Uli Hoeness, president of European football champions Bayern Munich, has gone on trial in a Munich court accused of tax evasion.
Prosecutors accused him of evading more than 3.5m euros (£2.9m) in tax.
The former World Cup-winning German international footballer, 62, has admitted holding a secret bank account in Switzerland.
He argues he filed an amended tax return last year, informing German tax officials about undeclared income.
If found guilty he could face a jail term. A verdict is expected on Thursday.
He is Germany's Mr Football. Not only was Uli Hoeness a star on the field, he became a great mover and shaker off it. As president of Bayern Munich, one of the world's greatest clubs, he was the man with whom everybody from Chancellor Angela Merkel down was pleased to be seen. This morning, in a court room in Munich, the allure and the glamour seemed a long way away.
He is accused of not declaring more than 33m euros in income. In addition to his failure to mention the existence of his Swiss account - and probably much more serious in the eyes of the law - he is accused of falsifying a declaration to the authorities.
He stood in the darkest of suits, smiling politely - and perhaps nervously - to the berobed lawyers around him.
At 62, he is portly, perhaps twice the weight he was when, as a magical forward in 1974, he helped Bayern Munich win the European Cup and Germany the World Cup. But before the judge he still kept his shoulders back and looked people in the eye.
The former Germany forward, who helped the national team win the 1972 European Championship and then the World Cup two years later, had believed that by coming clean about his undeclared income and paying back taxes he could avoid prosecution.
But prosecutors took a different view.
The question is whether Mr Hoeness outed himself in the knowledge that an investigation was under way, BBC Berlin correspondent Stephen Evans reports.
The penalty for tax evasion can be 10 years behind bars, though the prosecution says it will seek a seven-year term.
Munich state prosecutor Achim von Engel read out the indictment against Mr Hoeness shortly after the start of the trial, described as one of the most spectacular of the year by the German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
He alleged that for seven years the defendant had failed to declare the income he held in Switzerland.
In tax returns from 2004 to 2009, he is charged with not declaring 33,526,614 euros in income on which he should have paid 3,545,939 euros and 70 cents.
Despite the tax evasion scandal, Mr Hoeness remains a very popular figure at the club he helped build up. Before the scandal emerged, he was considered to be on good terms with Chancellor Angela Merkel.
He offered his resignation at last year's annual meeting but was backed by the supporters and the club's board.
Bayern Munich refused to comment before the trial but said its chairman and former star Karl-Heinz Rummenigge would speak after the verdict.
An added potential difficulty for Mr Hoeness, our correspondent reports, is that the judge in the case, Rupert Heindl, has been dubbed "judge merciless" in the German press, after jailing a pensioner in his 70s.
He is thought not to like deals whereby transgressors avoid jail by repaying what they have gained illegally.
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