Group 2

Algeria and West Germany opened the group and the only interesting thing about the match was to see and confirm how good the Germans were.

But something else happened – people saw haw good Algeria was. Surprisingly well organized, tactically up to date, not afraid to challenge the mighty Germans, who were increasingly frustrated, uninspired, and even struggling. Derwall, it was felt, was not up to the task – evidently, he wasted the intermission, for his team was worse in the second half. Later observers pointed out his weird passivity during the second half, including the lack of reaction when the referee disallowed may be a legitimate goal for West Germany. But it was Algeria opening the scores – and Madjer will be a German nemesis one more time later in the 1980s. Rummenigge equalized in the 67th minute, which was not even a temporary relief for his team, for Algeria scored a second goal in the next minute, thanks to Belloumi. And the first sensation of the 1982 finals was a fact – Algeria 2, West Germany 1. Today it is an annoying cliche of coaches, saying after a loss that they ‘can’t understand why the team played so bad’ – back in 1982 such a statement was more than a stupid risk: Derwall made it, as if confessing his own incapacity to coach. The journalists had a field day – German journalists especially. Delighted Mekhloufi proclaimed the victory the greatest day in the history of Algerian football. And rightly so – back in 1964 Mekhloufi scored twice in the West German net, but he wearing the French jersey.

The next day Austria faced Chile.

Suddenly it was a tough and difficult match – Austria managed to score early, thanks to Schachner in the 22nd minute, but 5 minutes later their German-born defender Krauss faulled Caszely in the penalty area. Caszely took the penalty kick himself and missed. Yet, Austria was more dangerous and early in the second half had missed a chance for a second goal. This changed in the last 20 minutes, when Chile pushed Austria in defence and only the perfect play of Koncilia saved the Austrians. Difficult victory 1-0, but the Austrian coaches were rather worried and cautios: they expected the second match to be more difficult than the first. Algeria was on their mind.

The next match was between West Germany and Chile. The Austrians were right to worry – before the game the Chilean coach was rather confident: he said his team was stronger than Algeria and would be possible to beat Germany. Alas, he was wrong – his team did not have enough class to win.

Rummenigge was the hero of this match, almost single-handedly destroying Chile – he scored 3 goals. But West Germany was once again plain nothing. Breitner had to be replaced by Mathaus. Actually, it was just Rummenigge and Stielike beating the Chileans. Worse, Derwall confessed after the game that he never gave any tactical instructions to the duo and they alone decided to take control of the game. Praise for great masters? Rather weakness – for a second match Derwall failed as a coach. And suddenly he was running out of options – Hansi Muller was still unfit to play and Rummenigge felt worse after the match with Chile. As for the Chileans, almost only Figueroa showed class. They were out after 1-4.

Austria – Algeria. For both teams winning was a must, but the Austrians obviously learned a good lesson from the sensational first win of Algeria. They started slowly and carefully, waiting and pressing the less experienced team. Pezzey was asked not to go ahead at all. The idea was to stiffle Alegia and made it nervous. The first half looked equal.

In the second half Austrian coaches made good tactical change, fielding a second striker – Kurt Welzl – thus putting stress on attack. It worked beautifully – first Schachner scored in the 55th minute and 12 minutes later Krankl made it 2-0. Welzl was instrumental in both goals. Algeria had no answer and after two matches Austria qualified to the next round.

But nothing was finished yet. Algeria had a chance if winning against Chile. Chile had only to play for its honour.

Algeria started very well and was leading 3-0 by the 35th minute. Unfortunately, the players, may be from lack of experience, decided the job was done. Contrary to the coaches urges in midtime to continue pressuring Chile and perhaps score more goals, they lost the initiave in the second half. Later their coaches said that the players were simply not strong enough to maintain high tempo for the whole match, they tired themselves in the first half. Chile came back and scored twice. They were unable to equalize and the match finished 3-2 Algeria.

The last group match had specific stakes: any victory of West Germany would move them ahead. But victory was a must – a tie was eliminating them. Austria had only to avoid loss by more than 1 goal. Later there were accusations that Austria decided not to play for finishing at first place, but let’s face it: first place in the group had no value. Even moral victory had no value. So ‘the digrace of Gijon’ took place… West Germany pushed hard, fast, and relentless from the very first whistle. Hrubesch scored in the 10th minute. And the match ended…

The next 80 minutes both teams slowly and carefully passed the ball to each other, just waiting the time to run out. It was well concerted effort not to play, not even to suggest any trace of attemp to attack the other net. Algerian fans angrily waived money bills to TV cameras – it was a sham, it was corrupt match. Blatantly so. It was a shamefull act in the face of the whole world. Tousands of angry words were written on this match, still remaining as prime example of world cup scam and disgrace. Nobody was ever punished and formally there was no reason: it was not a back-room deal. There was no need – both teams made their calculations. They knew the result of the previous match, played the day before. 1-0 for West Germany qualified both teams, the best result. Yes, the players spoke the same language, but there was no need to communicate – as long as nobody made a dangerous, or seen as dangerous, move both teams were fine. They made sure to not appear dangerous to the opponent – the Austrians trying to not anger still superior German players; the Germans trying to avoid a risk of a stray goal in their net. That was all – brotherly love and sheer boredom for those watching the game. Never before two teams so shamelessly refused to play. Never before the players were concerned only with killing practically the whole match. This was a sign of the end of football. Both teams got what they wanted without playing. Scary. Even scarier, because nobody was to blame and there was no way to force the teams to do anything on the pitch. There was no way to punish the culprits. Post-match interviues noone believed, although formally the coaches were right: Derwall said that his team was weakened by injured Stielike and Rummenigge; Schmidt said that his players wanted to preserve their strength for the next games. Formally, true… Algeria made a formal complaint, on the grounds of putting the game in disrepute, but FIFA brushed it away – there was no real rule Austria and West Germany broke. The ball was moving, the players moved, there was no bribery or fixing… nothing to do.

 

1. West Germany 3 2 0 1 6-3 +3 4

2. Austria                3 2 0 1 3-1 +2 4

3. Algeria                3 2 0 1 5-5 0 4

4. Chile                    3 0 0 3 3-8 −5 0

West Germany finished 1st, Austria 2nd, Algeria was out. It was not fair, but that was that. West Germany was no stranger to calculations – in 1974 they deliberately finished 2nd in the first round group in order of avoiding tougher opponents, particularly Brazil, later. This time it was a matter of survival – they were not in a position to pick and chose. And ended in a tougher next-stage group, but… went ahead at the expense of Algeria. Ultimately, it was an old problem: the last preliminary groups matches were not played in the same day. That gave an opportunity to those playing last to scheme. It happened in 1974. It happened in 1978. It happened again. Only this time was blatant and outrageous that FIFA had to do something and it did: after this championship the last group matches were played simultaneously in the same day at the same time. Too late for Algeria…

Group 2

Group 2. An easy group – West Germany was the big favourite not only to go ahead, but one of the possible winners of the championship. There was little doubt that the Germans came back to greatness, similar to the wonderful 1972-74 years. Not only they had a great team, but there was so much talent that some problems were more a fodder for journalists than actual threat. Breitner came back to the national team and largely because of his bossy ways Bernd Schuster refused to play for the national team. He was not alone, although the other ‘refusenik’, Bernd Dietz, was hardly ever mentioned. The third big name missing was Rainer Bonhof, but with him it was trivial reason – injuries and bad form. Another country may have suffered severely from the absence of such players, but it was nothing for the Germans: there was new talent pushing ahead – Littbarski and Matheus. Breitner was excellent, combined with Rummenigge.

Head coach: Jupp Derwall

 

1

GK

Harald Schumacher

6 March 1954 (aged 28)

NA

FC Köln

2

MF

Hans-Peter Briegel

11 October 1955 (aged 26)

NA

Kaiserslautern

3

MF

Paul Breitner

5 September 1951 (aged 30)

NA

Bayern Munich

4

DF

Karlheinz Förster

25 July 1958 (aged 23)

NA

Stuttgart

5

DF

Bernd Förster

3 May 1956 (aged 26)

NA

Stuttgart

6

MF

Wolfgang Dremmler

12 July 1954 (aged 27)

NA

Bayern Munich

7

MF

Pierre Littbarski

16 April 1960 (aged 22)

NA

FC Köln

8

FW

Klaus Fischer

27 December 1949 (aged 32)

NA

FC Köln

9

FW

Horst Hrubesch

17 April 1951 (aged 31)

NA

Hamburg

10

MF

Hansi Müller

27 July 1957 (aged 24)

NA

Stuttgart

11

FW

Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (c)

25 September 1955 (aged 26)

NA

Bayern Munich

12

DF

Wilfried Hannes

17 May 1957 (aged 25)

NA

Borussia Mönchengladbach

13

FW

Uwe Reinders

19 January 1955 (aged 27)

NA

Werder Bremen

14

MF

Felix Magath

26 July 1953 (aged 28)

NA

Hamburg

15

MF

Uli Stielike

15 November 1954 (aged 27)

NA

Real Madrid

16

FW

Thomas Allofs

17 November 1959 (aged 22)

NA

Fortuna Düsseldorf

17

MF

Stephan Engels

6 September 1960 (aged 21)

NA

FC Köln

18

MF

Lothar Matthäus

21 March 1961 (aged 21)

NA

Borussia Mönchengladbach

19

DF

Holger Hieronymus

22 February 1959 (aged 23)

NA

Hamburg

20

DF

Manfred Kaltz

6 January 1953 (aged 29)

NA

Hamburg

21

GK

Bernd Franke

12 February 1948 (aged 34)

NA

Eintracht Braunschweig

22

GK

Eike Immel

27 November 1960 (aged 21)

NA

Borussia Dortmund

Minuses. What minuses? Working horse Dietz was replaced with younger and better players. Bonhof too, it seemed. Schuster, then – but there was Breitner and it was very difficult to say who was more valuable. There were tensions in the team, but the Germans were masters of leaving problems in the locker room. Stielike was back – the stupid rule imposed by the German Federation in 1978 left him out, but lessons were learned and there was no more ‘foreign based players out’. Rummenigge was not fully recovered from injury, but no big trouble. The team had no weak place, was relatively young, with key players at their prime, and vastly experienced. Old days were invoked not only by the living direct link with the 1974 world champions – Breitner – but also with problems of wealth: back then it was Overatt or Netzer, now it was Magath or Hansi Muller. Plus Hrubesch or Fischer. The headaches of Jupp Derwall were the envy for other coaches. A team without any weaknesses, a dream-team. Curiously, three players were left home – Thomas Allofs, Hieronymus, and Engels. On call – they were not immediately needed. And trivia: Bernd Franke, now 34 years old, was going to world cup finals for the first time – the respected goalkeeper was in and out of the national team for the whole 1970s, but playing for lowly Eintracht Braunschweig was a handicap – the relegation of his club most likely left him out of the 1974 selection. At last he made it – and deserved it – although he was not a starter.

Short of sensation, Austria was the expected number two. Not a match for West Germany, but with experienced squad, which many considered at its peak. The talent pool was limited, but there was enough for a squad and the backbone of Koncilia – Pezzey – Prohaska – Krankl was enough to ensure at least qualifying to the second round.

Head coaches: Felix Latzke and Georg Schmidt

 

1

GK

Friedrich Koncilia

25 February 1948 (aged 34)

60

Austria Wien

2

DF

Bernd Krauss

8 May 1957 (aged 25)

5

Rapid Wien

3

DF

Erich Obermayer (c)

23 January 1953 (aged 29)

35

Austria Wien

4

DF

Josef Degeorgi

19 January 1960 (aged 22)

3

Admira/Wacker

5

DF

Bruno Pezzey

3 February 1955 (aged 27)

53

Eintracht Frankfurt

6

MF

Roland Hattenberger

7 December 1948 (aged 33)

47

SSW Innsbruck

7

FW

Walter Schachner

1 February 1957 (aged 25)

33

Cesena

8

MF

Herbert Prohaska

8 August 1955 (aged 26)

57

Inter Milan

9

FW

Hans Krankl

14 February 1953 (aged 29)

61

Rapid Wien

10

MF

Reinhold Hintermaier

14 February 1956 (aged 26)

10

Nuremberg

11

FW

Kurt Jara

14 October 1950 (aged 31)

55

Grasshopper-Club

12

MF

Anton Pichler

4 October 1955 (aged 26)

5

Sturm Graz

13

FW

Max Hagmayr

16 November 1956 (aged 25)

6

VÖEST Linz

14

DF

Ernst Baumeister

22 January 1957 (aged 25)

11

Austria Wien

15

MF

Johann Dihanich

24 October 1958 (aged 23)

8

Austria Wien

16

DF

Gerald Messlender

1 October 1961 (aged 20)

0

Admira/Wacker

17

DF

Johann Pregesbauer

8 June 1958 (aged 24)

4

Rapid Wien

18

FW

Gernot Jurtin

9 September 1955 (aged 26)

5

Sturm Graz

19

DF

Heribert Weber

28 June 1955 (aged 26)

27

Rapid Wien

20

FW

Kurt Welzl

6 November 1954 (aged 27)

19

Valencia

21

GK

Herbert Feurer

14 January 1954 (aged 28)

7

Rapid Wien

22

GK

Klaus Lindenberger

28 May 1957 (aged 25)

1

Linzer ASK

Weaker than West Germany, surely, but Austria was also well above the other teams in the group. No missing players. Enough class and ambition. May be a dark horse, for the Austrians were not considered a big favourite: with a bit of luck, they were capable of moving quite ahead when nobody was looking. Trivia: two head coaches, neither a big name.

Chile. Most likely to finish third. Not a great team, although this time there were no political tensions, handicapping the team as they did in 1974. Chile was just to be happy playing at the finals – going beyond the first round was out of the question. Miracles happen, but rarely – this team was not one to make a miracle.

Head coach: Luis Santibáñez

 

1

GK

Oscar Wirth

5 November 1955 (aged 26)

5

Cobreloa

2

DF

Lizardo Garrido

25 August 1957 (aged 24)

15

Colo-Colo

3

DF

René Valenzuela

20 April 1955 (aged 27)

23

Universidad Católica

4

DF

Vladimir Bigorra

9 August 1954 (aged 27)

17

Universidad de Chile

5

DF

Elías Figueroa (c)

25 October 1946 (aged 35)

44

Fort Lauderdale Strikers

6

MF

Rodolfo Dubó

11 September 1953 (aged 28)

27

Palestino

7

MF

Eduardo Bonvallet

13 January 1955 (aged 27)

21

Universidad Católica

8

MF

Carlos Rivas

24 May 1953 (aged 29)

24

Colo-Colo

9

FW

Juan Carlos Letelier

20 May 1959 (aged 23)

5

Cobreloa

10

MF

Mario Soto

10 July 1950 (aged 31)

34

Cobreloa

11

MF

Gustavo Moscoso

10 August 1955 (aged 26)

18

Universidad Católica

12

GK

Marco Cornez

15 October 1957 (aged 24)

0

Palestino

13

FW

Carlos Caszely

5 July 1950 (aged 31)

42

Colo-Colo

14

MF

Raúl Ormeño

21 June 1958 (aged 23)

1

Colo-Colo

15

FW

Patricio Yáñez

20 January 1961 (aged 21)

23

San Luis

16

MF

Manuel Rojas

13 June 1954 (aged 28)

27

Universidad Católica

17

DF

Oscar Rojas

15 November 1958 (aged 23)

1

Colo-Colo

18

DF

Mario Galindo

10 August 1951 (aged 30)

28

Colo-Colo

19

DF

Enzo Escobar

10 November 1951 (aged 30)

26

Cobreloa

20

MF

Miguel Ángel Neira

9 October 1952 (aged 29)

23

Universidad Católica

21

FW

Miguel Ángel Gamboa

21 June 1951 (aged 30)

14

Universidad de Chile

22

GK

Mario Osbén

14 July 1950 (aged 31)

26

Colo-Colo

The best of Chile was not exactly much – the team depended on old feet, known for years: Carlos Caszely was 31, Elias Figueroa -35. Figueroa was the only foreign based player, but he was playing in NASL. Eight years earlier, Chilean players were hired in Europe, which was telling: true, Chilean clubs now provided enough to keep players at home, the lack of European interest meant lack of class. The only interesting talent was the 21-years old striker Patricio Yanez. Very little. There was only the sense that players like Figueroa and Caszely deserve to have one more world cup before they quit the game.

Algeria was considered the strongest among the outsiders – partly, by default. The good impression of Tunisia four years ago still lingered. Arabic football was generally more competent than the Black African one. Algeria had European-based professionals, unlike any other outsider. They were a ‘may be’: if any outsider was to play well, it was to be Algeria, but nothing more than good impressions – if they played well, may be they would have been able to finish above Chile. Bumping Austria and West Germany? Not even in a dream.

Head coaches: Mahieddine Khalef and Rachid Mekhloufi

 

1

GK

Mehdi Cerbah

3 April 1953 (aged 29)

NA

RS Kouba

2

DF

Mahmoud Guendouz

24 February 1953 (aged 29)

NA

MA Hussein Dey

3

DF

Mustafa Kouici

16 April 1954 (aged 28)

NA

MA Hussein Dey

4

DF

Nourredine Kourichi

12 April 1954 (aged 28)

NA

Girondins Bordeaux

5

DF

Chaabane Merzekane

8 March 1959 (aged 23)

NA

MA Hussein Dey

6

MF

Ali Bencheikh

9 January 1955 (aged 27)

NA

MP Alger

7

FW

Salah Assad

13 March 1958 (aged 24)

NA

RS Kouba

8

MF

Ali Fergani (c)

21 September 1952 (aged 29)

NA

JE Tizi-Ouzou

9

FW

Tedj Bensaoula

1 December 1954 (aged 27)

NA

MP Oran

10

MF

Lakhdar Belloumi

29 December 1958 (aged 23)

NA

GCR Mascara

11

FW

Rabah Madjer

15 December 1958 (aged 23)

NA

MA Hussein Dey

12

DF

Salah Larbes

16 September 1952 (aged 29)

NA

JE Tizi-Ouzou

13

MF

Hocine Yahi

25 April 1960 (aged 22)

NA

CM Belcourt

14

MF

Djamel Zidane

28 April 1955 (aged 27)

NA

KV Kortrijk

15

MF

Mustapha Dahleb

8 February 1952 (aged 30)

NA

Paris St-Germain

16

DF

Faouzi Mansouri

17 January 1956 (aged 26)

NA

Montpellier SC

17

DF

Abdelkader Horr

10 November 1953 (aged 28)

NA

DNC Alger

18

MF

Karim Maroc

5 March 1958 (aged 24)

NA

Tours FC

19

MF

Djamel Tlemçani

16 April 1955 (aged 27)

NA

Stade de Reims

20

FW

Abdelmajid Bourebbou

16 March 1951 (aged 31)

NA

Stade Lavallois

21

GK

Mourad Amara

19 February 1959 (aged 23)

NA

JE Tizi-Ouzou

22

GK

Yacine Bentalaa

24 September 1955 (aged 26)

NA

MA Hussein Dey

What could be said? A team perhaps to make a good impression and go down fighting. At best, a good step for African football, giving example of bravery. Seven professionals, based in France and Belgium, supported the expectations of decent football. Mustapha Dahleb was the big name, playing in France for years and currently for Paris SG, but he was 30. The next in line was the 28-years old defender Nourredine Kourichi, currently with Bordeaux. Well respected players, not major stars – good to see them at the world cup, but no more. Trivia: group 2 was an anomaly – two teams having two head coaches, Austria and Algeria. Algeria chose to have domestic coaches, something unusual for an African team. Rachid Mekhloufi was a big star in France, when he was a player – his status was certainly inspirational, but his coaching abilities remained to be seen.