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.
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April 28th 2010 @ 3:15pm
David V. said | April 28th 2010 @ 3:15pm | Report comment
You can go back to 1982, when Cameroon, Algeria, Honduras and Kuwait all performed very credibly. Algeria did Africa proud and were royally robbed, Cameroon went out only on goals scored- the eventual winners scraping ahead of them. Honduras managed to hold their own too, and Kuwait drew with Czechoslovakia and lost 1-0 to England.
New Zealand were unfortunate to be up against 3 very good sides: Brazil, USSR and Scotland. But their 2 goals against Scotland were enough to prevent the Scots from reaching the next round.
El Salvador suffered a record defeat, yet Magico Gonzalez would go on to play for Cadiz. So maybe they weren’t as bad as that 10-1 loss to Hungary (their last decent stab at a World Cup) indicated.
April 30th 2010 @ 12:04pm
Derby County FC said | April 30th 2010 @ 12:04pm | Report comment
I don’t care what anyone says, Scotland have NEVER produced a “very good side”.
April 28th 2010 @ 4:01pm
apaway said | April 28th 2010 @ 4:01pm | Report comment
Great article, Tony, but may I add my voice to those describing the 1990 World Cup as one of the worst I’ve watched. Your description of the Socceroo moments from Germany ’06 gave me goose bumps. The party in Stuttgart after the Croatia game was incredible. I remember the train ride to the stadium that night. The two sets of fans were not segregated and there were dueling chants at the station. “You wish you had Viduka” and “Your shirt looks like a tea-towel” were two of the best. The ride itself was RAUCOUS with a carriage packed to the gills with green and gold. The train stopped at a station where a lone Croatian fan was waiting. He was texting on his phone, looked up at the same time as the doors opened, and the look on his face when he heard the noise and saw the scene was priceless. He waited for the next train.
Memories from earlier World Cups – Bryan Robson’s goal after 30 seconds in 1982 against France. The France-West Germany semi-final of that year. 3-3 AET, the Germans won on penalties, but not before German keeper Tony Schumacher pole-axed a French striker and got away with it.
1986 saw possibly the greatest game of all time when France and Brazil drew 1-1 in a quarter final. The French prevailed on penalties. I think Zico missed a spot kick. Hugo Sanchez scoring some outrageous goals for Mexico as the host nation went to the quarters, with the Mexican keeper sporting the brightest outfit ever seen. And of course, Maradona making the tournament his own with some of the best individual goals ever seen against England and Belgium. Belgium’s 4-3 QF win over a rampant Russian side was a thriller.
And from there, you’ve got it covered.
April 28th 2010 @ 11:30pm
Savvas Tzionis said | April 28th 2010 @ 11:30pm | Report comment
Watch that 86 game again. The ball virtually never went out of play. I showed it to my friend a few months ago and he picked up on that fact. Extraordinary fact.
April 28th 2010 @ 4:21pm
Lu said | April 28th 2010 @ 4:21pm | Report comment
I know you mentioned Italians in 94.. but surely the Divine Ponytail deserved a stand alone mention..
April 28th 2010 @ 6:25pm
tifosi said | April 28th 2010 @ 6:25pm | Report comment
Tony great article.
My fave world cup memory as a kid
1982 Brazil v Italy- One of the great world cup games
April 28th 2010 @ 6:38pm
Eamonn Flanagan said | April 28th 2010 @ 6:38pm | Report comment
A few more to add in:
Brazil in 1982..did they really lose?
Paulo Rossi in that game v Brazil 1982.
Gerry Armstrong for Northern Ireland 1 Spain 0 1982.
Holland France 1978
Holland v Germany 1974 Final.
Argentina Peru 6-0 yes they cheated 1978.
Brazil Italy 1970
England West Germany 3-2 1970
Ireland England the 1-1 win 1990
Ireland Holland the 1-1 win 1990
Ireland Romania penalties 1990
Ireland 1 Italy 0 after 12 minutes 1994.
Robbie Keane for the 1-1 win against Germany 2006
And special players, Raul, useless in all World Cups, Denis Berkamp that goal v Argentina, Michael Owen v Argentina, Diego v England, Diego and Caniggio v the World in 1990. Cruyff and Neeskens and co, Zico and Dr Socrates and the useless defender Junior. So many memories better stop.
April 28th 2010 @ 7:18pm
Mister Football said | April 28th 2010 @ 7:18pm | Report comment
It’s Bergkamp and Caniggia.
Let us not forget that van Basten ripped it up in 1990, also scoring one of the best goals in WC history (against the USSR I think it was)
April 28th 2010 @ 7:59pm
dasilva said | April 28th 2010 @ 7:59pm | Report comment
Are you sure the goal you referring to wasn’t the Euro final 1988 against USSR
I don’t think Van basten scored a single goal in the 1990 world cup.
April 28th 2010 @ 8:19pm
Pajovic said | April 28th 2010 @ 8:19pm | Report comment
Euro 88. Van Basten didn’t score in Italia 90.
April 29th 2010 @ 6:17pm
Mister Football said | April 29th 2010 @ 6:17pm | Report comment
Please accept my humblest apologies – it just goes to show that relying on your memory for something that happened 20 years ago is always fraught with danger – I could have sworn it was a WC.
But it does ring true, that it couldn’t have happened in Italia 90, which heralded the start of a series of dud WCs that persists to the present day: too many penalty shoot outs, low number of goals scored, the advent of 4231 and an increasing tendency for refs to be biased against “minnows”, which has become wearisome.
Increasingly, the attraction of the WC finals are the fact that they are on, with huge interest, and the party atmosphere that surrounds it, even if the games themselves are largely forgettable.
That people can get excited whenever yet another pen shoot out occurs speaks volumes.
The exoticism of the 2010 location does present us with a chance for something new and invigorating.
April 30th 2010 @ 8:26am
Savvas Tzionis said | April 30th 2010 @ 8:26am | Report comment
Couldn’t have said it better myself (except for 2002 when some questionable decisions went against the big teams).
April 28th 2010 @ 8:06pm
matty1974 said | April 28th 2010 @ 8:06pm | Report comment
Mr Football if you’re going to be in the habit of correcting minor spelling mistakes, you really should make sure that you haven;t mixed up your football tournaments. I think it may be the 1988 European nations Cup that you are referring to.
Most of my favourite memories have already been covered, but one I can’t see in these lists, is the demolition of the cynical Uruguayans by the sublime Danes in 1986.
April 28th 2010 @ 10:37pm
FrankLopez said | April 28th 2010 @ 10:37pm | Report comment
And we gotta thank SBS for all this.
My memory of Italia 90 was about 1000 Legal & General ads — SBS had just started taking ads at that time. So repetitive and boring as nobody was advertising with them.
For USA 94 it was Les and Johnny’s disappointment that OJ Simpson was stealing the limelight from the greatest show on earth. His timing was impeccable.
In France 98 Les and Johnny teamed up with Tracey Holmes. She spiced it up big time.
In 2002 Channel 9 made a disastrous attempt at hosting the football. Andy Harper was all that shone. Meanwhile at SBS, they were having a circus on their nightly show. I distinctly remember Johnny Warren getting shitty with some of their guests, like Nick Farr-Jones. ’twas funny. But I was totally behind JW.
Germany really brought out Fozzie as the football analyst. It was great seeing his diagrams and dissection of the games afterwards.
Wonder what they will have in stall for us this time round.
Great moments there Tony!
April 28th 2010 @ 11:57pm
Savvas Tzionis said | April 28th 2010 @ 11:57pm | Report comment
Here is my top ten forgotten moments from 1986 World Cup. I taped the two highlights shows hosted by Peter Wilkins and Craig Johnston back then. Close to 3 hours worth!!
1. Bruno Conti’s reaction to not getting a penalty for Italy against South Korea. He was petulantly remonstrating with the referree, even as his team eventually scored in the ensuing scramble.
2. Cabanas of Paraguay hitting the post from 40 yards away and the commentators incredulity at the effort.
3. USSR’s absolute annihilation of Hungary 6-0. They could have won 10-0
4.Australian referee Chris Bambridge keeping his cool moments after the over the line goal was not awarded to Spain, when Brazil scored with a well disguised handball (everyone forgets this!), only for Bambridge to spot it. He was unjustly criticised for his performance and never referreed again.
5. Northern Irelands bizarre goal against Spain where a combination of a miskick and slip by Zubizaretta allowed Colin Clarke to score after a back pass.
6.Careca’s airplane celebration after scoring Brazil’s 4th goal against Poland. The game was over and it was time to let the hair down.
7. USSR’s last second effort to equalise against Belgium where the Sovet player attempted to chip the keeper from 20 yards and an acute angle… the keeper just got his fingertips to it!
8. Mexican keeper Larios (love that name!) and Morocco’s keeper both making absolute point blank saves on the goal line. Moroccan keeper’s save was from a Rumenigge header. The German’s reaction was of utter frustration (very funny!).
9. Brazil v France…. the greatest match I have ever seen.
10. John Motson’s call in final. He made what I considered the greatest analysis I have ever heard, when he detected the Argentinians were starting to lairise (sic) at 2-0 up. Moments later, the Germans began their (ultimately futile) comeback.
April 29th 2010 @ 8:19am
Towser said | April 29th 2010 @ 8:19am | Report comment
Starting from England 1966 I would say that 1986 was the best overall tournament IMO.
April 29th 2010 @ 12:19pm
David V. said | April 29th 2010 @ 12:19pm | Report comment
On #3. The USSR’s defeat of Hungary is a match widely thought to have been fixed. It was a terrible blow from which Hungary never recovered.
England’s problem that tournament was its defence. Everything else in that team was excellent.
April 29th 2010 @ 12:24pm
whiskeymac said | April 29th 2010 @ 12:24pm | Report comment
Nice one Tony. your article made it to the guardian website… in at number two.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football
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2) Theroar.com.au: Fifty unforgettable World Cup memories
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5) Football Spotter: The complete online 1990 Panini World Cup album
April 29th 2010 @ 2:39pm
Peter Kandy said | April 29th 2010 @ 2:39pm | Report comment
HAHA being roughly the same age although Italia 90 wasn’t perfect it was also my first WC watched live on TV in the middle of the night ( I seem to recall needing glasses very soon after that ) and I also thought it was one of the best, particularly because of the football Italy played in that tournament – if only all Italian teams played like that! And of course there were those second round clashes Holland v West Germany and Brazil v Argentina!