Group C

Group C. France, USSR, Hungary, and Canada, playing in Leon and Irapuato.

France

Top row, from left: Thierry Tusseau, William Ayache, Yannick Stopyra, Michel Bibard, Bernard Genghini, Phillipe Vercruysse, Daniel Xuereb.

Middle row: Phillipe Bergeroo, Maxime Bossis, Yvon Le Roux, Patrick Battiston, Joel Bats, Jean Tigana, Luis Fernandez, Manuel Amoros, Albert Rust.

Bottom: Alain Giresse, Jean-Pierre Papin, Jean-Marc Ferreri, Henri Michel – coach, Bruno Bellone, Dominique Rocheteau, Michel Platinin.

Head coach: Henri Michel

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Joël Bats

4 January 1957 (aged 29)

23

Paris Saint-Germain

2

DF

Manuel Amoros

1 February 1962 (aged 24)

32

Monaco

3

DF

William Ayache

10 January 1961 (aged 25)

9

Nantes

4

DF

Patrick Battiston

12 March 1957 (aged 29)

42

Bordeaux

5

DF

Michel Bibard

30 November 1958 (aged 27)

5

Paris Saint-Germain

6

DF

Maxime Bossis

26 June 1955 (aged 30)

69

Racing Paris

7

DF

Yvon Le Roux

19 April 1960 (aged 26)

18

Nantes

8

DF

Thierry Tusseau

19 January 1958 (aged 28)

18

Bordeaux

9

MF

Luis Fernández

2 October 1959 (aged 26)

28

Paris Saint-Germain

10

MF

Michel Platini (Captain)

21 June 1955 (aged 30)

63

Juventus

11

MF

Jean-Marc Ferreri

26 December 1962 (aged 23)

14

Auxerre

12

MF

Alain Giresse

2 September 1952 (aged 33)

41

Bordeaux

13

MF

Bernard Genghini

18 January 1958 (aged 28)

25

Monaco

14

MF

Jean Tigana

23 June 1955 (aged 30)

40

Bordeaux

15

MF

Philippe Vercruysse

28 January 1962 (aged 24)

2

Lens

16

FW

Bruno Bellone

14 March 1962 (aged 24)

24

Monaco

17

FW

Jean-Pierre Papin

5 November 1963 (aged 22)

1

Club Brugge

18

FW

Dominique Rocheteau

14 January 1955 (aged 31)

45

Paris Saint-Germain

19

FW

Yannick Stopyra

9 January 1961 (aged 25)

16

Toulouse

20

FW

Daniel Xuereb

22 June 1959 (aged 26)

3

Lens

21

GK

Philippe Bergeroo

13 January 1954 (aged 32)

3

Toulouse

22

GK

Albert Rust

10 October 1953 (aged 32)

0

Sochaux

Numbers were given alphabetically, except to goalkeepers, where tradition was continued – France used 1, 21, and 22 for the goalies – and Platini and Giresse, who used their favourite numbers 10 and 12. Nothing really important, just like the numbers Argentina used, and the fuss made over that was mostly related to the conservatism in vogue by mid-80s – so, the frivolity of the 1970s was forgotten… Apart from nonsense news, France was favourite, at least in the this group. Reigning European champions, experienced, solid, playing fascinating football, led by Platini – they were expected to go far, why not even winning the championship? But there were skeptics as well: key players were getting old, long-lasting problems with the attacking line, newcomers, who were well known, but hardly on the level of the players they replaced, somewhat unlucky tradition of playing great football, but soft when really mattered and losing under real pressure. Most of that, rightly or wrongly, was amalgamated around increasing journalistic anger with Platini, who acted as a spoiled brat in their view, when dealing with journalists. He was accused of running the team and telling Michel what to do, in the same time concerned only with making more money and not with his ‘patriotic’ duties. Some of it was true, but it became focus and central point around which everything else was piled up. Objectively, France did not play very well after winning the European championship, had traditional problems with its strikers, and was beatable in crucial games, but the midfield and Platini were capable to overcome other weaknesses in a good day. Henri Michel did not introduce any conceptual changes, which was reasonable, for having Platini, one better structure the game around him. France was the favourite of this group.

USSR.

Sitting from left: S. Myshalov – doctor, O. Protassov, N. Larionov, A. Bal, I. Yaremchuk, V. Bessonov, V. Evtushenko, A. Zavarov, V Ratz, I. Belanov.

Second row: ?, S. Aleynikov, O. Kuznetzov, S. Krakovsky, R. Dassaev, S. Rodionov, S. Mosyagin – assistant coach, Yu. Morozov – assistant coach, N. Simonyan – team chief, V. Lobanovsky – coach, G. Litovchenko, P. Yakovenko, A. Demyanenko, A. Bubnov, V. Chanov, O. Blokhin, G. Morozov.

Head coach: Valeri Lobanovsky

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Rinat Dasayev

13 June 1957 (aged 28)

58

Spartak Moscow

2

DF

Vladimir Bessonov

5 March 1958 (aged 28)

53

Dinamo Kyiv

3

DF

Aleksandr Chivadze

8 April 1955 (aged 31)

42

Dinamo Tbilisi

4

DF

Genady Morozov

30 December 1962 (aged 23)

9

Spartak Moscow

5

DF

Anatoliy Demyanenko (Captain)

19 February 1959 (aged 27)

46

Dinamo Kyiv

6

DF

Aleksandr Bubnov

10 October 1955 (aged 30)

32

Spartak Moscow

7

MF

Ivan Yaremchuk

19 March 1962 (aged 24)

2

Dinamo Kyiv

8

MF

Pavel Yakovenko

19 December 1964 (aged 21)

1

Dinamo Kyiv

9

MF

Aleksandr Zavarov

24 April 1961 (aged 25)

7

Dinamo Kyiv

10

DF

OlehgKuznetsov

22 March 1963 (aged 23)

5

Dinamo Kyiv

11

FW

Oleg Blokhin

5 November 1952 (aged 33)

104

Dinamo Kyiv

12

MF

Andrey Bal

16 February 1958 (aged 28)

17

Dinamo Kyiv

13

MF

Genady Litovchenko

11 September 1963 (aged 22)

18

Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk

14

FW

Sergey Rodionov

3 September 1962 (aged 23)

17

Spartak Moscow

15

DF

Nikolay Larionov

19 January 1957 (aged 29)

15

Zenit Leningrad

16

GK

Viktor Chanov

21 July 1959 (aged 26)

1

Dinamo Kyiv

17

MF

Vadim Evtushenko

1 January 1958 (aged 28)

7

Dinamo Kyiv

18

FW

Oleg Protasov

4 February 1964 (aged 22)

19

Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk

19

MF

Ihog Belanov

25 September 1960 (aged 25)

4

Dinamo Kyiv

20

MF

Sergey Aleinikov

7 November 1961 (aged 24)

23

Dinamo Minsk

21

MF

Vassily Ratz

25 April 1961 (aged 25)

2

Dinamo Kyiv

22

GK

Sergey Krakovsky

11 August 1960 (aged 25)

0

Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk

Once again Lobanovsky was trusted with the national team, hence, it was saturated with Dinamo (Kiev) players – 12 – but it was different than similar tries going back 10 years. Now Dinamo (Kiev) was again in excellent from, fresh from European success. And Ukrainian football, leading the Soviet game for a long time, had another very strong club, so the total of Ukranian players was 15. The rest were well known players from recent Soviet champions, all already well established in the national team. It was a squad generally at the perfect age – roughly, around 25 years old. The conceptual duel Dinamo (Kiev) vs Spartak (Moscow) was seemingly settled to satisfaction: there were Spartak players, but only truly strong, nothing experimental and causing doubts. Traditionally, the Soviets were taken seriously and this was a vintage particularly strong, but in the same time there was reluctance to consider them a big favourite: yes, the memories of 1982 were good, but the team was quickly eliminated. Did not reach the European finals in 1984. Had difficulties qualifying to the 1986 finals. Lobanovsky was a great coach, but it was also well known that his despotic methods not always worked and in recent years rebellions against him surfaced. Using his own Dinamo (Kiev) as the national team was tried and it was a big failure before. This time, though, it was selection of the truly tested and proven best Soviet players, so there was little to argue against Lobanovsky’s selection and at least back-room battles and stabbing were seemingly absent – good for moral. In any case, Spartak had pitiful record of failing to win a title for years and inability to make a really strong balanced squad, so there was nothing to accuse Lobanovsky of favoritism: the three Spartak players were pretty much all the opposition had to offer no matter who was coaching the Soviet team. Two of them – Dassaev and Bubnov – were regular starters, so there was absolutely nothing the Moscow critics could use against the Ukrainian domination. The only problem was the checkered record of the national team. USSR was expected to finish 2nd in the group and depending on how they played in the group, some other predictions could emerge, but not before that. It was an easy group, there was no doubt the team will go ahead to the next stage.

Hungary

Head coach: György Mezey

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Péter Disztl

30 March 1960 (aged 26)

13

Videoton

2

DF

Sándor Sallai

26 March 1960 (aged 26)

31

Budapest Honvéd

3

DF

Antal Róth

14 September 1960 (aged 25)

18

Pécsi Munkás

4

DF

József Varga

9 October 1954 (aged 31)

29

Denizlispor

5

DF

József Kardos

22 March 1960 (aged 26)

27

Újpesti Dózsa

6

DF

Imre Garaba

29 July 1958 (aged 27)

53

Budapest Honvéd

7

FW

József Kiprich

6 September 1963 (aged 22)

14

Tatabányai Bányász

8

DF

Antal Nagy (Captain)

17 October 1956 (aged 29)

25

Budapest Honvéd

9

MF

László Dajka

29 April 1959 (aged 27)

19

Budapest Honvéd

10

MF

Lajos Détári

24 April 1963 (aged 23)

17

Budapest Honvéd

11

FW

Márton Esterházy

9 April 1956 (aged 30)

21

AEK Athens

12

DF

József Csuhay

12 July 1957 (aged 28)

9

Videoton

13

DF

László Disztl

4 June 1962 (aged 23)

5

Videoton

14

DF

Zoltán Péter

23 March 1958 (aged 28)

21

Zalaegerszeg

15

MF

Péter Hannich

30 March 1957 (aged 29)

23

Rába ETO Győr

16

MF

József Nagy

20 October 1960 (aged 25)

1

Szombathelyi Haladás

17

MF

Győző Burcsa

13 March 1954 (aged 32)

11

Auxerre

18

GK

József Szendrei

25 April 1954 (aged 32)

2

Újpesti Dózsa

19

MF

György Bognár

5 November 1961 (aged 24)

7

MTK Hungária

20

FW

Kálmán Kovács

11 September 1965 (aged 20)

8

Budapest Honvéd

21

MF

Gyula Hajszán

9 October 1961 (aged 24)

22

Rába ETO Győr

22

GK

József Andrusch

31 March 1956 (aged 30)

5

Budapest Honvéd

Hungary started the year with impressive 3-0 victory over Brazil, but the expectations were modest even at home. Unlike 1982 finals, this time it was not a squad heavily based on foreign-based players – Honved and Videoton, the best teams at the moment, provided the backbone of the national team. It was also slightly younger squad than the 1982 one, but quite short on great talent. Lajos Detari was the big star, Garaba, Kiprich, Hannich, Peter Disztl, and may be Esterhazy and Sallai were the best Hungary had at this time and it was not much. And, except Detari, all current stars paled in comparison with names from recent past. Short of miracle, Hungary was expected to finish third in the group.

Canada

Head coach: Tony Waiters

1

GK

Tino Lettieri

27 September 1957 (aged 28)

21

Minnesota Strikers

2

DF

Bob Lenarduzzi

1 May 1955 (aged 31)

44

Tacoma Stars

3

DF

Bruce Wilson (Captain)

20 June 1951 (aged 34)

54

no club

4

MF

Randy Ragan

7 June 1959 (aged 26)

32

no club

5

DF

Terry Moore

2 June 1958 (aged 27)

11

Glentoran

6

DF

Ian Bridge

18 September 1959 (aged 26)

20

La Chaux-de-Fonds

7

FW

Carl Valentine

4 July 1958 (aged 27)

3

Cleveland Force

8

MF

Gerry Gray

20 January 1961 (aged 25)

22

Chicago Sting

9

FW

Branko Šegota

8 June 1961 (aged 24)

11

San Diego Sockers

10

FW

Igor Vrablic

19 July 1965 (aged 20)

27

Seraing

11

MF

Mike Sweeney

25 December 1959 (aged 26)

26

Cleveland Force

12

DF

Randy Samuel

23 December 1963 (aged 22)

25

PSV Eindhoven

13

FW

George Pakos

14 August 1952 (aged 33)

22

Victoria Athletic Association

14

FW

Dale Mitchell

21 April 1958 (aged 28)

26

Tacoma Stars

15

MF

Paul James

11 November 1963 (aged 22)

30

Monterrey

16

MF

Greg Ion

12 March 1963 (aged 23)

5

Los Angeles Lazers

17

MF

David Norman

6 May 1962 (aged 24)

22

Tacoma Stars

18

MF

Jamie Lowery

15 January 1961 (aged 25)

5

no club

19

DF

Pasquale De Luca

26 May 1962 (aged 24)

19

Cleveland Force

20

DF

Colin Miller

4 October 1964 (aged 21)

7

Glasgow Rangers

21

GK

Sven Habermann

3 November 1961 (aged 24)

11

no club

22

GK

Paul Dolan

16 April 1966 (aged 20)

20

Edmonton Brickmen

 

Outsiders. Canada was just happy to reach World Cup finals, a miracle enough. Her squad presented curiosity mostly because there were so many players without any club – not a new thing, Tarantini after all became world champion having no club to play for, but in the past such anomalies were rare and exceptional. Canada elevated the anomaly to entirely new level, a level never to be reached and beaten: Kicker Magazine listed 10 players without a club, finally they were reduced to 4. Of those who played organized football, many played indor-football in the USA – not the real game. Those anomalies were a direct result of the collapse of NASL, where most Canadians used to play – now they were suddenly out of jobs. Which was not entirely negative situation: on one hand, those were professional players at heart, so now they had to look for new opportunity – going to play in Europe or hoping to do so. On the other hand, the Canadian Federation provided the clubless players with financial support and training facilities, so practically the national team operated like a club team – coach and players were together all the time, there is plenty of time to get to know each other both on the pitch and in general. It was familiar approach used by many developing countries and some times it worked. Canada was expected to play with heart and try the best they can – it was a team with British background, like Australia and New Zealand before, but with a difference somewhat in their favour: Aussies in 1974 and Qiwis in 1982 were essentially amateurs – the Canadians were professionals. Not great professionals, but still professionals, eager to get contracts. They had personal ambitions on their minds, for jobs were at stake – Canada was going to lose, no doubt about it, but it was a team expected to do its best, to provide lively opposition to any team. A miracle was unlikely to happen, but European contracts could be signed after Canada played her three games. That was the whole mood in the team: modest and happy. Sometimes its best to be like that – no expectations to worry you, no conflicts and raw nerves, no big pressures.

Group B

Group B. Playing in Mexico City and Toluca. Mexico, Belgium, Paraguay, Iraq.

Head coach: Guy Thys

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Jean-Marie Pfaff

4 December 1953 (aged 32)

51

Bayern Munich

2

DF

Eric Gerets

18 May 1954 (aged 32)

56

PSV

3

MF

Franky Van Der Elst

30 April 1961 (aged 25)

9

Club Brugge

4

DF

Michel de Wolf

19 January 1958 (aged 28)

17

Gent

5

DF

Michel Renquin

3 November 1955 (aged 30)

47

Standard Liège

6

MF

Franky Vercauteren

28 October 1956 (aged 29)

48

Anderlecht

7

MF

René Vandereycken

22 July 1953 (aged 32)

48

Anderlecht

8

MF

Enzo Scifo

19 February 1966 (aged 20)

13

Anderlecht

9

FW

Erwin Vandenbergh

26 January 1959 (aged 27)

39

Anderlecht

10

MF

Philippe Desmet

29 November 1958 (aged 27)

3

Waregem

11

MF

Jan Ceulemans (Captain)

28 February 1957 (aged 29)

56

Club Brugge

12

GK

Jacky Munaron

8 September 1956 (aged 29)

7

Anderlecht

13

DF

Georges Grün

25 January 1962 (aged 24)

15

Anderlecht

14

DF

Lei Clijsters

6 November 1956 (aged 29)

13

Waterschei Thor

15

MF

Leo Van Der Elst

7 January 1962 (aged 24)

6

Club Brugge

16

FW

Nico Claesen

7 October 1962 (aged 23)

14

Standard Liège

17

FW

Raymond Mommens

27 December 1958 (aged 27)

14

Lokeren

18

FW

Daniel Veyt

9 December 1956 (aged 29)

2

Waregem

19

DF

Hugo Broos

10 April 1952 (aged 34)

21

Club Brugge

20

GK

Gilbert Bodart

2 September 1962 (aged 23)

1

Standard Liège

21

DF

Stéphane Demol

11 March 1966 (aged 20)

2

Anderlecht

22

MF

Patrick Vervoort

17 January 1965 (aged 21)

2

Beerschot

Guy Thys and his well known boys were the strongest team in the group – by reputation. The troubles of 1984 were long gone, no more suspended players, so the revered coach had everybody at hand. ‘The Red Devils’ always tried their best, reliable team with massive experience, which so far made smooth transitions despite the obvious limits a small pool of players presented. Pfaff, Gerets, Ceulemans, Renquin, Vandereicken, Vercauteren, Vanderbergh, Broos were more than well known names and they had younger players of quality next to them including 20-years old Scifo, already an international star. The group was easy enough and even if Belgium did not finish on top, it was going to reach the next stage.

Mexico.


Head coach: Bora Milutinović

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Pablo Larios

31 July 1960 (aged 25)

N/A

Cruz Azul

2

DF

Mario Trejo

11 February 1956 (aged 30)

N/A

América

3

DF

Fernando Quirarte

17 May 1956 (aged 30)

N/A

Guadalajara

4

DF

Armando Manzo

16 October 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

América

5

FW

Francisco Javier Cruz

24 May 1966 (aged 20)

N/A

Monterrey

6

MF

Carlos de los Cobos

10 December 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

América

7

MF

Miguel España

4 April 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

UNAM Pumas

8

MF

Alejandro Domínguez

9 February 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

América

9

FW

Hugo Sánchez

11 July 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

Real Madrid

10

MF

Tomás Boy (Captain)

5 July 1953 (aged 32)

N/A

Tigres

11

FW

Carlos Hermosillo

24 August 1964 (aged 21)

N/A

América

12

GK

Ignacio Rodríguez

13 August 1959 (aged 26)

N/A

Atlante

13

MF

Javier Aguirre

1 December 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

América

14

DF

Felix Cruz

4 April 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

UNAM Pumas

15

FW

Luis Flores

8 August 1962 (aged 23)

N/A

UNAM Pumas

16

MF

Carlos Muñoz

8 September 1962 (aged 23)

N/A

Tigres

17

DF

Raúl Servín

29 April 1963 (aged 23)

N/A

UNAM Pumas

18

DF

Rafael Amador

16 February 1959 (aged 27)

N/A

UNAM Pumas

19

MF

Javier Hernández

1 August 1961 (aged 24)

N/A

Tecos

20

GK

Olaf Heredia

19 October 1957 (aged 28)

N/A

Tigres

21

FW

Cristóbal Ortega

25 July 1956 (aged 29)

N/A

América

22

MF

Manuel Negrete

15 May 1959 (aged 27)

N/A

UNAM Pumas

The hosts had a good chance to win the group, but more likely to finish second and go ahead. They were not seen as a big favourite and even at home seemingly nobody expected them to become world champions, but all measures were taken for solid performance. Bora Milutinovic already established himself as the best coach in Mexico, he was there for years – first as a player and then as a coach – so he knew Mexican football well, he was young coach with contemporary ideas and also was easy to work with. The strongest asset of his team was, of course, Hugo Sanchez at the peak of his form and fame, but there few other very good players as well: Boy, Quirarte, Larios, Negrete, Hermosillo. Perhaps goalkeeping was the weakness of the team, but there was nothing to do about it. Mexico was certainly not one of the big favourites, but were expected to reach 1/8 finals at least.

Paraguay.

Head coach: Cayetano Ré

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Roberto Fernández

9 July 1954 (aged 31)

43

Deportivo Cali

2

DF

Juan Torales

9 May 1956 (aged 30)

58

Libertad

3

DF

César Zabala

3 June 1961 (aged 24)

N/A

Cerro Porteño

4

DF

Vladimiro Schettina

8 October 1955 (aged 30)

N/A

Guaraní

5

DF

Rogelio Delgado (Captain)

12 October 1959 (aged 26)

N/A

Olimpia

6

MF

Jorge Amado Nunes

18 October 1961 (aged 24)

N/A

Deportivo Cali

7

MF

Buenaventura Ferreira

4 July 1960 (aged 25)

N/A

Deportivo Cali

8

MF

Julio César Romero

28 August 1960 (aged 25)

N/A

Fluminense

9

FW

Roberto Cabañas

11 April 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

América de Cali

10

MF

Adolfino Cañete

13 September 1956 (aged 29)

N/A

Cruz Azul

11

FW

Alfredo Mendoza

31 December 1963 (aged 22)

N/A

Independiente Medellín

12

GK

Jorge Battaglia

12 May 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Sol de America

13

DF

Virginio Cáceres

21 May 1962 (aged 24)

N/A

Guaraní

14

DF

Luis Caballero

17 September 1962 (aged 23)

N/A

Guaraní

15

FW

Eufemio Cabral

21 March 1955 (aged 31)

N/A

Guaraní

16

MF

Jorge Guasch

17 January 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Olimpia

17

FW

Francisco Alcaraz

4 October 1960 (aged 25)

N/A

Nacional

18

FW

Evaristo Isasi

26 October 1955 (aged 30)

N/A

Olimpia

19

MF

Rolando Chilavert

22 May 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Guaraní

20

FW

Ramón Hicks

30 May 1959 (aged 27)

N/A

Libertad

21

FW

Faustino Alonso

15 February 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Sol de America

22

GK

Julián Coronel

23 October 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

Guaraní

 

A mystery team. Apart from two internationally recognized stars – Romero and Cabanas – both the team and its coach were practically unknown outside South America. No big scandals surrounded the team, so it looked like Paraguay was preparing calmly for the finals, but how good or bad they were was anybody’s guess. Whatever reputation Paraguayan football had was very old and limited: sturdy fighters. Thus, more inclined to brutality than anything else. Romero rivaled Maradona, but that was in the late 1970s, when both were under 20 years of age. He had great season in 1985, playing in Brazil, but both he and Cabanas were a bit suspect to European observers, because the Paraguayan stars chose to play for Cosmos (New York) and it was easy to shine in the old-men resting home, what the now defunct NASL was. No current Paraguayan player was playing in Europe, the real test for quality. Little was known about Paraguayan football at all and it was not helpful: Olimpia (Asuncion) was the strongest team for years and they even won the Intercontinental Cup, but the national team had few players from Olimpia – looked like it was based on Guarani and mostly playing in Colombia foreign-based players. It was even a bit surprising that the squad was relatively young, including Romero and Cabanas. Somehow, Paraguay was seen as taking 3rd place in the group – may be tough opponent, but unlikely to surprise neither Mexico, nor Belgium.

Iraq.

Head coach: Evaristo de Macedo

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Raad Hammoudi (Captain)

20 April 1958 (aged 28)

N/A

Al-Shorta

2

DF

Maad Ibrahim

30 June 1960 (aged 25)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

3

DF

Khalil Allawi

6 September 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

4

DF

Nadhim Shaker

13 April 1958 (aged 28)

N/A

Al-Tayaran

5

DF

Samir Shaker

28 February 1958 (aged 28)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

6

MF

Ali Hussein Shihab

5 May 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Al-Talaba

7

MF

Haris Mohammed

3 March 1958 (aged 28)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

8

FW

Ahmed Radhi

21 March 1964 (aged 22)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

9

FW

Karim Saddam

26 May 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Al-Jaish

10

FW

Hussein Saeed

21 January 1958 (aged 28)

N/A

Al-Talaba

11

FW

Rahim Hameed

23 May 1963 (aged 23)

N/A

Al-Jaish

12

MF

Jamal Ali

2 February 1956 (aged 30)

N/A

Al-Talaba

13

DF

Karim Allawi

1 April 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

14

MF

Basil Gorgis

15 January 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Al-Shabab

15

MF

Natiq Hashim

15 January 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Al-Tayaran

16

MF

Shaker Mahmoud

5 May 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Al-Shabab

17

MF

Anad Abid

3 August 1955 (aged 30)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

18

MF

Ismail Mohammed Sharif

19 January 1962 (aged 24)

N/A

Al-Shabab

19

MF

Basim Qasim

22 March 1959 (aged 27)

N/A

Al-Shorta

20

GK

Fatah Nasif

2 February 1951 (aged 35)

N/A

Al-Jaish

21

GK

Ahmad Jassim

4 May 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Al-Rasheed

22

DF

Ghanim Oraibi

16 August 1961 (aged 24)

N/A

Al-Shabab

 

Well, outsiders. No matter how heroic was to reach world cup finals during war and unable to play any games at home, Iraq was non-entity in football. Pure exotica. Most of the background, the gruesome details of the background, surfaced after the World Cup finals, so at the moment it was taken for granted that the rulers of Iraq were pouring money and promises to the team – other African and Asian countries did it before, but there was no way to make weak team better just by that. Like many third-world countries, Iraq employed foreign coach and that was the biggest news about them. Yet, even that was uncertain thing… the West German magazine Kicker, one of the most reliable sources of information, introduced the Iraqi coach as Eduardo Antunes Coimbra, 39-years old Brazilian. The name meant nothing… but it was not nothing: to the football world he was known as Edu, when he was a player, and he was the older brother of Zico. Trivia… the player was a star, his brother was mega-star, the coach was unknown. However, he was not the coach of the team at the finals – it was another Brazilian: Evaristo de Macedo. In fact, there was more: the original Brazilian coach Jorge Vieira was sacked after qualifying Iraq to the finals, Edu was hired, and was sacked just a month before the finals and replaced with Evaristo de Macedo. Evaristo, if anything, had much more impressive background than Edu: as a player, he played for Flamengo, Barcelona, and Real Madrid, plus the Brazilian national team, and as coach had massive experience, including briefly coaching Brazil in 1985. Well, that was almost all what could be said about Iraq… But another thing was a problem, ever-lasting problem. Not a new one, but gradually getting bigger and bigger and never solved: how many games players of African and Asian teams actually played? A matter of statistics. To this very day there is no solution – the reason why the ISSF does not risk numbers and choosing ‘N/A’. Kicker, however, supplied numbers as given by Iraqi Federation – according to them, the goalkeeper Hammoudi played 92 games for Iraq. Impossible to confirm… FIFA already placed question marks and was not really recognizing such information, for if it was true, a large number of African and Asian players played astonishing number of national team games – much more than players form Europe and South America, but checking yearly schedules there were no enough international matches for so many appearances. The numbers were obviously doctored or entirely made up. What exactly were Asians and Africans counting? Nobody will ever know… but it was unbelievable. Just compare: Peter Shilton, already 37 years old and member of the English national team since 1971 arrived in Mexico with 78 caps. True, he had strong competition in the 1970s, but England also had busy international schedule. Which rarely went above 10 games per year. It was impossible Iraq had more yearly international games than England. Even if it did, it was still suspect, because the second Iraqi goalie, Nusseyef, was listed with 50 caps. Statistical mystery or not, Iraq was an outsider, destined to finish last in the group.

Group A

Group A. Played in Mexico City and Puebla and opening the championship, for Italy was there and by tradition the reigning world champion played the first game. Italy, Argentina, Bulgaria, and South Korea.

 

 

Head coach: Enzo Bearzot

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Giovanni Galli

29 April 1958 (aged 28)

15

Fiorentina

2

DF

Giuseppe Bergomi

22 December 1963 (aged 22)

28

Internazionale

3

DF

Antonio Cabrini

8 October 1957 (aged 28)

64

Juventus

4

DF

Fulvio Collovati

9 May 1957 (aged 29)

49

Internazionale

5

DF

Sebastiano Nela

13 March 1961 (aged 25)

2

Roma

6

DF

Gaetano Scirea (Captain)

25 May 1953 (aged 33)

74

Juventus

7

DF

Roberto Tricella

18 March 1959 (aged 27)

6

Hellas Verona

8

DF

Pietro Vierchowod

6 April 1959 (aged 27)

23

Sampdoria

9

MF

Carlo Ancelotti

10 June 1959 (aged 26)

11

Roma

10

MF

Salvatore Bagni

25 September 1956 (aged 29)

26

Napoli

11

MF

Giuseppe Baresi

7 February 1958 (aged 28)

15

Internazionale

12

GK

Franco Tancredi

10 January 1955 (aged 31)

12

Roma

13

MF

Fernando De Napoli

15 March 1964 (aged 22)

1

Avellino

14

MF

Antonio Di Gennaro

5 October 1958 (aged 27)

11

Hellas Verona

15

MF

Marco Tardelli

24 September 1954 (aged 31)

81

Internazionale

16

FW

Bruno Conti

13 March 1955 (aged 31)

43

Roma

17

FW

Gianluca Vialli

9 July 1964 (aged 21)

4

Sampdoria

18

FW

Alessandro Altobelli

28 November 1955 (aged 30)

39

Internazionale

19

FW

Giuseppe Galderisi

22 March 1963 (aged 23)

6

Hellas Verona

20

FW

Paolo Rossi

23 September 1956 (aged 29)

48

Milan

21

FW

Aldo Serena

25 June 1960 (aged 25)

5

Juventus

22

GK

Walter Zenga

30 April 1960 (aged 26)

0

Internazionale

Well, Italy is always seen as favourite. Reigning champions also are always seen as favourites. International observers overwhelmingly saw Italy as favourite – it was almost like before the finals in 1974. Back then Italian journalists and pundits saw Italy as candidate for the title, but now it was the opposite: Bearzot was heavily criticized and predictions were dark. Critics considered the team rather weak and were right to some degree: a whole bunch of key players were aging and no longer in top form, notably Paolo Rossi. Bearzot, true to his old promise and well known loyalty to his pupils, ignored some local favourites in favour of his old guard. Key positions were shaky at best – notably, the goalkeepers and playmakers. However, critics pretty much ignored offering solutions, for there were none – Zoff and Antognoni were no longer around and there were no similar players at hand. It was objective situation, nothing to be done about it. As for objections to the inclusion of some players and the absence of others… frankly, it was more or less comparing similar players and Bearzot, like almost every coach, chose experienced and familiar with teammates guys. There was no doubt Italy would be formidable in defence and for the rest… it was as ever: counterattacks could provide a goal or two. This Italian squad promised, at a glance, exactly what usually made Italy lethal: hard experienced team, not given to some extravagant play. One only had to recall the 1978 World Cup – wonderful play and nothing at the end. Of course, one may go back to 1974… dreadful play and nothing, but playing some painful football in 1982 made Italy world champions, the team eventually improving with time and at its best when mattered most. Italy was seen as the favourite in the group and certainly qualifying to the second round. And from there – sky was the limit.

Argentina.

Top row from left: trainer, Pumpido, Valdano, Giusti, Zelada, Clausen, Brown, Ruggeri, Islas, Maradona, trainer.

Middle row: Bochini, Tapia, Enrique, Pasculli, trainer, Bilardo – coach, Borghi, Cuciuffo, Trobbiani.

First row: trainer, Passarella, Olarticoechea, Garre, Almiron, Batista, Burruchaga, trainer.

 

Head coach: Carlos Bilardo

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

FW

Sergio Almirón

18 November 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

Newell’s Old Boys

2

MF

Sergio Batista

9 November 1962 (aged 23)

N/A

Argentinos Juniors

3

MF

Ricardo Bochini

25 January 1954 (aged 32)

N/A

Independiente

4

MF

Claudio Borghi

28 September 1964 (aged 21)

N/A

Argentinos Juniors

5

DF

José Luis Brown

10 November 1956 (aged 29)

N/A

Deportivo Español

6

DF

Daniel Passarella

25 May 1953 (aged 33)

70

Fiorentina

7

FW

Jorge Burruchaga

9 October 1962 (aged 23)

33

Nantes

8

DF

Néstor Clausen

29 September 1962 (aged 23)

N/A

Independiente

9

DF

José Luis Cuciuffo

1 February 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Vélez Sársfield

10

MF

Diego Maradona (Captain)

30 October 1960 (aged 25)

47

Napoli

11

FW

Jorge Valdano

4 October 1955 (aged 30)

N/A

Real Madrid

12

MF

Héctor Enrique

26 April 1962 (aged 24)

N/A

River Plate

13

DF

Oscar Garré

9 December 1956 (aged 29)

N/A

Ferro Carril Oeste

14

MF

Ricardo Giusti

11 December 1956 (aged 29)

N/A

Independiente

15

GK

Luis Islas

22 December 1965 (aged 20)

N/A

Estudiantes La Plata

16

DF

Julio Olarticoechea

18 October 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

Boca Juniors

17

FW

Pedro Pasculli

17 May 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Lecce

18

GK

Nery Pumpido

30 July 1957 (aged 28)

N/A

River Plate

19

DF

Oscar Ruggeri

26 January 1962 (aged 24)

19

River Plate

20

MF

Carlos Tapia

20 August 1962 (aged 23)

N/A

Boca Juniors

21

MF

Marcelo Trobbiani

17 February 1955 (aged 31)

N/A

Elche

22

GK

Héctor Zelada

30 April 1957 (aged 29)

N/A

América

With all the outrage against Bilardo and dark predictions that his team would not go beyond the first phase, hardly anybody in Argentina really thought that: the group was easy. Most likely Argentina was to finish second. As for the urgent calls ‘Bilardo, resign!’, perhaps nobody was taking this seriously either – changing coach just before the finals was suicidal move. Besides, in the great crusade against Bilardo 1982 was deliberately forgotten – the argument of ugly Bilardo football vs beautiful Menotti football did not hold water: Argentina was neither beautiful, nor successful in 1982 and Menotti had to go. And Bilardo made radical change of both philosophy and selection, so if he was sacked just before the World Cup, that meant making a new team from scratch. As for the team, it did not look much at first – only 5 players remained from the 1982 squad: Passarella, Maradona, Valdano, Pumpido, and Olarticoechea. Of them only Passarella amd Maradona were regulars. Valdano appeared in only one match, Olarticoechea was unused substitute and Pumpido never made even the game list. Of the 1978 world champions there was only Passarella left. The other radical departure from Menotti’s years was the massive inclusion of foreign-based players – 8 in total. True, Menotti stubbornly followed his believe that foreign-based players think mostly for their clubs and not for the country, but even if he was still at the helm ‘foreigners’ were going to be in the team, for by now the best Argentinians, including his own favourites, were playing abroad. However, Bilardo’s squad echoed the team of 1974 – practically no players from River Plate and Boca Juniors. The 1974 team was dreadful… and so was Bilardo’s. Scandals did not help either – Passarella compromised and decided to stay, perhaps driven by desire to play at third World Cup, but Fillol did not compromise and left the national team. Both played in the qualifications and suddenly looked like Bilardo was going to build anew – Passarella was in the squad, but was not going to be used. Perhaps – mostly because of his age – he was replaceable, but Fillol was a big loss. The best goalkeeper Argentina had and nobody even remotely close to him. Calling Zelada to replace Fillol produced justified outcry, but other members of the squad were similarly suspect: Almiron, Garre, Tapia… at least outside South America those were strange nobodies. To a point, the inclusion of Bochini was also suspect – a living legend, yes, but rarely called to play for Argentina. Already old… may be a legend, but Bochini was not included in the squads for 3 World Cups – 1974, 1978, and 1982. Why now? What for? Was he going to be used? To a point, Bochini was similar to Maradona player – one, who needs the rest of the team to play for him. This was Bilardo’s concept, of course, but based on Maradona. Maradona and Bochini could not play together, so unless thought of replacement, if Maradona fails, Bochini was going as a tourist. Claudio Borghi as well, for he was similar and compared to Maradona. There were too many suspicions and questions and Argentina was not seen as prime force, but expected to climb out of the group. Most likely second.

A trivia note: a point is usually made that Argentina used ‘unusual’ numbering at this World Cup. So fickle is the memory in the world of football – Argentina used alphabetical numbering in 1986, just like in 1982 and 1978. ‘Unusual’ numbering was used in 1974 too. And there were always some exceptions granted to the prime stars, so, following tradition, Maradona, Valdano, and Passarella were permitted to use their favourite numbers.

Bulgaria.

Sitting from left: Vassil Dragolov, Radoslav Zdravkov, Plamen Getov, Georgy Dimitrov, Stoycho Mladenov, Bozhidar Iskrenov, Kostadin Kostadinov.

Middle row: Iliya Dyakov, Zhivko Gospodinov, Anyo Sadkov (Ayan Sadakov), Georgy Yordanov, Georgy Vassilev – assistant coach, Ivan Voutzov – coach, Nikolay Arabov, Petar Petrov, Atanas Pashev, Plamen Markov.

Top row: Nasko Sirakov, Petar Aleksandrov, Boycho Velichkov, Nikolay Donev, Borislav Mikhaylov, Iliya Valov, Aleksandar Markov, Christo Kolev, Andrey Zhelyazkov.

Head coach: Ivan Vutsov

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Borislav Mikhailov

12 February 1963 (aged 23)

26

Vitosha Sofia

2

FW

Nasko Sirakov

26 April 1962 (aged 24)

18

Vitosha Sofia

3

DF

Nikolay Arabov

21 February 1953 (aged 33)

39

Sliven

4

DF

Petar Petrov

20 February 1961 (aged 25)

37

Vitosha Sofia

5

DF

Georgi Dimitrov (Captain)

14 January 1959 (aged 27)

65

Sredec Sofia

6

FW

Andrey Zhelyazkov

9 July 1952 (aged 33)

51

Strasbourg

7

MF

Bozhidar Iskrenov

1 August 1962 (aged 23)

33

Vitosha Sofia

8

MF

Ayan Sadakov

28 September 1961 (aged 24)

47

Lokomotiv Plovdiv

9

FW

Stoycho Mladenov

24 April 1957 (aged 29)

55

Sredec Sofia

10

MF

Zhivko Gospodinov

6 September 1957 (aged 28)

36

Spartak Varna

11

MF

Plamen Getov

4 March 1959 (aged 27)

18

Spartak Pleven

12

MF

Radoslav Zdravkov

30 July 1956 (aged 29)

65

Sredec Sofia

13

DF

Aleksandar Markov

17 August 1961 (aged 24)

18

Spartak Pleven

14

MF

Plamen Markov

11 September 1957 (aged 28)

37

Metz

15

MF

Georgi Yordanov

21 July 1963 (aged 22)

10

Vitosha Sofia

16

FW

Vasil Dragolov

17 August 1962 (aged 23)

2

Beroe Stara Zagora

17

MF

Hristo Kolev

21 September 1964 (aged 21)

7

Lokomotiv Plovdiv

18

FW

Boycho Velichkov

13 August 1958 (aged 27)

26

Lokomotiv Sofia

19

FW

Atanas Pashev

21 November 1963 (aged 22)

14

Trakia Plovdiv

20

FW

Kostadin Kostadinov

25 June 1959 (aged 26)

41

Trakia Plovdiv

21

DF

Iliya Dyakov

28 September 1963 (aged 22)

5

Dobrudzha Tolbuchin

22

GK

Iliya Valov

29 December 1961 (aged 24)

13

Vratsa

First of all, a note on names – Turks were forcefully renamed at that time, so Ayan Sadakov was listed as Anyo Sadkov in 1986. After the Cup final scandal in 1985, clubs were ‘disolved’ and renamed by the government: Vitosha is Levski (Sofia); Sredetz – CSKA (Sofia), Vratza – Botev (Vratza), Trakia – Botev (Plovdiv) today.

The photo perhaps describes best the uncertainty of coach Voutzov’s mind, which was characteristic of his spell as national team coach. This was the squad just before the last cut – 24 players, 2 had to be eliminated. These were the goalkeeper Nikolay Donev and the center-forward Petar Aleksandrov. Voutzov took a risk by going to Mexico with only 2 goalies – the wisdom of having 3 keepers at world cup finals is weird, but stubbornly popular. He went against it, taking a risk. But then he followed fear… Aleksandrov was young yet and not very stable player at the time, but he was typical strong center-forward and great scorer. With his elimination, the team had no typical center-forward left – and that happened when the opponents were already known! Physical, gritty teams like Italy, Argentina, and South Korea required strong, physical centers, capable to fight in the air and difficult to push around. Voutzov somehow chose to get rid of his only player suitable for such opponents, scared by his fragile age. But it was not only that – there were a quite a few questionable choices. Yes, Voutzov went to the head of the state to beg amnesty for heavily suspended players in 1985, because they were national team regulars, but the only really needed one was the goalkeeper Borislav Mikhaylov. Some of the restored just because he claimed he need them for the national team were not called at all – instead, some strange guys were included: the full backs Iliya Dyakov and Aleksandar Markov. Dyakov, playing in the Second Division, was universally seen just called to make the numbers. Markov was a little better, but his main quality was that he was tough fighter. Looked like Voutzov had no options for some positions… which was not true – there were a few better than those defenders, who he entirely ignored. Similar was the case with the strikers, particularly center-forwards – some good players were never even tried. Looked like Voutzov preferred more universal, lighter, and mobile players, but that led only to emphasis on defensive-minded players, saturation with midfielders, and piling up of players playing similar positions. Attacking midfielders like Getov, Gospodinov, Kolev, Yordanov tended to stay on the left side. Add Dragolov and Velichkov plus left-winger Pashev, plus universal strikers, often used as left-wingers like Mladenov and Iskrenov. Voutzov tended to use about 5 of them in a match, so… when things were going the wrong way and he had to look for different solutions, he had none. As the World Cup games proved. Andrey Zhelyazkov was another player Voutzov constantly used for reasons unknown – Zhelyazkov was, at the time, the most expensive and successful Bulgarian export and the first foreign-based player to play for the national team in the Communist era, but he was out of place on the field. Most likely Voutzov wanted him for his experience and Zhelyazkov tried to help,although had no idea how. He was running constantly, but he was entirely out of touch with the rest of the team, sometimes it was even funny when he suddenly made a run in the opposite direction of the flow of the game at the moment or pass awkwardly the ball in some known only to him direction. It was more like Zhelyazkov was playing for the other team, not his own. By now he was 34 years old and it started to show, especially when he was moved further back to help defence in Mexico – out of breath and speed, he often just gave up chasing an opponent near Mikhaylov’s net. It may be strange, but Bulgaria had a big number of talented players at the moment, yet, they somehow did not deliver in the national team, presenting constant problem establishing lines. Tactics and concepts were not the strongest points of Voutzov, so he constantly changed players, hoping that some combination could work, but always inclined to reinforce defence and saturate midfield. Hoping for some miracle, he took Kostadinov and Pashev, presumably, because they played together in Trakia and scored a lot. But they were tried and dismissed from the national team many times already, because they never performed well there – yet, Voutzov never tried the obvious: if calling them, to call their club playmaker, who provided them with great passes and their center-forward, who was ready to finish their crosses with a goal. This could be said for almost all his squads – they were somewhat piles of players to make the numbers, a rag-tag unfinished groups ill-fitted to play together. Bulgaria was expected to finish third, for South Korea was obvious outsider.

South Korea.

Head coach: Kim Jung-nam

No.

Pos.

Player

Date of birth (age)

Caps

Club

1

GK

Cho Byung-deuk

26 May 1958 (aged 28)

N/A

Hallelujah FC

2

DF

Park Kyung-hoon

19 January 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

POSCO Atoms

3

DF

Chung Jong-soo

27 March 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Yukong Elephants

4

MF

Cho Kwang-rae

19 March 1954 (aged 32)

N/A

Daewoo Royals

5

DF

Chung Yong-hwan

10 February 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Daewoo Royals

6

FW

Lee Tae-ho

29 January 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Daewoo Royals

7

FW

Kim Jong-boo

3 November 1965 (aged 20)

N/A

Korea University

8

DF

Cho Young-jeung

18 August 1954 (aged 31)

N/A

Lucky-Goldstar Hwangso

9

FW

Choi Soon-ho

10 January 1962 (aged 24)

47

POSCO Atoms

10

MF

Park Chang-sun (Captain)

2 February 1954 (aged 32)

N/A

Daewoo Royals

11

FW

Cha Bum-kun

21 May 1953 (aged 33)

125

Bayer Leverkusen

12

DF

Kim Pyung-seok

22 September 1958 (aged 27)

N/A

Hyundai Horangi

13

MF

Noh Soo-jin

10 February 1962 (aged 24)

N/A

Yukong Elephants

14

DF

Cho Min-kook

5 July 1963 (aged 22)

N/A

Lucky-Goldstar Hwangso

15

DF

Yoo Byung-ok

2 March 1964 (aged 22)

N/A

Hanyang University

16

MF

Kim Joo-sung

17 January 1966 (aged 20)

N/A

Chosun University

17

MF

Huh Jung-moo

13 January 1955 (aged 31)

N/A

Hyundai Horangi

18

MF

Kim Sam-soo

8 February 1963 (aged 23)

N/A

Hyundai Horangi

19

FW

Byun Byung-joo

26 April 1961 (aged 25)

N/A

Daewoo Royals

20

FW

Kim Yong-se

21 April 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Yukong Elephants

21

GK

Oh Yun-kyo

25 May 1960 (aged 26)

N/A

Yukong Elephants

22

MF

Kang Deuk-soo

16 August 1961 (aged 24)

N/A

Lucky-Goldstar Hwangso

Well, the outsiders. A mystery team, but no more – some improvement was registered, but it was mostly considered to be due to the fame of Cha Bum-kun, now playing for Bayer (Leverkusen). Inspirational player, certainly boosting moral, but he was 33 years old and aided by enthusiasm was still not enough. South Korea was to be considered lucky if they got a point. The only thing in their favour was that the were unknown and could surprise careless opponent – but even so, it was unlikely they could win even one match.

Before the World Cup

On the eve of the 1986 World Cup finals there were more problems and scandals than usually. One has to start from much earlier time – originally, Colombia was chosen to host the finals. But Colombia found itself unable and withdrew. In 1983 FIFA had to chose replacement. This was a problem started after 1974 and gradually getting bigger and bigger – replacement of Argentina was considered in 1978. The country was on the brim of withdrawal and there were also country urging a boycott for political reasons. It was heavily criticized championship – security was somewhat too heavy-handed and almost to the last minute stadiums were not ready. In 1982 Spain was severe criticism for late and insufficient preparedness and many feared that no stadium will be finished for the championship. And now Colombia called it quit. The problems were real: hosting a world cup was more and more expensive and overwhelming operation, stretching painfully almost every country wanting to host the big event – new stadiums had to be build, tourist lodging and attractions had to be organized in sufficient numbers, and security was looming almost as the central problem, because of ever increasing number of visiting fans and dangerously increasing fan violence. Colombia’s withdrawal was related to combination of domestic political problems and lack of enough cash. Replacement was not easy – as bad luck had it, it was American turn to host the finals. There were few countries able to host such an event to begin with and now even fewer candidates – originally, Brazil, USA, and Canada. Then Brazil withdrew and out of the blue Mexico stepped in. And Mexico was chosen, but there was bitter taste – it looked like Mexico was chosen in advance and no matter what USA and Canada would proposed, they were not going to win. Journalists dug a little and quickly discovered suspicious connections between Joao Havelange and some of the key Mexican bidders. The giant satellite TV company ‘Televisa’ was seen as the prime culprit, for it was going to take huge slice of the profits – it was the biggest TV supplier of the Spanish speaking world. Everybody was denying, of course, and nothing was proven, of course, but the sense of injustice, manipulations, scheming, bribing was very strong. Yes, it fitted well with Havelange’s determination to make the World Cup financially successful, generating enormous profits for FIFA. Corporate sponsorship was more than welcome and from this point of view ‘Televisa’ was important element, just like Coca-Cola: bring the game to every home, see the Coca-Cola add, run to get a bottle or two, and watch the second half sipping Coke. Everybody happy, right? FIFA get money from the sponsors for the privilege to peddle their products and money go to poor countries, so the kids there to be able to play football and develop the game further. No objections about that too.


Thus, Mexico became the first country in the world to host World Cup finals a second time. Good for the record book. On more mundane and closer to the game matters, Mexico was the best available choice: USA and Canada had no football infrastructure to speak of and everything had to be build from scratch. Mexico, on the other hand, already had relatively new stadiums, built for the 1970 World Cup and it was more of a case of cosmetic changes and repairs. Time was short, so the Mexican case was the better one. Secondly, this was the only country with developed football culture among the candidates. In 1983 it was plain that football in North America did not capture hearts and NASL was coming to its own bitter end. Both countries had the economic capacity for building new giant stadiums quickly and up to the modern requirements, but it was unlikely to happen, because it could be building useless facilities, a waste of money. Most likely both USA and Canada were going to twist the projects once chosen to host the finals and try to build something different – essentially, a baseball stadium instead of soccer stadium – and because of the time pressure they were going to get their way. Canada presented additional problem – just a few, but far away from each other, large cities. By now, FIFA demanded big tournaments to be played in as many as possible towns and Canada had no more than 4 possible candidates with enormous distances between them. May be even the 1976 Olympics were evoked as argument against: in 1976 most of football games were played on what FIFA did not even consider stadiums: University football fields and such. Canada had its own understanding of ‘spreading the game’ – it was on community level. Give the people a chance to see and then kick the ball a little at the neighbourhood park. It was quite possible Canada to propose some outlandish town as one of the venues, following its own spirit – a city like, say, Regina, which nobody heard of, relatively small and difficult to get to. Such proposition was horrifying for FIFA, wanting grand show and maximum exposure, ‘a big product’ to sell. Mexico had what USA and Canada lacked – football culture, large crowds, stadiums, tourist attractions, more or less enough hotels for accommodating visitors, and police better prepared to deal with fan troubles than USA and Canada, where fan violence was unheard of and supporters of opposing clubs sat peacefully next to each other, sipping beer and making jokes. North American television was unlikely customer too. Frankly, Mexico was the best choice, no matter how crooked the ‘choosing’ was. But that was in 1983.

In 1985 the World Cup was on the brink of collapse again: Mexico was devastated by massive earthquake. This time nature was the enemy, the damage was huge and Mexico was not that rich – looked like the country was forced to abandon the World Cup and use the money for recovery. And if so… there was no time left to get another host. Stadiums take time to build. But Mexico somehow decided to stage the World Cup. Relief. Qualifications were over by the end of 1985 and preparation was the focus in the early months of 1986. Speculations, hopes, criticism, scandals. Plenty of scandals…

 

The draw for the finals was perhaps the last happy moment. Everybody somehow got what they wanted – meaning, the usual favourites. On paper, everything looked just fine – Italy, Brazil, West Germany, France, Argentina, England were the favourites, most of them eternal favourites and France – because of what they displayed after 1978. Mexico had an easy group as well – but somehow hosts always get easy group. There were still spots for secondary teams to go ahead, no problem. Yet, never before world cup finals there was so much scandals and criticism of the usual leaders and there was severe doubt that the big football countries had the teams, the coaches, the attitude to play their ‘rightful’ role. Here are some of the big scandals:

Argentina. Menotti was sacked after the poor performance at the 1982 World Cup and Carlos Bilardo was appointed to coach the national team. He was not obvious choice and at first even did not look like he was hired for a long term: it was his recent success with Estudiantes (La Plata) central to his appointment. But the football his team played was disliked and even more disliked was his idea to make the national team play the same kind of football. Once upon a time Bilardo played for the very successful team of Estudiantes, coached by Osvaldo Subeldia, whose credo was ‘realistic football’. That was a concept of iron discipline, absolute following on the chosen tactic, defensive football, looking for opening for lightning counterattack. Ugly and brutal football, which made Estudiantes universally hated. Carlos Bilrado was key defender in this team and one the biggest villains. A team of brutal laborers was Subeldia’s Estudiantes and now Bilardo proclaimed that he will follow the same concept. After the artistic approach of Menotti, this was a huge step back. A step back to some ancient, pre-historic days of the sport. How possibly one can win in 1980s playing a football from the 1960s? Yes, Estudiantes was successful, but they won by 1-0, they were no fun, they spent most of the time kicking the opponents, fighting, arguing with referees. It was no football. That was one side of the problems with Bilardo, leading to bitter irony expressed in ‘El Grafico; just days before the World Cup was about to begin: ‘Bilardo finally managed to divide Argentina in two camps – those, who strongly dislike him, and those who hate him. There were open calls from all sides for his resignation – but he stubbornly did not. A French journalist, watching Argentina vs Colombia, was dismayed by the Argentinian fans – Bilardo was steadily whistled and booed during the whole match, the only moment the fans stopped was in the 24th minute,when Maradona dribbled around 9 Colombian players. That was the public side of the conflict – Bilardo had no friends in the country at all. Dealing with players was the other side – on one hand, Bilardo made clear that he was not going to follow Menotti, therefore, he had no use for players Menotti used. It was entirely different team, centered on Maradona. Two veterans were also included – Daniel Pasarella and Ubaldo Fillol. But it was not even a truce with them – Bilardo clashed with the stars over tactics, over teammates, finally over his making Maradona the team captain. Pasarella eventually bent and remained in the squad, despite the clear fact that he was not to play, but Fillol left the national team. Both were regulars in the qualification campaign, a part of Bilardo’s new team in 1985, but were out just before the World Cup. Fillol’s absence was seen as crucial: he was not only the best Argentine goalkeeper, but he was a regular for so long, there was practically no other keeper with international experience. Out of the blue Bilardo called the barely known Hector Zelada from his Mexican club and this move produced universal outrage: Zelada was 30-years old already and never played for Argentina. He spent most of his career in Mexico, hardly a championship where real stars play. Replacing Fillol with Zelada? Bilardo was out of his mind, surely. Resign, Bilardo! Give us a favour, get out! With you and your jokers we are going to be eliminated in the first round of the World Cup! Hardly ever before a coach faced such universal hostility in Argentina, the mood was dark, and disaster was expected. Outside Argentina opinions were also largely negative – it was shaky Argentina at best, a team with many problems, perhaps the bigger one was making Maradona the center of everything – Maradona’s failure at the 1982 World Cup was not forgotten and there were big doubts he will be better now.

Brazil. After the tragic end of the 1982 World Cup Tele Santana was not sacked, but he changed his approach. No more free improvising and fun – now it was to be careful tactical football, oriented on results only. But it was to be same squad as before. New approach, same players. Who were getting too old – it was repeatedly pointed out to Santana and he only shrugged, saying that age is not important in football. He felt it was his duty to give Zico and Socrates a chance to revenge themselves for 1982. How such free-spirited players were going to play tactical restricted football was unfathomable for fans and specialists. Santana was asking Brazil to play un-Brazilian football, a kind universally despised, and may be his new concept got only one supporter: four years ago Leao, the best Brazilian goalkeeper, refused to play for Santana, because of his undisciplined attacking concept. Defense was weakened in Leao’s view and he was somewhat proven right, for Brazil lost stupidly to Italy. Now it was defensive concept and Leao was back. But others were not and openly rebelled and criticized Santana, which led to their dismissal from the team. Eder was out – officially, for ‘weak legs’. That, for player kicking the ball with 175km per hour! Eder retaliated calling a press-conference with 200 journalists and telling them that Santana will lose his head in Mexico. More fuel for the fier. Renato was out – arguably, the best right winger at the moment. Officially, the reason was egoistic play, which did not serve the needs of the team. Santana dismissed the two best wingers in the country and disaster immediately followed: the last friendly before going to Mexico, against Chile, enraged the Brazilian fans and the team was showered with stones and rotten fruit at the end. ‘An agony and an insult!’ was the verdict of the press. Socrates, Zico, Dirceu, and Oscar were singled out as prime examples of Santana’s lunacy. The lats blow was just before leaving for Mexico – the plain for the team waited idly two hours, because Leandro refused to go at the last minute and Zico and Junior tried to persuade him to change his mind. Still, Leandro refused and immediately called press-conference to give his reasons: ‘Santana wants me to play a winger, but I am central defender. We have a winger – Renato – but Santana does not like him. That is why I don’t want to play for team coached by him.’ True enough… Leandro put his finger in the wound: Santana left out the two best wingers and now had none, so was looking for improvisation. It was stupid, it was a suicide. Best players out, but Zico, not even recovered from heavy injury and plainly out of form, was in… No wonder Santana received death threats and a funeral procession was led in front of his home with his coffin. And an effigy of him was publicly burned. Perhaps never before Brazil was in so dark mood before a world cup, expecting the worst and hoping only for some divine miracle.

West Germany. Usually, the most cruelly criticized team from domestic journalists. This time it was more than ever before – more scandals, more criticism, and also justified criticism, for it was plain fact that West Germany did not have enough classy players. The first scandal started quite early, but never went away: the West German Federation made a revolutionary move after the resignation of Derwall. It was long, iron-clad tradition… so far, West Germany had only 3 coaches, and the old one, after long serving, was replaced by his assistant. But it was not working anymore – partly, because football changed and there was need for somebody with fresher ideas, and partly because there were few really good players and perhaps only some radical change can make more from mediocre material. Franz Beckenbauer was appointed and that was very annoying: it was violation of the sacred – only am educated coach with proper professional license can coach, no exceptions. Beckenbauer had no license and no experience and there was massive professional outcry. It was a scandal not going away even after the Federation tried to compromise – Beckenbauer was not appointed as a coach, but as a ‘director’. Nobody was fooled – against this appointment were people knowing Beckenbauer for years: his former coach in Bayern Udo Lattek and his long-term teammate in the national team Heynckes, now licensed coach. Paul Breitner was merciless as well, although from another angle – now a journalist, but rebellious and iconoclastic as ever, he wrote that Beckenbauer’s team reminds one of old, falling apart, buggy, driven by drunk coachman. It was not far from reality, for the efforts of Beckenbauer to build some decent team at first looked quite clueless – he tried and dismissed Augentaller and Herget, before settling for Magath, who was clearly on downhill, too old, too slow. The efforts to bring Schuster again in the national team failed, but not before escalating into a scandal, this time between players: Schuster plainly said that the West German team is hopeless. His presence or absence would not make any difference. Rummenigge retaliated immediately, accusing Schuster of behaving like spoiled brat. The feud between the two was old, but now was rapidly spreading far and wide – relations in the national team will not be good during the Mexican finals, where Rummenigge will openly accuse ‘the Koln mafia’ of running the show. ‘The Koln mafia’ – Schumacher, Allofs, and Littbarski – had its own problems and grievances. Their problems with ‘the Muhchen mafia’ – Rummenigge and Breitner – in 1982 were not forgotten. Schumacher was particularly outspoken and increasingly feuding with anybody seeing things differently. He just managed to get fired Rinus Michels from 1.FC Koln and now was fighting with chief of the club. In Mexico he severely injured Herget during training match, which was seen as getting rid of him, for Beckenbauer wanted Herget to play libero and Schumacher did not. Beckenbauer used all his diplomatic skills to get a truce with Schumacher until the end of the World Cup – that was, not to give interviews. Schumacher promissed and then broke his promise. As well as his Koln teammates Allofs and Littbarski, who openly protested Beckenbauer’s view that his team has no champion qualities. And then it was almost open war against Rummenigge – not a superstar, in their opinion, but just favourite of Beckenbauer. And the reserve goalie Uli Stein contributed with his own complaints that Beckenbauer favours no-good Schumacher. It was everybody against everybody, never ending war and spat, and sober voices were almost lost in the battle cries. Beckenbauer constantly pointed at the real situation – there were no current German players capable of molding into champion team, that was the reality. Helmut Schon supported his old team captain: ‘the problem of Beckenbauer is that he has not a Beckenbauer in the team.’ Others tried to recall previous campaigns, which were shaky and uncertain at first, but with time the right team eventually shaped just when was needed – no need to attack Beckenbauer too much now. Among scandals and feuds sober realism somewhat prevailed: it was accepted that the current generation is far from great and no matter who coaches and who is in the national team, great expectations would be laughable. At least in West Germany, there were no expectations before the World Cup started, no great hopes, no ambitions. For the first time in years the expectations were modest.

Italy. Reigning world champions, thus, immediately a favourite and in Italy – that was the only concern. Nothing else could do, so the national team was scrutinized and criticized against grand expectations. Bearzot was the prime target – unlike Beckenbauer, Bilardo, and Santana, Bearzot had no problems with players. His team really liked him, the players were loyal to him. He was loyal to them too – it was mutual, but dangerous respect. Bearzot stated just after winning the World title in 1982 that he will use all of his players in 1986, provided they are under 40. Exception will be made for Dino Zoff – he could be at whatever age. Well, in 1982 Bearzot was God himself, but in football gods are transformed into devils incarnate the next day and in Italy – even quicker. The troublesome campaign for the 1984 European championship unleashed heavy criticism against Bearzot. He was accused of stupidly leaving out of the national team some stars, notably Pruzzo and Giordano, and time naturally was against the coach as well, for some of his beloved players retired or got too old, or lost form. By itself, aged players are not seen as something dangerous in Italy – not until they start losing. May be Bearzot made mistakes by not trying to construct younger team, but there was objective problem similar to the one West German faced: currently, there were not enough really talented youngsters. Whatever changes Bearzot did, was with more or less good knowledge that he was getting lesser quality and there was nobody else. He kept veterans as long as he could not just because he was stubbornly loyal, but because there was no equal to Scirea and Tardelli now. No matter what, Bearzot’s team was send to Mexico with open hostility – paradoxically, outside Italy the world press considered Italy as one of the biggest favourites for winning the world title.

France. Scandals gradually simmered and culminated during the World Cup finals, but they were mostly between Platini and journalists. France was going to the finals as one of the favourites and perhaps the most exciting team so far in the 1980s, but… that was largely based on the 1982 World Cup and the 1984 European finals. After that the team was shaky and there were some grumblings during the qualification rounds. There were some old problems – the attack – which never found solution, but on the other hand Platini was arguably the best player in the world in the last few years. But with time more and more was centered on Platini on and off the field and one negative result was growing tensions between him and the press. The superstar eventually got tired from the same questions, with the time lost to answer them and became ‘disrespectful’. Giving ironic, meaningless, ‘stupid’ answers, clearly showing that he wants the journalists out of his life, cutting them short. The journalists retaliated with sarcastic and negative reviews, increasing criticism and blaming him for every unfortune moment France had on the field. Hostility escalated and culminated during the World Cup, when he was accused that he influences the team coach Henry Michel and practically runs the team – to its peril. Prove? Easy… Michel was not substituting Platini even when he was in very poor form. So, Michel had to answer and defend himself. But it was easy to attack Michel further, using the traditional French weakness in attack – why this, and why not that, easy to scold and accuse, conveniently forgetting that France unfortunately had somewhat deficient strikers. Fragile Rochetetau, for instance, was almost permanently injured. Then recovering from injury and not at top form. So easy to ask both ways in the same time – why Rocheteau is not in the team and after that why Rocheteau is in the team? The French national team was hardly ever criticized as much as it was in 1986, but it was criticism born mostly from something different than the game itself – at the base was mutual irritation: football stars got fantastically high social status, which journalists, guilty of making the stars social celebrities, felt wrong and players had to be put back in their humble place. Thus, scrutinize them and expose whatever vile habits they have. Meantime the players felt they were constantly watched and never left in peace, losing privacy by the minute – they were angry of the intrusions, they were bored by stupid questions, and wanted to be left alone. But there was no way either side to get out of the circus, so conflicts and mutual hostility emerged. One of the biggest crimes Platini committed at the 1986 World Cup was ignoring the team of the French television and calling a Syrian journalists down the way, who was never hoping to get even close to the superstar to ask his questions. The French journalists retaliated immediately: ‘Michel Platini is anti-French!’ What started well before the World Cup continued after it, when Platini entirely stopped giving interviews – for that he was accused that never red a book in his life and his only interest is his banking account and he fell so low, that exchanged world success with France for money. 1986 was the undoing of Platini.

Uruguay. Again, most of the scandal started during the World Cup finals, but then the preliminaries were recalled in detail and relish. The national team coach Omar Borras was not exactly loved and was criticized often – but now he was villain number one, so everything happening before was unleashed. Was his title ‘ professor’ real or a fake? Can’t find which institution gave him the title… so better make him go to the beach and work there, for his diploma for beach lifeguard is at least real. He is more than your usual political right-wing lunatic – he collaborated with the murderous military junta! He has no guts and never sticks to anything, he is double-faced and never having real opinion – one minute brave, the next defeatist; one minute rejects all advice, the next takes it. No tactical skills to speak of. No vision. No selection – his ‘selection’ is just cramming whatever players with some names exist. But politically motivated, so whoever is on the left, is out of the squad. Some true to that – Ruben Sosa and Hugo de Leon were left out for political reasons. Both vastly popular in Uruguay and also top class players. Fernando Morena was one of the biggest critics – he predicted failure in Mexico: ‘The team does not play well, has no style, and no tactical concept – all because of the coach.’ However, with time it was more of a making Borjas a scapegoat than anything.

Bulgaria. Here everything was on a different plain, as always was in the Communist world – what and when happened was learned usually way after the actual event and was revealed partly by rumours, partly by half-truths. So, a big deal of problems were told after the World Cup and were piled on the heads of coach and players, although they were not the only culprits. It was scapegoating to a large degree, for some of the troubles were initiated by state and football officials. The coach was blamed for everything – for not listening to advice, for having no plan or concept, for favoritism, for wrong selection, for wrong preparation. To a large degree it was true Ivan Voutzov was not the best coach – at least two others were better in everything, but they were also ‘unsuitable’, they were not liked at all by various officials, so they not even considered. Well, it was not Voutzov fault that the Federation hired him and not the better ones. Nor was his fault that the same Federation did not fire him when some deficiencies became obvious. It was not his fault that the Communist Government crashed the best teams in 1985 and suspended national team regulars for life. Voutzov tried to make something after that – to more or less build a new national team with whatever players remained and it did not work. So he personally visited the head of state and Party Todor Zhivkov to plead for amnesty – and he got amnesty, no doubt singing concerns for national pride, for the glory of Socialist sport and fears that now we are giving the Capitalists free hand to mock us, for we have nothing to oppose them. It worked, suspensions lifted, everybody back in the pitch, but there was also bitter taste about it – what was the point? Penalizing, destroying clubs, and a few months later – the opposite. It was unprincipled situation, no matter what – particularly because after the penalties were voided very high expectations were expressed. As for the team, it was never convincing – some choices Voutzov made were more than suspect, perhaps the strangest one was the out of the blue inclusion in the Mexican squad of an unheard of Second Division player, who immediately sunk into obscurity after the finals. Voutzov had his favourites and they rarely played convincing game, but even that was perhaps secondary to the problem of tactics: there were no tactics really, seemingly, the whole ‘concept’ was to play heroically and, hopefully, prevail. Sometimes it worked, especially against teams having troubles at the moment. But when the clueless approach did not work… it happened at the World Cup and the result was disastrous: Voutzov rotated players, but the fixed number forced him to use some at unusual positions, where they were entirely lost and the chaos was only increasing. Why Voutzov ignored alternatives at particularly weak posts and insisted on combinations which plainly could not do anything was a mystery. All his selections had some curious players, contributing nothing and at odds with the opponent’s strength and even their own teammates. Most of it was obvious for years and even more so in the last months before the finals, when Bulgaria played a number of strange friendlies – it did not look like real preparation for world cup finals and later it was pointed out that the prime motivation for those friendlies was income. Later… it was too late ‘later’, the finals were over. And even ‘later’, it was more than doubtful the truth was told via criticism of the failed finals – ‘later’ everything was blamed on coach and players, but they were not guilty for everything, it was just the usual scapegoating, with the tacit agreement that if ‘you’ take the blame in the press, nothing will be done to ‘you’. With all blame piled on them, neither coach, nor a single player was punished, as suggested by official vitriol. Take the blame and for that you will be rewarded with foreign contract, even in violation of the transfer rules – the case of the national team captain Georgy Dimitrov, who went to St. Etienne right after the world finals. But most of it happened in Mexico, or was triggered by the performance there – in the spring of 1986 everything was quiet, except for some rumours and the plain idiocy of the preparations.

Of course, there were more difficulties and scandals, and problems, but those above were perhaps the biggest. Somehow the 1986 World Cup had too many scandals, more than the usual ones before, for there were always scandals before world finals. Perhaps the objective problem was universal depletion of good enough players – there was plenty of competent players, more than ever, but few were exceptional and even the strongest football nations had a dangerously limited number of options. A sharp contrast with, say, the Brazilian problems before the 1970 World Cup – back then Zagalo was asked what was he going to do with plenty, for he had Pele, Rivelino, Tostao, Gerson, and Jairzinho seemingly playing the same position. Too may, too great… he said he will use all of them, and he did. No such luxury now – the problem was not who to leave out, but who to put in at all. Beckenbauer spelled it out: ‘Don’t you understand that we don’t have a midfielder like Platini? Look at the Bundesliga – the best there are foreigners, the Dane Lerby and the Icelandic Sigurvinson.’ In his own way, Leandro said the same when he left the national team of Brazil – Eder and Renato are out, and there is nobody else, so Santana asks me, a defender, to play as a winger. Scarcity everywhere…or was just the fatal number 13?


The 13th World Cup was about to begin and perhaps – perhaps! – all earlier problems would be evaporated by excitement.

The format of the finals was changed again – 24 teams was weird number, difficult to structure to begin with – and this time there was no second group round. Instead, the formula was returned to direct elimination after the first stage: 1/8, ¼, ½, and a final. To make 16 teams for the second round the best 4 third-placed teams in the first round qualified to the 1/8 finals. By points or goal-difference, if points were equal. Not the best solution, but there was no best solution for a long time.

1986

1986

 

The World Cup finals were the big bang of the year, of course, but there was more. The usual expectations of the World Cup were not fulfilled: it was lively tournament, but without any revolutionary changes. There was even a step back, because in the effort of finding some sufficient way to beat the mechanic competence of so many, by now, teams, some looked at defensive tactics – the prime example was Argentina. This was also the last chance for the greatest stars of the last 10 years to concur the world’s top and they failed – Zico, Socrates, Falcao, Rummenigge, Magath, Platini, Tigana, Giresse, Blokhin, Camacho, Wilkins, Morten Olsen, Simonsen, Boniek, Gomes, Pfaff, Vercauteren, Ceulemans, Gerets. Unlike the great players of the past, those achieved little at the world finals, none becoming world champion. There was also a strong impression that many a coach was afraid of risks and ultimately preferred to use veterans, but in the same time it was very little to suggest as alternatives , for even the greatest football countries in the world had limited options, especially among the younger generation. It was one thing a small country with traditionally small pool of players to use veterans, but when Brazil and West Germany kept over the hill veterans… the future was not looking bright. And when dull, mechanic West Germany was continuously winning, than the future was looking even darker. The game was curiously retreating – the answer to competent, war-like and robotic football was one-man show. Find a solitary magician, surround him with defenders, and he can beat unimaginative robots – this was right from the 1960s, but Argentina succeeded. Yes, there were a plethora of tactics tried at the finals – 4-3-3, 4-4-2, 3-5-2, 4-5-1 – but none was revolutionary and innovations were more like desperate attempts to break matching team giving no chances. Well established, but already old tactics worked best – those, using libero. On the positive side counted the improvement of previously weaker teams to the point of the disappearance of outsiders. Perhaps for the very first time there was no laughably weak team – but this was double edged observation: yes, the weaker were getting competent, but the traditionally strong teams were getting weaker.

Behind the World Cup other things took place this year – perhaps the African Championship was most important. Still invisible, but arguably African football came of age this year. In the past, the teams reaching the World Cup finals dominated the African scene at least at that moment. But this year was different, suggesting that more than two or three African teams were strong. There was massive improvement of the game and most importantly there were no more meteoric teams – the best stayed strong year after year. There were not just Morocco and Algeria, but also Egypt, Cameroon, Ghana. Africa clearly left the romantic undeveloped stage and was rapidly catching-up with Europe and South America.

This was also the first year without English clubs in the European tournaments. How fair was the punishment depends on stand point, but it should be questioned nevertheless: on one hand, hooliganism was spilling over in Europe and beyond and was no longer just English ugly phenomenon. The suspension of the English clubs did not stop hooliganism at all. On the other hand how wise was to banish the most successful clubs? Since the beginning of the European club tournaments English clubs appeared at 33 finals, winning 22 of them. English teams won the Champions Cup 6 years in a row and Fairs Cup/UEFA Cup 6 consecutive years. Finals with English participant were usually more attractive and interesting to watch. From this angle it looked like UEFA was artificially cutting off the strongest and promoting dull football. And that at time when no other country dominated on club level – the West German dominance ended, the Spanish and Italian ones were long gone already. Not that dominance itself was a great thing, but it was like stepping down – no particular leading ‘school’, rather occasional spurts of greatness here and there, quickly extinguished.

At the end, no wonder ‘The hand of God’ became the everlasting emblem of 1986. It was a shameful moment no matter how one looks at it, a loud and clear commentary of the state of football at the time. Football was firmly established as war and everything was ‘fair’ in order to win. Talent itself had little to do with success, although it was there – after Maradona shamelessly scored with his hand, he displayed pure magic and scored his second goal. A brilliant goal, leaving everybody perplexed – a villain, but also a magician. Atrocity and greatness go hand in hand and the current star player was equally proud of both. Whatever for a win. Players in the past made blunders and were hardly angels; referees made mistakes, deliberately or not, but there was something new – in the past nobody was proud of their mistakes and faults. Now… it was ‘the hand of God’ and the current player took pride of his vile acts, if succeeding by them. Football lost the last remains of decency in particularly wicked way: just when one wants to blame Maradona, he produces something fantastically beautiful – and leaves us with both, neither hero, nor criminal, but both in the same time. Moral judgment stumbles and fails.