportunity for David Raum to cut inside and bend a shot just wide of Gulacsi's far post, before Neuer saved a Fiola volley with his leg shortly before halftime.
With little under 20 minutes remaining, Kai Havertz sent Hofmann in on goal, but the striker botched his attempted pass to Timo Werner, allowing Willi Orban to clear.
In the closing 10 minutes, substitute Daniel Gazdag forced Neuer into another fine save, but both teams were forced to settle for a point.
What does this imply? Flick needs to put the finishing touches on his project as quickly as possible.
Prior to this match, Germany had drawn 1-1 with both Italy and England; they had also drawn 1-1 with the Netherlands in a friendly prior to that.
Hungary had won four of their previous six games in all competitions, so they were never going to be easy to beat, but Germany will be unhappy not to have forced a win with the amount of possession they had.
Die Mannschaft, who are two points behind the Azzurri in Group A3, may very well need to beat Italy in their next game to have any chance of winning the group.
Hungary is more aggressive.
The hosts proved that their win against England in the first game was no fluke by causing Germany numerous issues.
Hungary had seven shots on target against Germany's one, and their 15 open-play crosses kept the German defense on their toes.
Possession does not imply ownership.
Flick's team had 67.1 percent possession, including 72.5 percent in the second half, but just six shots on goal, two of which came after halftime.
They missed Thomas Muller's creativity, who came on as a substitute with 12 minutes left, while Werner failed to make an impact up front.