Fifty truly unforgettable World Cup memories
By Tony Tannous, 28 Apr 2010 Tony Tannous is a Roar Expert
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Australia's Lucas Neill, bottom, trips Italy's Fabio Grosso in the penalty box during the last minutes of the Australia vs Italy Round of 16 World Cup soccer match at Fritz Walter Stadium in Kaiserslautern, Germany, Monday, June 26, 2006. Italy was awarded a penalty and won the match 1-0. AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian
Many older Roarers and long term fans of the world game might be able to cast an eye back to the 1970s and 80s and the feats of Diego Maradona, Michel Platini, Zico, Johan Cryuff and Pele. But for this writer, the love affair with the World Cup really began at Italia 1990.
As we look forward to the latest installment, with the knowledge that the Socceroos will again represent us, it’s time to relive some of the best memories from over the past five editions;
Italia ‘90
1. The first up victory by the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon over the defending World Champions Argentina. Romance at its absolute finest.
2. Back-up keeper Sergio Goycochea coming in for Nery Pumpido in Argentina’s second match and producing some wonderful displays, especially from the penalty spot.
3. Paul Gascoigne’s drive and delightful skills taking England to the semis.
4. The commentary of Martin Tyler. “My word”, has there ever been a better caller, in any sport?
5. The emergence from nowhere of Italian striker Salvatore ‘Toto’ Schillaci, he of the wide-eyes and lethal finishing.
6. The Inter Milan trio of Germans, Jurgen Klinsmann, Lothar Mattahaus and Andreas Brehme, conquering the world at their home ground, the San Siro.
7. The headed goals of Czechoslovakian tower Tomas Skuhravy.
8. The flair and sheer romance brought to the tournament by 38 year old Roger Milla and the likes of Francois Omam-Biyik from Cameroon. Something very very special.
9. The influence of Argentine front man Claudio Caniggia, who combined with Maradona to take Argentina all the way to the final.
10. It wasn’t a tournament of many goals, but Roberto Baggio produced a gem against Czechoslovakia.
USA ‘94
1. Watching the Gheorghe Hagi and Gheorghe Popescu lead Romania in dishing up some delightful stuff which took them beyond Argentina into the quarter finals.
2. Saaed Owairan’s superb solo slalom goal against Belgium will live long in the memory, as will the call from Martin Tyler; “Can he score? He can, he can indeed.”
3. Rasheed Yekini’s goal celebration, inside the net, symbolised everything that was beautiful and fun about Nigeria’s run, which was eventually brought to an end by a Baggio penalty in the second phase. Who will ever forget the quality brought to this tournament from the likes of Sunday Oliseh, Finidi George, Daniel Amokachi and Jay Jay Okocha.
4. The performance of Hristo Stoichkov and his Bulgarian outfit, who not only knocked out Germany, but made it all the way to the semis. Players like Trifon Ivanov, Iordan Letchkov and Krassimir Balakov became household names. Ivanov, the central defender, with his deep eyes and facial hair, became a cult hero.
5. Another surprise semi finalist was Sweden, for whom there were memorable performances from goalkeeper Thomas Ravelli and strikers Martin Dahlin and Thomas Brolin.
6. The little men up front for Brazil, Bebeto and Romario, lead with their hearts. This wasn’t a great Brazilian side, but it had spirit, in abundance. Hardest to forget was their contribution to the 3-2 thriller against Holland in the quarter finals.
7. Less memorable was the first ever effort from Greece, who failed to score and copped 10 goals in their three games, including one from Maradona, leaving Greeks all over Australia on the receiving end of some not so subtle jokes.
8. The Italians, of course, lead the chorus, until they lost the final on penalties.
9. Maradona himself ended his tournament in disgrace, bowing out a drug cheat.
10. Another sour memory was the murder of Colombian defender Andres Escobar, soon after returning home from scoring an own goal against the USA.
France ‘98
1. Allez Les Bleus. To my mind, the most deserving of the World Cup champions over the past five tournaments .While they needed extra time to get through Paraguay, penalties to get beyond Italy, and had to come from behind against Croatia, their empathic win in the final was a reward for their all-round teamwork and their ability to control the game in the all the thirds, even without a recognised striker.
2. While Zinedine Zidane and Youri Djorkaeff provided some wonderful flair in the front third, in the semi final, against Croatia, France needed two goals from right back, Lilian Thuram, to get the win. It proved how much of a team they were, relying on contributions from all.
3. The manner in which the French nation got behind its team was something to behold.
4. As in USA four years earlier, the Romanian’s again made a positive impression, topping their group and outplaying England along the way. Remember the peroxide?
5. Who can ever forget the round of 16 epic between England and Argentina in which Michael Owen, “the boy wonder’, scored a epic solo goal, David Beckham saw red, before England were eliminated on penalties, again.
6. The Dutch and the Italians also choked from the penalty spot, the latter for the third time on the spin.
7. Dennis Bergkamp’s strike (love the commentary!!) in the quarter final against Argentina, enough said.
8. The wonderful run from Croatia all the way to the semi finals. A young nation was announcing itself to the world, and what a statement it was, with Davor Suker the inspiration. The 3-0 quarter final win of Germany was particularly thrilling.
9. The drama surrounding Ronaldo ahead of the final. Mysterious stuff.
10. And Spain failed again.
Korea/Japan ‘02
1. As Cameroon had done at Italia ’90, Senegal kicked off this World Cup with a massive upset over defending champs France.
2. They went on to have a terrific tournament, finally eliminated in the quarter final by Turkey.
3. The Turks, lead by inspirational skipper Hakan Sukur, with able support from the likes of Yildiray Basturk, Rustu Recber and Hasan Sas, had an outstanding tournament, making it all the way to the semi finals.
4. Another team dazzling the world with their high-octane pressing game were South Korea, who, spurred on by the magnificent sea of red across the nation, made it all the way to the semis with controversial wins over Italy and Spain.
5. Lead by the Dutch master Guus Hiddink, South Korea was able to play a highly offensive game, with Park Ji Sung influential, while legendary defender Hong Myung Bo was great.
6. Who will ever forget Ahn Jung Hwan’s golden goal against Italy?
7. Germany relied heavily on their goalkeeper Oliver Kahn, and the finishing of Michael Ballack, to progress to the final, but it was there their luck ran out.
8. They came up against The Phenomenon, Ronaldo, who was sporting the tournament’s most ridiculous hairstyle, but managed to bag two in the final to go with his six in the lead up to it.
9. Mexico may have failed to get past the second round, but they did produce some wonderful flowing team football to top their group, including this gem of a team goal by Jared Borghetti against Italy.
10. And remember the less glamorous dive from Rivaldo when struck by a ball near the corner-flag?
Germany ‘06
1. This was all about our beloved Socceroos, back in the big show for the first time in 32 years, it was time to let the hair down and have a party. Lead by Hiddink, the Socceroos were fit, prepared and keen to paint a positive picture. And what a start it was, with those eight totally crazy minutes in the Fritz Walter Stadium, when substitutes Tim Cahill, Josh Kennedy and John Aloisi made such a glorious impact. Outside the stadium, before and after the game, the sea of yellow was something to behold, and it only grew as the circus moved through Munich, Stuttgart and back to Kaiserslautern. It was the ride of a lifetime, for fans, new and old, players, present and past, and the entire nation.
2. While there was much despondency around the Allianz Arena after the loss to Brazil, my endearing feeling was that the Roos had competed superbly, and taken it to the raining World champs. We had much to be proud of.
3. The night out at the Gottleib-Daimler Stadion was something surreal. From seeing Zeljko Kalac’s name on the team-sheet, to hearing the almighty noise from the Croatian supporters across the pitch, to the performance from Graham Poll, to the equaliser from Harry Kewell and the ensuing mayhem and euphoria, before and after the final whistle. And then, Archie Thompson on the corner flag guitar and the sound of “I come from a land downunder…”
4. And then back to Kaiserslautern and that drama surrounding Fabio Grosso and Lucas Neill. While bitterly disappointed with the incident afterwards, my endearing memories were of catching up with Paul Trimboli after the match and marvelling at the performance of Fabio Cannavaro. He ate Mark Viduka. For all the Socceroos pressing that match, the reality is we didn’t come close to penetrating the Italian rearguard and we sadly missed the drive of Brett Emerton and Harry Kewell that night.
5. The Italians, as we know, went on to win the tournament on the back of this remarkable defensive structure, with Cannavaro and Gianluigi Buffon superb.
6. Even the great Zinedine Zidane, such an influence in getting France to the final, snapped under the relentless pressure.
7. While Zidane was bowing out, another French star in Frank Ribery emerged.
8. Germany was a great host, both on and off the field. On the field, the Nationalmannschaft sparkled, dishing up some of the most entertaining football I can remember them producing.
9. Argentina failed to live up to expectations, yet again, but against Serbia & Montenegro they did produce what must surely be one of the greatest ever World Cup goals, a 25 pass move which finished with a one-two on the edge of the box and clinical finish from Esteban Cambiasso. Here it is, complete with Martin Tyler.
10. Another personal memory was attending the Paraguay vs Trindad and Tobago game in Kaiserslautern and witnessing the Soca Warriors fans singing for the introduction of their legendary midfielder, Russell Latapy, for much of the match. Midway through the second half the then 37 year old finally fulfilled a life-time dream and got to taste the World Cup. The fans went mad. More World Cup dreams and memories fulfilled.
So there you have it, 21 years of memories from the world’s biggest show.
Be sure to share yours.
Follow Tony on Twitter @TonyTannousTRBA
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Savvas Tzionis said | April 28th 2010 @ 7:38am | Report comment
Italia ’90?!!!
The worst World Cup ever got you hooked?
You are easily pleased.
AGO74 said | April 28th 2010 @ 12:48pm | Report comment
Possibly the worst world cup ever. Definitely had the worst haircuts:
http://www.footballspotter.com/complete-panini-italia-90-collection/
Austria should hang their heads in shame.
True Tah said | April 28th 2010 @ 2:50pm | Report comment
At least professional sportsmen back then actually had facial hair!
David V. said | April 28th 2010 @ 3:11pm | Report comment
It was dreadful, I give you that. But even that one had its moments, like Cameroon’s run to the quarter-finals, or the last really good England side with Platt, Gascoigne, Waddle and Barnes.
Tony Tannous said | April 28th 2010 @ 8:02am | Report comment
“You are easily pleased.”
As a wide-eyed teenager, getting up in the middle of the night for just about every game, marvelling at the stadia and the players on show, you could probably understand my enthusiasm Savvas
Mister Football said | April 28th 2010 @ 8:06am | Report comment
As a teenager and young man, there was always something quite magical about getting up in the middle of the night to watch most of the WC games televised.
Now I’m a bit older, a bit wiser….
AndyRoo said | April 28th 2010 @ 9:29am | Report comment
I still love it but the internet takes the mystery out of it a bit. We now know a lot more about all the teams and players (so may of them running around in the ECL) whereas before (when I was pretty ignorant of anything not Australian/English) I was often seeing players for the first time (even if they played for a big team like Juventis). And all those little bit’s of trivia about the players were golden.
Nowdays I already know who Frank Ribery was but without the internet or SBS excellent ECL coverage the World Cup would have been my first exposure to the gypsy who was in a huge car crash and can play awesome football.
Towser said | April 28th 2010 @ 9:50am | Report comment
Whilst the WC always remains magic for me I agree AndyRoo its “Merlin status” is diminished somewhat because some of the mystery has been removed.
Nevertheless Maradona returns & his antics are always mysterious & unpredictable.
Norm said | April 28th 2010 @ 1:33pm | Report comment
-”Now I’m a bit older, a bit wiser….”…you might be older but you’re no wiser.
Australian Football said | April 28th 2010 @ 5:10pm | Report comment
Well said Norm D:
Shay in Beijing said | April 28th 2010 @ 10:17am | Report comment
The past tense of “lead” is “led”. “Lead” can only be pronounce “led” when we are talking about a heavy metal. Five times in a single article!
whiskeymac said | April 28th 2010 @ 10:22am | Report comment
some good memories there tony!
as a kid my first memories were 86, but it was Italia 90 that got me truly interested in football. 94 was a clincher, if one was needed, as a student able to spend all day and night in front of the box and watch just about every game. needless to say i was in the UK and not here, so the coverage and interest was truly infectious.
maybe 90 wasnt the best tournament, but supporting England – who made it to the semi finals – it was certainly good enough.
am much happier now supporting the roos mind you, but no chance now of getting up at 3am to watch every game….
favourte memories – gary lineker in 86, roger milla and cameroon; england beating argentina, hagi and stoichkov, holland in 98, senegal game and south koreas run in 2002 and of course being able to finally cheer on the ‘roos in 2006. but wc related: the best moment was the uruguay game and the worst was the iran one.
Australian Football said | April 28th 2010 @ 10:33am | Report comment
Tony,
the 1974, World cup was the one that caught my attention and interest the most. The Australian National Football Team’s (Roos) first appearance in a Football World Cup. I remember the disappointment when Johnny Warren was injured and only played a minor part in that tournament—still it was a good effort. West Germany vs Holland was a fitting final. I haven’t missed a Football World Cup Final since. Nothing on the Planet comes remotely close. That’s why it’s important we all get behind Australia’s Football World Cup Bid for 2018-2022—not fare off now, come December we will know.
_____
AF
AGO74 said | April 28th 2010 @ 12:46pm | Report comment
Italia 90 – David Platt’s incredible goal for England against Belgium and England almost getting knocked out by Cameroon.
USA 94 – Iordan Letchkov’s amazing diving header to knock out Germany and Amokachi’s spectacular goals.
France 98 – Denmark’s demolition of Nigeria and their ensuing 3-2 classic against Brazil and the Iran v USA grudge match
Korea/Japan 02 – The sea of red Korean supporters and their incredible (and ever so slightly controversial) run to the semi’s.
Germany 06 – Eight mad minutes in Kaiserslautern!!! I agree with you re Brett Emerton. If he had been there, Grosso would never have got past him the way he was able to get past Bresh.
Kazama said | April 28th 2010 @ 1:15pm | Report comment
Thank you for sharing your memories with us Tony
The first World Cup I followed entirely was the 2002 edition. I can remember watching Italy v Norway and the final from ’98, but I didn’t really care too much about football in those days. By the time ’02 rolled around I was keen as mustard, and the fact I didn’t have to stay up late to watch the matches was a big help. So in spite of still hurting from Australia’s loss to Uruguay in the qualifiers, I watched as much as I could. The ten moments I remember the most are:
1) Reigning champions France getting beaten by Senegal in the first game, then bowing out after drawing 0-0 with Uruguay and losing 2-0 to Denmark
2) Argentina and Portugal also going out in the group stage
3) Ronaldinho’s chip v England
4) Croatia’s come from behind win against Italy (and the shocked look on the faces of the Italian relatives I watched the match with when Rapiac scored)
5) Borghetti’s header, and later in that match Del Piero saving Italy, sparking wild celebrations amongst aforementioned relatives
6) My Dad ruining the result of the South Korea v Italy match (was on a half hour delay down here in SA). He was listening on the radio and stormed into the room to inform everyone that we wouldn’t like the result!
7) Rivaldo’s oscar-worthy performance v Turkey
8. South Korea following their win over Italy by knocking out Spain – I got to my cousin’s house after work just in time to see the shoot-out
9) The third place play-off between South Korea and Turkey – great game, good goals, wonderful scenes at the end
10) Writing a major essay (due the next day) before, after, and during the half time break of, the otherwise quite dull final
The 2006 edition was for me, like probably most reading this, all about the Socceroos. My ten favourite moments are therefore dominated by the feats of the Aussie team
1) The crazy opening match between Germany and Costa Rica. 6 goals, some of them absolute stunners.
2) Being lucky enough to watch the Australia v Japan game at a pub pretty much entirely populated by friends and family. I can remember everyone going quiet after Japan scored, except for my mate George who continually swore at the TV until Cahill’s equaliser. Cue absolutely mad celebrations. We managed to calm down just in time for “TIM CAHILL’S DONE IT AGAIN!!!!”… even crazier celebrations… the bartender (also a mate) jumped over the bar, ripped his shirt off and ran around the place going nuts, pretty much like the rest of us were…we were all too bloody knackered to celebrate Aloisi’s third goal… an amazing night, a match I will never forget, and to be able to share it with friends and family made it even more special
3) The Socceroos’ brave loss to Brazil
4) The surreal match between Australia and Croatia… I’m not sure what the hell happened during that ninety minutes (and I don’t think Graham Poll knew either), but in the end we were through…to face Italy…cue mixed emotions among many family members
5) The loss to Italy… damn did that hurt… I can remember just sitting there with my Dad after the match, both of us not saying a word for about an hour…the World Cup suddenly wasn’t as meaningful now that the Socceroos were out… I guess the manner in which we were eliminated didn’t help either… but I kept watching anyway
6) France stunningly eliminating Spain, Brazil and Portugual in consecutive games to make the final
7) Cristiano Ronaldo’s wink after getting Rooney sent-off, and the ill-feeling that would create in the English press after their elimination via penalties in that match – with C. Ronaldo converting the winning kick of course.
8. Argentina’s 6-0 hammering of Serbia & Montenegro, including the incredible goal Tony mentioned
9) Italy scoring twice in the dying moments of extra time against Germany to make the final
10) Zidane’s mad headbutt in the final, sadly the final act of the great man on a football field, which soon became more infamous than the final itself… won by the “cheating” Italians – a bitter end to a great World Cup for many Aussies.
I absolutely cannot wait for the tournament to start! Bring it on!
Al said | April 28th 2010 @ 1:36pm | Report comment
2006 – Every Australia match, Zidane’s headbutt, Argentina’s awesome team goal against Serbia, Graham Poll’s meltdown, filthy cheating Italians.
2002 – South Korea knocking out both Italy and Spain, Turkey’s goal within the first half a minute of the match in the 3rd place playoff, Uruguay coming back from 3-0 down to Senegal to draw 3-3 which wasn’t enough to get them through to the knockout stage, Ronaldinho’s free kick over a hapless David Seaman.
1998 – England vs Argentina:Owen’s wonder goal and Beckham’s red card, Ronaldo in the final (a game he wasn’t fit enough to play in)
1994 – Oleg Salenko scoring 5 goals against Cameroon, Escobar’s own goal, Baggio single handedly playing Italy into the final (and costing them the final once there)
1990 – Rene Higuita vs Roger Milla, Milla won.
1986 – too far back to remember
Joe FC said | April 28th 2010 @ 1:54pm | Report comment
Great article Tony. Like Australian Football my memories go back to 1974. Watching on black & white TV, Australia v East Germany, the team strips were almost indistinguishable. 1978 ABC TV were not screening group stage matches until petitioned by the Aust-Italian community, at which point Italy were eliminated. 1982 France v West Germany semi, an all time classic. 1986 & was it my TV picture or were the fans doing something bizarre in the stands. You and the other roarers have covered just about everything since then, the return of the Socceroos at 2006 will always be the standout.