He rose to prominence from the Dortmund stable to join an elite list comprising Pele, Gerd Muller and Zinedine Zidane among others. But Dortmund has no love lost for the star as he picked Bayern Munich following his rise.
After ninety minutes of end-to-end battle against Argentina, Gotze had scored the decisive goal to seal the World Cup in Germany's favour at the Maracana last July, as Messi's dream lay in tatters.
"He was technically very good. You could make out that he would make it big someday," said Lars Ricken, director at Dortmund Youth Academy, when asked to throw some light into his early years at the sprawling training facility here.
Now struggling for form at Bayern, a possible return to Dortmund for Gotze was one of the rumours doing the rounds before the onset of the ongoing season's summer transfer window in Europe.
Even if Dortmund is not known to loosen its purse like Bayern Munich in Cramer's words, the Gotze story goes beyond money.
Gotze's move to switch allegiance to Bayern did not go down well with Dortmund's passionate fans and they are in no mood to welcome him back to their club. In their eyes the star young player chose money over loyalty and left a real football club for greener pastures.
The anger and resentment remains to this day.
