Retirement

Retirement. One of the most beloved and admired players of the 1980s Sócrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira played his last games this year.
Born on February 19th, 1954 in Belem, Para state, Socrates debuted in 1973 Botafogo (Ribeirao Preto, Sao Paulo state).

He played for his home team – his middle class family moved to this city because of his father work and Socrates grew up there – for 5 years, somewhat repeating the fate of Ademir da Guia of Palmeiras, with whom he is pictured here: admired at home, but unable to get national, not to speak of international, fame for some time. Socrates really got noticed around 1978. During his early years the tall striker made quite an unusual move for a player – he started and eventually completed University studies in Ribeirao Preto, getting medical degree. For Botafogo he played 99 games in 5 years, scoring 35 goals, entertaining the local crowd with his trademark back-heel passes, even scoring penalties this way. Botafogo he never forgot.
In 1978 Socrates moved to Corinthians, finally becoming a true star. In 4 years he played 135 games for Corinthians and scored 74 goals. He debuted in the Brazilian national team in 1979, repeating to a point the case of his friend Zico, who also debuted for Brazil rather late. But it was not just the dazzling football which made Socrates a star – his influence and opinions went outside the football pitch:
His political views and involvement made a history not just for Corinthians – his stand against military dictatorship forced his club to play with political adds on the team shirts: ‘Democracy’ and ‘cast your vote on 15th ‘. At that time Socrates also moved back from center-forward and number 9 to playmaker and number 8.
To a point, Socrates was already an anomaly – 192 cm tall, but thin as a rail, he was not perfect for center-forward position in times when burly defenders played rough physical game. His height was even more unusual for playmaking midfielder, so he played somewhat a mix of a straiker and playmaker. Not very fast and largely preferring slow tempo, he had great acceleration, somewhat reminding Cruijff, who was also fragile-looking player with no great speed, but explosive acceleration. Already established key player of wonderful Brazil of 1982, Socrates was destined to go to Europe, as all South American stars were eager to do.

In 1984 Socrates donned the jersey of Italian Fiorentina. But he stayed in Europe just one season, playing 26 games and scoring 6 goals for his new club. 30-years old by now – going to Europe a bit late, like Zico – it was not his age which made his European career short: it was mostly his character. Independent, not much concerned with money, loving Brazilian life too much and not really liking to train, Socrates disliked cold and demanding European professional football and quickly returned home.
Now he joined the most popular Brazilian club, Flamengo.
Should have been the perfect choice from a political point of view: the left-leaning Socrates playing for the people’s club, for the club of the poor.
And also playing together with his friend Zico should have been magical and personally satisfying. But… age and lifestyle were taking their tall. Zico was also getting old and the pairing of the two was perhaps not very well thought move: they somewhat duplicated each other and were not always effective together because of similarity of position. Socrates played only 12 games for Flamengo, scoring measly 3 goals, and in 1988 he was no longer part of the club.
Next stop – Santos, the club of Pele. It was like Socrates paying homage to Brazilian icons – Flamengo, Santos – but it was gradual going home… The season with Santos was not bad – in 1988-89 the aging star played 25 games and scored 7 goals. But ‘aging’ was the key word now… Socrates was no longer the same.

In 1989 he moved to Botafogo (Ribeirao Preto) and after 6 games called it quit. Thus he made full circle, finishing his career exactly where he started it. After 303 official games and 125 goals Socrates stepped down.
For Brazil Socrates stopped playing in 1986 – after the World Cup fiasco, when it was decided that the old stars had to be replaced by new team.
Socrates debuted for Brazil when he was 25-years old in 1979 and ended his national team duties in 1986, when he was 32-years old.
Along with Zico, they were the face of the wonderful Brazil built by Tele Santana.
It was playing for Brazil Socrates became a darling for millions around the globe – elegant, highly technical, graceful, imaginative, always a gentleman on the field, Socrates returned to the fans what was rapidly disappearing in the 1980s: the sheer pleasure of watching football. Alas, the wonderful Brazil and Socrates did not win a World Cup… and in a time increasingly recognizing only success, Socrates became also a symbol of failure somewhat: what good is dazzling play, if you lose? Still, he played a total of 60 games for Brazil and scored 22 goals.
Winner of loser, Socrates – or Dr. Socrates as he was often called – had a charm appealing the fans, even those who subscribed to the cold philosophy of winning no matter how – Socrates was somewhat a player of the gone romantic past: a nice guy, intellectual and bohemian, who disliked training and loving holding court in the neighbourhood pub with glass of beer in one hand and cigarette in the other. He was accessible, humbly, good companion, interesting to meet and chat with, egalitarian, and when stepped on the pitch – highly entertaining. Teammates and fans liked him, listened to him, and respected him. Coaches liked him and listened to him, putting benevolent bling eye to his missed practices, skipping demanding physical exercises, drinking and chain smoking. Club officials get along and respected Socrates and also put a bling eye to his unprofessional lifestyle. Socrates did not hide his preferences – he was honest and open about it: ‘take me as I am, for I am not changing’. His career had no major scandals – doing what he likes in times demanding Spartan professionalism, he was never involved in scandals like those hunting George Best and Diego Maradona. Yet, his lifestyle affected his career – for a big international star, Socrates played only 302 games in 16 years. Considering that he played mostly in Brazil, where even lesser players appear about 40 times in a year, Socrates’ numbers are small… then again, it is hard to tell what counts for official games in Brazil.
Socrates retired and his life continued in the way he liked best: largely in the pub, chatting with ordinary people. Yet, he was Socrates, not just another faded old star recalling nostalgia when drinking himself to death with nothing better to do. Socrates truly became Dr. Socretas, practicing medicine as family doctor. Well, most of the time he did that, but also did not abandon football. Coaching was not his forte – perhaps because coaching presenting problems similar to that he had as a player: training and discipline. He tried coaching three times: Botafogo (Ribeirao Preto) in 1994, LDU (Quito, Ecuador) in 1996, and lastly one more small Brazilian club – Cabofriense – in 1999, but it was sporadic activity and is hard to tell was he incapable coach, or just disinterested in the profession, taking it sometimes in whim, but not really wanting to make a career. Coaching, seemingly was like playing for him – mostly love of football, but not to be taken all that seriously. He, however, take much more regularly journalism – both in writing and on radio and TV. To be a commentator was more satisfying to his intellectual nature and he wrote column on politics and economics as well as on football. With time Dr. Socrates became largely a neighbourhood sage figure – mostly to be found in the cafe ready to chat. His bohemian nature made his retirement a statistical joke, for he added one more game to his record and that far away from Brazil:

In 2004 Socrates came back and in lucrative England at that.
He was contracted for 1 match as player-coach of semi-professional Garforth Town – and came on the pitch as a substitute for 15 minutes. It was rather pathetic appearance, but still a mockery of his retirement and statistical havoc as well: which year should be considered for his last – 1989 or 2004? And 12 minutes count as official game, so at the age of 50 Socrates completed his official record to 303 games total. But if playing – or sitting on his ass – 12 minutes in a non-league semiprofessional club in England counts, then why not beach football or whatever games Socrates was involved with even before 1989? Let statisticians worry about that – Socrates was too well loved by anybody else, so we can forgive him anything. His moments with Garforth Town were instantly memorable – what a thrill to see him with their jersey! The charming power of ‘anti-athlete’, as he honestly called himself. Fans easily forgive Socrates that his less talented brother Rai actually brought real success to Brazil and oveall had more lucrative career – Dr. Socrates gave us pleasure, one of the few artists of the game after the end of the 1970s.

World Cup Qualifications. Oceania. Group 14

Oceania – group 14. The weakest continent, which did not have designated spot at the finals as usual. Perhaps not fair, from Australian point of view, but objectively speaking only Australia and New Zealand were there and both countries ranked very lowly in the football scale. It was even difficult to have meaningful qualifications in this group. And because of that Israel was placed in this group – a fantastic combination, but Israel, expelled from Asia for many years, was homeless team and out of desperation FIFA attached it to tiny Oceania. Three teams, having to fly literally half the planet for away match. At least all participants were able to afford such spending, which was not the last either – the winner of Oceania had to play further qualification playoff against the winner of South American Group B. Really, a team of this group would hope only on miracle to qualify them to the World Cup finals and only the fact that all participants were wealthy countries made them play under such difficult and expensive circumstances.

1.Israel 4 1 3 0 5- 4 5
Israel won the group and rightly so, for they had a few players well established in European professional football and there opponents entirely lacked professional stars. The ugly face of 1980s football showed itself as well: in the last and decisive group game in Sydney, the Israelis were shocked by hostile Australian fans waiving banners with Nazi swastikas. Yet, team Israel extracted 1-1 draw and left Australia triumphal.
2.Australia 4 1 2 1 6- 5 4
Here is the Australian team unable to beat Israel in Sydney and thus finishing second. Hopes for second World Cup appearance ended, but nothing really surprising: Australia perhaps had better football in 1989 than in 1974, but still it was lowly level and the team was nothing much.
3.New Zealand 4 1 1 2 5- 7 3
Among the weak, they were weakest – even the empty stands show it. Well, it is rugby world ‘down there’. New Zealand manage to win their home match against Australia – 2-0 – which was a matter of local pride and to a point blocked Australia from going ahead, but that was all.
Israel won the group of Oceania and had to meet the winner of South American Group B next. Colombia. Up and coming Colombia, led by Carlos Valderrama and the first leg was in Bogota.
Team Israel put a good fight, but lost 0-1. The minimal loss gave them a strong chance, but only a chance: the result is somewhat misleading – and repeated in later years. South Americans often underestimated their opponents from ‘undeveloped’ continents and suffered as a result. Nobody could deny that team Israel did their best, but also it was certain that Colombia was the stronger team by far. Two weeks later in Ramat Gan Israel was unable to beat the Colombians – the visitors extracted a 0-0 draw and reached the World Cup finals. As a whole, Israel had strong campaign, but difference of class won at the end.
And with that the qualifications came to end – 22 teams were going to Italy in the next year: Romania, Sweden, England, USSR, Austria, the Netherlands, West Germany, Yugoslavia, Scotland, Spain, Republic of Ireland, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Uruguay, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, USA, Egypt, Cameroon, South Korea, and United Arab Emirates. Host Italy and reigning World Champion Argentina completed the finalists. Meantime, Communism was rapidly collapsing in Europe and the rapid political changes already made a tricky situation – it was not all that certain that some countries will be in 1990 and what could be the new European map. Germany unified by the end of 1989 and there was no more West Germany – at the finals Germany was going to play. USSR and Yugoslavia gave strong signs of falling apart and even if full disintegration would not happen, at least it was becoming clear that their national teams will be weakened with players refusing to play for them for nationalistic reasons. The old order was collapsing and football was affected by that. At least for Europe, it was the last year and qualifications of ‘classic’ small Europe – soon it will be vastly enlarged with teams of old, but not recognized in football terms, and newly made countries. Changes were taking place in the whole football world – 1989 was, in a sense, the last year of ‘stable and familiar’ football globe.

World Cup Qualifications. Asia. Group 13

Asia. Group 13 – two teams going to Italy. The qualifications went through two rounds – at first the participating countries were divided into 6 groups, which winners went to final round and the top two teams in the final group qualified to the World Cup finals. In 5 of the first round groups games were played in the familiar way: every team hosted one leg against its opponents and played the second leg away. Subgroup D (South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, and Nepal), though, had all games played in Seoul and Singapore. Originally, five teams were in this group, but India withdrew. It was not the only country to withdrew from the qualifications – Bahrain (Subgroup B) and South Yemen (Subgroup C) did the same, leaving the actual groups uneven: two groups had 3 participants and the rest – 4 teams. In a way, there were two big surprises in the first round:

Japan finished 2nd in Subgroup F, behind North Korea, and
Iran lost the battle for top position in Subgroup E to China dramatically – on goal-difference.
Japan’s elimination was seemingly more surprising – Iran lost ground because of Islamic revolution and regime which came to rule the country in the late 1970s, which affected negatively football, but Japan was developing steadily during the 1980s and was rapidly becoming one of the leading football countries in Asia. But solid professionalism was only in its very first steps and perhaps that was why Japan failed.
The final round between the 6 group winners took place in Singapore – a round-robin tournament between teams representing the leading football strongholds in Asia: the Arabic West and the Pacific coast in the far East. Since economic wealth goes hand in hand with football, the winners pretty much represent that as well: economic rapid development and oil money.

1.SOUTH KOREA 5 3 2 0 5- 1 8
No surprise there: South Korea was perhaps the best developed Asian country at that moment – careful building of the game, step by step towards full professionalism brought results and South Korea reached World Cup finals again – 1986 finals were just a stepping stone, continued now on higher level.
2.UAE 5 1 4 0 4- 3 6
United Arab Emirates came rather surprising second, but in the same time their great success was not entirely out of the blue: UAE were part of Arabic West rich on oil money and investing in football. Unlike South Korea, team UAE had to fight against equal foe.
Their key match was against China – here Khalil Mubarak just equalized and thus turned the game in UAE’s favour. It was the only match the team won, but it was against their biggest rival – 2-1.

The great Mario Zagallo coached UAE to their success – an instant hero, of course, but the Brazilian of Lebanese descent was not to coach UAE in Italy (replaced by another Brazilian, who would become famous coach as well). Thus, UAE reached World Cup finals for the first time – what a thrill.
3.Qatar 5 1 3 1 4- 5 5
Not bad, even close to qualification, but… unsteady. They lost badly to North Korea – 0-2 – and that was more or less the end of their hopes.
4.China 5 2 0 3 5- 6 4
China – pictured here in a game against Iran in the first round – entertained high hopes for going to Italy, but the game against UAE killed them.
5.Saudi Arabia 5 1 2 2 4- 5 4
Cannot judge them harshly – Asian football was pretty much equal and depending on chance, momentary form, sudden drops of form. The Saudis were neither better, nor worse than the others, but it was not their time to reach World Cup finals.
6.North Korea 5 1 1 3 2- 4 3
Perhaps the weakest team in the final group, driven more by political motivation than anything else. Did what they could, but perhaps their really big aim was prevailing over South Korea – and they lost the battle 0-1. After that they lost all remaining games.

World Cup Qualifications. Africa. Group 12

Africa was also Group 12 with 2 teams qualifying. Like CONCACAF, the tournament went through elimination stages, culminating into final 3rd round where two pairs of teams met and the winners qualified to play in Italy. At first and second stages countries withdrew: Lesotho, Ruanda, Togo, and Libya. Eventually, the 3rd stage was reached: Algeria vs Egypt and Cameroon vs Tunisia. Depending on outcome, African football could make one important historic step – never before a team from Africa appeared 3 times at World Cup finals. But it was not to be this time…
Egypt killed the historic chance – they kept Algeria at bay in Constantine to 0-0 tie and in the second leg beat them 1-0 in Cairo. Egypt reached the finals, Algeria did not qualify for third time to the finals.
Meantime Cameroon ended the decade with second qualification to the World Cup finals – they won at home against Tunisia – 2-0 in Yaounde – and then won the second leg in Tunis 1-0. Here are the winners in Tunis: Second row from left: Jean Manga Onguene, Nlend Ajouma, Omam Biyik, Cyril Makanaky, Jean Claude Pagal, Emmanuel Kundé, Andre Kana Biyik, Louis Paul Mfede, Joseph Antoine Bell, Jules Denis Onana. Bottom: Emile Mbouh, Stephen Tataw, Hans Agbo, Lotin Ernest Ebongué, Eugene Ekeke, Bertin Ebwellé Ndingue, Bonabenture Njonkep. Cameroon did it again, confirming its high standing in African football aand also the legendary status of Jean Manga Onguene – a star player in the 1970s and now coaching Cameroon to its second World Cup.

World Cup Qualifications. CONCACAF

Central and North America – CONCACAF. Group 11. Two teams qualified and normally one of them was indisputable certainty – Mexico – but… scandals played its role in the complicated qualifications. In the second round of the qualifications Mexico was found guilty of infringement of age rules and disqualified. Since there are no age rules in national team competitions, it must have been in some junior-team tournament. Rumors of cheating and manipulating birth certificates were going around for years, but mostly African countries were suspected of such things. In any case, practically no country was suspended so far – Mexico was the first. Without the heavy favorite… anything was possible in the CONCACAF qualification. And the wild possibilities depended on events outside the playing field.
The political situation in El Salvador led to messy final stage: the last 2 games between Guatemala and El Salvador were annulled by FIFA. Before that the match between El Salvador and Costa Rica, played in San Salvador, was abandoned. When the game was interrupted, Costa Rica was leading 4-2 and later FIFA awarded the same result to Costa Rica. Thus, the final stage of CONCACAF qualifications ended in this order:
1.COSTA RICA 8 5 1 2 10- 6 11
The country reached World Cup finals for the first time. Great success, indeed, but the Costaricans did not achieve it entirely by playing. Twice victories were awarded to them and if the abandoned game in El Salvador was not important, the disqualification of Mexico was crucial – if Costa Rica had to play against Mexico, most likely it would have been eliminated. Good lucky strike, but otherwise the team played well.
2.USA 8 4 3 1 6- 3 11
Luck had nothing to do with the achievement of team USA – they played as well as they could and reached the finals. USA reached finals once again, but practically for the first time after proper qualifications.

3.Trinidad/Tobago 8 3 3 2 7- 5 9
The team tried hard, but could not make it. Not a big surprise.
4.Guatemala 6 1 1 4 4- 7 3
Did not play full schedule, but the games against El Salvador even if awarded in their favour could not elevated them higher.

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5.El Salvador 6 0 2 4 2- 8 2
The political situation of the country greatly affected their performance – 3 of their games in the final round were abandoned.

World Cup Qualifications. South America. Groups 8, 9 & 10

South America. Three qualification groups here, but only two group winner qualified directly to the finals – the winner of Group 9 went to playoff against the winner of Oceania for a spot at the finals.
Group 8
1.URUGUAY 4 3 0 1 7- 2 6
Group favourtites, but lucky to win the group and only on better goal-difference. Sure, in terms of quality of the World Cup finals Uruguay was the best option, having world-class stars, but not everybody – especially in Europe – was happy: the brutal way of playing at the 1986 World Cup was well remembered and Uruguay was feared to taint ‘the reputation’ of the finals ones again.
2.Bolivia 4 3 0 1 6- 5 6
Surprisingly strong performance and one could be sorry the underdogs did not win the group. To a point, the schedule benefited their opponents: Uruguay had the last 2 games of the group at home, the first hosting Bolivia. It was highly unlikely the Bolivians could win in Montevideo, the only outcome which guaranteed them qualification. At the end, Bolivia came very close to going to Italy, but was denied on goal-difference.
3.Peru 4 0 0 4 2- 8 0
I sharp decline, Peru lost all games.
Group 9. As luck had it, ‘lesser’ teams played in it and the winner had to play against the winner of Oceania for the spot in Italy.
1.Colombia 4 2 1 1 5- 3 5
Up and coming Colombia clinched top position.
2.Paraguay 4 2 0 2 6- 7 4
A gritty team can win, but more often loses. Not by much, but loses.
3.Ecuador 4 1 1 2 4- 5 3
Ecuador was the outsider and finished last, but managed to drag down Paraguay.
Colombia faced Israel, the winner of Oceania, next. Won minimally in Bogota – 1-0 – but managed to keep scoreless draw in Ramat Gan two weeks later and thus reached the finals. Drug money aside, it was a team deserving the play at the World Cup finals – at least because of wonderful Valderrama.
Group 10. Whether or not this group was decided outside the field is debatable, but the scandal is well remembered at least in Chile. It happened in Rio de Janeiro, in the last and decisive group match. Brazil and Chile had equal points Brazil was leading 1-0.

A flare from stands apparently hit the Chilean goalkeeper Rojas. He dropped dead at one. Eventually, the match was abandoned and the case had to be ruled by FIFA. Investigation concluded that Rojas faked having been hit and injured. FIFA awarded the game to Brazil, but Chillean feel wronged even today. In any case, Brazil reached the finals not on the field.
1.BRAZIL 4 3 1 0 13- 1 7
Brazil came close to miss World Cup finals for the first time. Would have been enormous failure not only hardly anyone imagine finals without Brazil, but mostly because the newly build national team had huge potential. Yet, they managed to qualify. The picture is something like B-team of the country, from friendly played in June against Denmark in Copenhagen and lost 0-4. It mostly shows what Brazil had at the time, for a good number pf players here were stars, yet, without real chance to be starters for Brazil. Standing from left: ’Bernardo’ da Silva, ’Paulo Roberto’ Curtis Costa, ‘Ricardo’ Raimundo Gomes, Cláudio Ibrahim Vaz Leal ‘Branco’, André Alves da Cruz, ‘Acácio’ Cordeiro Barreto. Bottom, left to right: ’Valdo’ Cândido Filho, ‘Geovani’ Silva, Gerson II,  ‘Cristovão’ Borges dos Santos,’Bismarck’ Barreto Faria
2.Chile 4 2 1 1 9- 4 5
Chile really challenged mighty Brazil, but… the unfortunate incident in the crucial last group game taints the outcome with myth: Chileans feel they were wronged by FIFA, ruling in favour of Brazil. In reality, Chile had no chance to prevail over their mighty opponent: they were losing 0-1 when the match was abandoned and if played to the end, it was highly unlikely Chile could equalize, let alone win in Rio de Janeiro. Good effort, but scandalous finish.
3.Venezuela 4 0 0 4 1-18 0
Outsiders as ever, losing all games and scoring only one goal.

World Cup Qualifications. Europe. Groups 4, 5, 6 & 7

Group 4.
1.NETHERLANDS 6 4 2 0 8- 2 10
Since only one team directly qualified to the finals from this group, the principle battle was for the first place between Holland and BRD. There were old scored to be settled as well, for the Dutch 1974 was never forgotten. They had the edge this time – reigning European champions, plenty of talent, including the top three European players, excellent football – as the photo shows, the team was formidable even without Gullit. Nobody won in the clash between Holland and West Germany, but still the Dutch won the group. They were on the road to concur the world – that how it looked in 1989.
2.West Germany 6 3 3 0 13- 3 9
Clearly in decline, but one cannot dare dismiss the Germans – whatever they lacked in skills, they compensated with battling character and great determination. The group was technically easy – only Holland was a problem and the Germans did not allow the better otherwise Dutch to beat them. Yet, they did not win the group and that was a problem… among the 3 second-placed teams to compete for 2 spots in the finals it was pure chance. England had the same record as West Germany. Denmark had better goal-difference. Luckily, West Germany had a point more than the Danes and clinched the finals.
3.Finland 6 1 1 4 4-16 3
No hopes for reaching the finals, of course, but considering the level of Finnish football third place was very satisfactory.
4.Wales 6 0 2 4 4- 8 2
Wales had no chance to reach finals, of course, but still they were expected to finish ahead of Finland. So, to a point the team failed… not winning even one game. But they brought the big scare to West Germany taking a point from them and thus effectively placed Holland at the top, leaving the mighty Germans to depend on luck.
Group 5.
1.YUGOSLAVIA 8 6 2 0 16- 6 14
Political troubles were already simmering in 1988, when the qualifications started for Yugoslavia, but nobody imagined disintegration and civil war even by the fall of 1989. As usual, the Yugoslavs were a team capable of reaching the finals and that was their aim – two teams qualified from their group, but it was a battle between 3 teams… quite equal teams: France was showing signs of decline, but Yugoslavia was also shaky. Scotland depended largely on fighting spirit for quite a long time, thus matching at least relatively weakened Yugoslavia and France. However, Yugoslavia stepped on the pedal and had a surprisingly good campaign given the players at hand. Comfortably on the top of the group as a result. This is the team ending 0-0 in a friendly against Brazil in 1989: standing from left: Panadić, Prosinečki, Stanojković, Spasić, Marović, Ivković; crouching: Savićević, Brnović, Stojković, Hadžibegić, Janković.
2.SCOTLAND 8 4 2 2 12-12 10
Quite frankly, Scotland had much more talented teams in the past, but whatever the Scots lacked in skills they compensated with grit and spirit. Reaching the finals was possible. At the end, it was reality – Scotland managed to finish ahead of France.
3.France 8 3 3 2 10- 7 9
Second row from left: Henri Emile (Int.), Joël Bats, Stéphane Paille, Sylvain Kastendeuch, Alain Roche, Marcel Dib, Basile Boli, Jean-Christophe Thouvenel, Franck Sauzée, Bruno Martini, Gérard Houllier (ent. adj.).
Sitting: Christian Perez, Daniel Bravo, Eric Guérit, Jean Tigana, Michel Platini (sél.), Jean-Pierre Papin, Jean-Marc Ferreri, Manuel Amoros.
In a nut shell, coach Platini did not have player Platini. Inevitable decline… the old great stars aged and stepped down and the new talent was not at the same level. Change of generations takes time. Torn between old and new, France was not a bad team, but it was not the team of early half of the decade and was beatable. Jean-Pierre Papin was the current bid name, but the absence of Eric Cantona shows the problems of the transitional time. France fought and lost. Minimally, but fatally – no finals for them.
4.Norway 8 2 2 4 10- 9 6
Like many ‘small’ countries, Norway improved a lot during the 1980s, but still was unable to really challenge traditionally ‘big’ teams. Strong campaign, but without really disturbing the status quo. This is the squad of one of the games against Yugoslavia – Norway lost both games by a goal, however, they extracted ties against France (at home) and Scotland (away).
5.Cyprus 8 0 1 7 6-20 1
Still outsiders.
Group 6.
1.SPAIN 8 6 1 1 20- 3 13
Such was the group that Spain was sure winner. They won, of course, but the fact that Ireland finished only a point behind them was a warning sign: Spain reached the finals, but was hardly a team to make great impact in Italy.

16 November 1988; The Republic of Ireland, from left to right, Kevin Moran, Packie Bonner, Ray Houghton, John Alridge, Steve Staunton, John Sheridan, Tony Galvin, Mick McCarthy, Tony Cascarino, David O’Leary and Chris Morris 

2.IRELAND 8 5 2 1 10- 2 12
Given the decline of Hungary, Ireland had a chance. And they more than used it – in fact, it was surprisingly strong campaign for a naturally limited team. This is the squad which faced Spain and beat it 1-0. Jack Charlton really made the most from his team. It was great to see Ireland going to World Cup finals. If anything, the boys were brave fighters.
3.Hungary 8 2 4 2 8-12 8
What is there to say? Hungary was already in long decline and there was simply very little talent at hand.
4.Northern Ireland 8 2 1 5 6-12 5
Sometimes spirit is not enough and that was the case of Northern Ireland. The other Irish had Stapleton, Whelan, Houghton, Moran… Northern Ireland had no solid big names.
5.Malta 8 0 2 6 3-18 2
This is the national side before the World Cup qualifier against Northern Ireland played at the National Stadium at Ta’ Qali on 26th April 1989. Standing from: David Cluett (Floriana FC), Denis Cauchi (Floriana FC), John Buttigieg (Brentford, England), team captain Ray Vella (Ħamrun Spartans), Martin Gregory (Sliema Wanderers) and Edwin Camilleri (Hibernians). Squatting: Charles Xerri (Hibernians), Joe Galea (Rabat Ajax), David Carabott (Hibernians), Carmel Busuttil (KRC Genk, Belgium) and Michael Degiorgio (Ħamrun Spartans). Improvement was there, testified by players good enough to play in England and Belgium, but Malta still remained an outsider. The team on the picture lost the game 0-2 at home. However, they extracted 1-1 tie against Hungary in Budapest.
Group 7.
1.BELGIUM 8 4 4 0 15- 5 12
Much depends on draw… Belgium was in a group of relative equals. Yes, it was in decline, very mucg dependent of veterans, but among the opposition there was no formidable team and anything was possible. And no matter what, the Belgians were traditionally good fighters. So, like many times before Belgium was at least serious and solid and won the group. It was great to see wonderful player like Gerets going one more time to World Cup finals.
2.CZECHOSLOVAKIA 8 5 2 1 13- 3 12
May be this vintage lacked the talent of the 1976 European champions, but Josef Venglos and Vaclav Jezek were back at the helm and delivered. A mixed bag of a team, really, but having a core of strong players – Griga, Luhovy, Hasek, Straka, Nemecek, Chovanec, Moravcik. At least for reaching the finals in this group, that was enough. For more? Highly unlikely…
3.Portugal 8 4 2 2 11- 8 10
The great soaring of 1983-87 was gone, Portugal sunk into relative decline again and the team shows it: Rui Barros was pretty much the lone star. If there are not strong players, nothing could be done… Portugal tried as much as they could, but the limitations of the team excluded them from the finals.
4.Switzerland 8 2 1 5 10-14 5
Only luck would had them qualified – Switzerland simply did not have enough great players. Kubilay Turkylmaz was not enough to propel them higher. As expected.
5.Luxembourg 8 0 1 7 3-22 1
Naturally, outsiders. Got one point from Belgium, which amounted to a great success at the time for Luxembourg, especially because the point was earned in the away match. No matter that the game did not matter to Belgium.

World Cup Qualifications. Europe. Groups 1, 2 & 3

World Cup qualifications. 24 teams were to play at the finals in Italy next year. Italy as host and Argentina as reigning world champions directly qualified to the finals. The rest of the world had to go through the process of qualifications depending on the continental quota and organization of reaching it. Oceania had no final spot as usual and their winner had to go to playoff against the winner of Group 10 – or the second South American qualification group. Israel was included in the Oceania as it had been done on previous occasions. South Africa was still banned completely from participation. Europe was divided into 7 groups, but the rules were complicated: since Europe had the largest quota at the finals, second-placed teams from the groups qualified as well, but with them all the quota was exceeded. Thus, three groups – 1, 2, and 4 – did not have direct qualification of their second-placed team, but only 2 teams with best results qualified. This was the last time ‘old Europe’ played a tournament – by the end of 1989 the European map started to change rapidly and in effect the number of countries increased dramatically. It was not just new countries popping out of the ashes of USSR and Yugoslavia, but also small fringe of the European football world was included and, eventually, ‘homeless’ Israel. So, it happened to be the last show of so to say ‘classic Europe’ in football terms. Various unpleasant events tarred the qualifications elsewhere – from Nazi swastikas meeting team Israel in Australia to expulsion of teams for cheating. Whatever happened in the world at large, football was reaching the sorry bottom of decline and entering big crisis – the decline was noticed gradually during the 1980s and critical point was finally displayed in the 1990 World Cup finals. So far, though, no big reforms were attempted. Lastly, the qualifications were largely played in 1989, which was something new, even if largely concerned Europe: previously, qualifications often lasted 3 years, but most games were more or less equally spread in two years and relatively few games were played in the fall of the year preceding the finals – this time most games were played in one year, many of them in the fall of 1989.
Europe.
Group 1
1.ROMANIA 6 4 1 1 10- 5 9
Romania reached the World Cup finals for the first time since 1970, which was great success. The team led by Gheorge Hagi already was well known and respected around Europe. The missing name was Belodedici, who left Romania for political reasons. The photo is from the friendly against Czechoslovakia.
2.Denmark 6 3 2 1 15- 6 8
Absolutely unlucky – strong campaign and great scoring record, the only team to beat Romania, but… among the second-placed teams in groups 1, 2, and 4 they had the least points and did not qualified to the finals.
3.Greece 6 1 2 3 3-15 4
Nothing special as expected. Reached 3rd place in the last group match against already eliminated and disinterested Bulgaria by winning it at home 1-0.
4.Bulgaria 6 1 1 4 6- 8 3
Everything ended pretty much after their third match, which resulted in second home loss. One more failure, which from the distance of time may look strange, for all big names well known in the 1990s were at hand and almost the whole team was soon going to play for solid clubs in the West. Sitting from left: Bozhidar Iskrenov, Pavel Dotchev, Anyo Sadkov (Ayan Sadakov), Plamen Getov, Christo Stoichlov, Ilian Kiryakov, Georgi Yordanov, Atanas Pashev. Standing: Boris Angelov – coach, Nikolay Iliev, Borislav Mikhailov, Trifon Ivanov, Dimitar Vassev, Ivaylo Kirov, Petar Aleksandrov, Georgi Dimitrov, Zapryan Rakov, Iliya Valov, Lyuboslav Penev, Ivan Kyuchukov – assistant coach.
Group 2.
1.SWEDEN 6 4 2 0 9- 3 10
Wonderful campaign of a squad yet to become well known. Talent and determination were there and the boys really build character holding their own against England. The photo is from one of the games against England.
2.England 6 3 3 0 10- 0 9
Usually England had very strong qualification campaigns only to fail at finals, but this time… yes, they ended not only unbeaten, but without permitting to score even one goal in their net. But Sweden got more points and England finished second in the group, thus depending on the results of teams in groups 1 and 4. Luckily, they had a point more than Denmark and qualified to the finals. Paul Gascoigne and all… were just lucky.
3.Poland 6 2 1 3 4- 8 5
Whatever hopes the Poles had ended quickly and quite predictably – the present vintage was a far cry from the great team of 1974. Solid – yes. But nothing more.
4.Albania 6 0 0 6 3-15 0
Albania was one of the team starting the qualifications in 1988, so the photo is from that year. Not greatly different from the squad ending predictably weak campaign – they lost every game they played. Talented vintage by Albanian standards, but the familiar outsider in the big European picture.
Group 3.
1.SOVIET UNION 8 4 3 1 11- 4 11
As expected, team USSR won the group easily. Talent was there, the team was highly regarded and players now permitted to play abroad had strong motivation to perform well and get noticed by foreign clubs. Political changes would affect them very soon – soon, but not during the qualifications. This is the squad playing in the second match against DDR – by that time, USSR already qualified to the finals and lost the game 1-2.
2.AUSTRIA 8 3 3 2 9- 9 9
Somewhat of a surprise – Austria was expected to be third. Solid team, but not at the level of team from 1978-82. Prohaska was at his last legs and not in the team most of the time. To a point, Austria benefited by the political tremors in DDR.
3.Turkey 8 3 1 4 12-10 7
Turkey improved a lot during the 1980s, but still did not have a team capable of reaching finals. Very good campaign and very encouraging final standing, but one have to keep in mind the East German situation too and take the Turkish performance with a grain of salt.
4.East Germany 8 3 1 4 9-13 7
Not even dreamed of in the beginning of 1989, but DDR was no more at the end of the year. Political unrest and eventual fall of Communism affected the qualification campaign of otherwise talented team expected to reach the World Cup finals – some of the players actually did, but with the jerseys of unified Germany (Sammer, Kirsten, Thom). Team DDR had uneven campaign and still had a chance to qualify – they beat USSR 2-1 before last decisive game against Austria in Vienna. One can question the victory over USSR, though – was it somewhat a clash on principle, like the 1974 World Cup match against West Germany or was it a last helping hand by the Soviets, which already qualified. Was it an East German finally taking revenge for having to bend over to USSR? Whatever it was, this victory did not help and very likely the German players even did not care much for World Cup finals by November 15th , when they lost 0-3 in Vienna, the last match in this group.
5.Iceland 8 1 4 3 6-11 6
The boys played as hard as they could, but whatever improvement Icelandic football made in the 1980s, it was still not a real match to most European countries. Brave campaign, but predictably Iceland finished last.

More General Observations

Scandals are scandals, but was it not the general state of football bright in the 1970s? The optimism of the beginning of the decade did not last long. Neither the Brazilian samba, nor the total football survived – rather, they were transformed into something else: domination of tactics, great physical emphasis, and sharp decrease of creative players. The grave signs were already present in 1974: on one hand was Brazil, and West Germany was on the other. Seeing what was going on in Europe, coaches in Brazil were alarmed – they detected lagging behind and urgent need of change. The result was the dreadful Brazilian team at the World Cup 1974, which was to catch up with European football. It was defensive minded, disciplined team. There was no spark in it, no imagination, no fun. Only victory mattered, not how it was achieved. Yet, Brazil had to surrender its title and finished 4th. Many, myself included, felt even 4th place was too much, Brazil did not deserve to be that highly placed.
Meantime the West Germans were on another road: after Ajax destroyed Bayern in 1973, the Germans realized that attractive football was not going to win anything. In 1974 Bayern won its first European Champions Cup. The Bavarians added two more cups in the next two years. None of their games was pleasant to watch – they barely survived the nasty final with Atletico Madrid and won the Cup in the replay thanks to superior fitness. In 1975 the whole final was played in the penalty area of Bayern, but it was not Leeds United victorious at the end – Bayern won 2-0. In 1976 Bayern scored one goal against St. Etienne (France), and it was enough. The French played much more pleasant to the eye football, and lost. Bayern was winning largely because they were able to outrun the opposition, to terrorize it everywhere on the pitch, to defend themselves shrewdly, and to wait for rare counter-attacking opportunities. By the end of the 1970s practically everybody learned to run non-stop 90 minutes, to pressure the opposition, to fight for the ball cynically, to waist time by endless passing between defense and goalkeeper. Players became the same, there were no more outstanding individuals. The game was moving and more into the central area of the pitch, where both teams fought not that much for the possession of the ball, but fought to block and prevent the other team from developing attacks. Superficially, attacking football, total football dominated the decade, but teams were happy to score one goal and the rest was just speedy running around and tackling the opposition. Defensive football did not die at all – for the most part of the 1970s the Italian championship showed 0-0 ties. The Soviets were the same and tried to introduce changes, hoping to break the scary habits of clubs to end half of their matches 0-0. Ill fated reforms, though… the first was no points for 0-0 ending matches for both teams. No problem, winked the clubs – by silent agreement, both teams were quickly scoring a goal each in the first minutes of the match and whatever ‘real’ playing followed after point giving 1-1 was established. The Soviet federation fought back: no points for more than 10 ties in the season. But the clubs were not to give up – very few clubs lost points for having too many ties. Instead, clubs started exchanging wins in a ‘gentlemen agreements’ : A wins at home against B, and gets 2 points. Later, when visiting B, A loses and B gets their 2 points. At the end, the same number of points for each, as it used to be before with two ties.
From this perspective, the 1970s were hardly exciting decade. Franz Beckenbauer delivered warning as early as 1974: talent was drying out and grave days were coming. He spoke for the German football, but his prediction applied to the whole of European football. Everybody can prepare players to run 90 minutes non-stop, but so what? Of course winning is very important, but what about beautiful football? The new reality seemingly had no place for skilful players and they were disappearing fast – no new Netzers, Beckenbauers, Cruiffs emerged. Players were look-alikes workaholics without individuality. Teams looked the same, games looked the same, football was quickly becoming very boring.

Bayern won the European Champions Cup third time in a row in 1976. As in the previous years, Bayern failed to inspire fans. St. Etienne was the better playing team at the final, but the Germans were once again physically stronger and tactically more disciplined. Rummenigge was already displaying the features of the new breed of footballers: supremely fit, disciplined, forceful, but not exactly shining player.

Hoeness and Hansen with one more cup. They even don’t look particularly happy; rather, businesslike – job well done and nothing more. Tactics prevailed: only 2 years earlier Hoeness was fun to watch. By 1975 there was no big difference between him and ordinary player Hansen on the pitch: both running and fighting endlessly. Hoeness did not risk anything skilful or extraordinary, it looked like he sunk to the level of Hansen, not the other way – an ordinary player becoming imaginative and skilful like earlier Hoeness.

Football is never clear cut, only good or only bad. The sport is always very diverse and a sick man (a fan) is largely fueled by hope. Yes, the last match was terrible; yes, the season is lost; yes, my favourites angered me again; but tomorrow would be different. Every new match is a hope renewed against reason. The sick man goes to matches and continues reading match reports, and collects. And he is not alone… his cravings are continuously fed. Sometimes by unusual sources. Football literature is an obvious supply for the addicted. With the years passing, I became somewhat skeptical and selective when it comes to football books.
I dislike and avoid two types of football books – the histories of the World Cup and players autobiographies. The histories concentrate on the most recent tournaments. I rather read about World Cup 1938 in detail – the World Cup 2006 I remember painfully well… it was not as great as the upbeat pages of the book tell me. But the older the tournament, the less pages it gets.
Players fail to interest me when writing of themselves. Few of them have to say anything about great games and the opposition. I want to read about football, not about weddings, vacations, and purchases of cars and houses.
Once the above categories are eliminated, there is a sea of football books. Some good, some not so. However, two books I recommend highly:

and

Why? Read the books and you will know for yourself.

Football appears in the ‘high’ literature as well: the great Austrian writer Robert Musil was even prophetic – in his enormous and unfinished masterpiece The Man Without Qualities, Musil saw the football player (along with the tennis player) as the new ‘profane’ modern hero. He placed the emergence as early as 1913. On the other hand, Albert Camus attributed positive qualities to football in terms of morals and ethics. But he was speaking about 1930s and early 1940s. The little moment in The Outsider, where the crowd carries the goalkeeper on their shoulders through the city’s streets is nostalgically touching. Another Austrian, Peter Handke, published in 1970 one of his most famous novellas: ‘The Goalie’s Anxiety At The Penalty Kick’. The central character is Joseph Bloch, ‘a construction worker who had once been a well-known soccer goalie.’ (3 X Handke, Collier Books, New York, 1988)
Those are fiction books, of course, and little football knowledge can be extracted from them: no real players of teams, or fixtures. But occasionally football appears in fiction surprisingly real.
Two examples from the Argentine great writer Adolfo Bioy Casares: ‘In a Sport-Dimanche that somebody left in the waiting room of the Hotel de Roma I was able to find out that today Reims plays Paris-Saint-Germain a match that I wouldn’t want to miss for anything, because Reims number 9 – the center forward, as we’d say in my day – is none other than Carlitos Bianchi.’(the short story ‘Our Trip (A Diary)’, A Russian Doll And Other Stories, New Directions Books, New York, 1992, p. 75). The episode is hilarious, at least for a soccer fan – it is going to the match with annoying ignoramus, forcing the narrator to leave the stadium before the game ends. Carlitos Bianchi is none other than Carlos Bianchi:
Carlos Bianchi still playing for Velez Sarsfield (Buenos Aires)
He played for Reims from 1973 to 1977, before moving to Paris Saint-Germain (1977-79), RC Strasbourg (1979-80), going back to Argentina and Velez Sarsfield (1980-84), and finishing his career in France – his last season is again for Reims, 1984-85. Bianchi played 14 games for the National team of Argentina and scored 7 goals between 1970 and 1972. He was 5 times top goal scorer in France (1974, 1976, and 1977 with Reims, and 1978 and 1979 with Paris SG). Curiously enough, another Argentine, playing at the same time in France is also 5 times top scorer and all-time top goal scorer of the French League with 299 goals – Delio Onnis. The two replaced each other as leading scorer – Onis in 1975, 1980, 1981, 1982, and 1984. And finally: Onnis played for Reims between 1971-73. Bianchi took his place in 1973, when Onnis moved to Monaco. Unlike Bianchi, Onnis was not born in Argentina, but in Rome, Italy, the son of Greek emigrants, and was less known in Argentina. Bianchi was Argentinean champion in 1968 and three times top goal scorer – 1970, 1971, and 1980 – with Velez Sarsfield.
Delio Onnis, the great rival of Bianchi in France. Here with the colours of his third French club – Tours in 1981.

But perhaps the player means nothing to you. Try the more familiar coach Carlos Bianchi: three Intercontinental Cups – 1994, coaching Velez Sarsfield; 2000 and 2003 coaching Boca Juniors. 4 Copa Libertadores coaching Velez and Boca. Three Argentine titles with Velez, and 4 with Boca. Coach of Paris SG 1990-91. Coach of AS Roma in 1996. Coach of Atletico (Madrid) 2005-06. One of the best coaches of the 1990s – voted South Americam Coach of the Year in 1994, 1998, 2000, 2001, and 2003. Such is the little Carlitos popping out of the story by Bioy Casares.
But the writer had more in his sleeve: ‘Dante, who always got angry when he lost (though as a fan of the Excursionista soccer team, he should have learned to accept defeat philosophically), chided him for not keeping his mind on the game’. This sentence occurs in the beginning of the novel Diary of the War of the Pig (E. P. Dutton, New York, 1988), on page 5. The outlandish name sounded suspect, most likely an author’s invention, but knowing Bioy Casares I decided to check and make sure. It was real.

Club Union de Excursionistas was found in Belgrano District, Buenos Aires on February 1, 1910. The name was changed to the current one – Club Atletico Excursionistas (CA Excursionistas) in 1920. The glory days of the club are deep in the past: 10 seasons in Primera Division from 1925 to 1934. It should be mentioned this is old amateur Primera of Argentina, recognized by FIFA. It was much bigger league than today’s Primera – 36 club participated in 1928 and 1930. Our heroes were not big success, usually finishing in the bottom half. Their best year was 1931, when they finished 5th in the 16 club league. But in 1931 18 clubs left Primera to organize their own professional league – Excursionistas finished high, but among the remaining smaller clubs. Until 1934 there were two concurrent leagues, the amateur still the legal one. Once the professionals became legal, they became the Primera Division and Excursionistas plummeted to their contemporary existence in the 4th Division (Primera C Metropolitana). In their entire history only one player of notice played for the club – Rene Houseman (in the Argentine squad for World Cup 1974 and World Cup 1978) – he made his name in Huracan, but ended his long career in Excursio.
Rene Houseman – Argentine champion with Huracan (this is a photo of those days), played 15 minutes as a substitute in the World final 1978, played for River Plate, Colo Colo (Chile), Amazulu (South Africa), and Independiente before joining Excursionistas in 1985.

In 2006 it was rumoured that Maradona was going to play for Excursionistas, but nothing happened.

The team in 2005

La Pampa – the Excursionistas stadium in Buenos Aires with 8000 capacity and hardly any grass.

Football in books can be enjoyable, but football in motion pictures is rare. Starngely, the exciting game never makes good film script. I have seen few films based on football and did not like any of them. Not memorable films and not up to my own taste. But here is an example: in 1981 Escape To Victory came out. A Second World War adventure film, more or less structured around a ‘life or death’ match between prisoners of war and Nazi military team.

Nazis and dog excluded, back row (left to right): Russell Osman (England), Paul Van Himst (Belgium), Mike Summerbee (England), Sylvester Stalone (Rocky/Rambo a goalkeeper?) John Wark (Scotland), Kazimierz Deyna (Poland), Soren Lindsted (Denmark)
Front row: Hallvar Thorsen (Denmark), Osvaldo Ardiles (Argentina), Michael Caine, Pele (Brazil), Bobby Moore (England), Co Prins (Holland).

What a selection? Well, except the goalie, but remember Brazil 1982? Holland 1974 and 1978? Even the great Ajax had no goalie to speak of. Now, the Nazis had no player of any standing and our boys won.
A moment of the match: POW Pele tricks a Nazi.

I always had the feeling Hollywood adapted a horrible actual event from the Eastern Front: there was a match in Kiev between Nazi team and Soviet POWs – the story says it was practically Dinamo Kiev, and is incorporated in the club history, but in the recent years the Dinamo version is refuted. But there was such a match. No black player and no Rambo, however.

Football and literature, football and movies, what about football and music? May be better not going there… Sure, Rod Stewart, Elton John, fans songs, ‘You’ll will never walk alone’ at the end of Pink Floyd 1971 record Meddle (incorporated in ‘Fearless’) . But…

Barcelona in the studio, recording ‘Azur y Grana’ (Blue and Red).
Back row, left to right: Juanito, Rexach, Torres, Rife, Marcial, De la Cruz
First row: Juan Carlos, Asensi, Sotil (Peru).
On the right Cruiff either getting ready to belt out a solo, or expelled for lack of singing form. Or lack of Spanish. The goalkeeper is absent.
If you never heard the profound song of the 1974 Spanish champions, you are lucky.

Fine arts didn’t shy away from football either. Here is a sample:

The painting by Bulgarian modernist Kiril Tzonev (1896-1961) is appropriately named ‘Boy Football Player’ and most likely was done in the 1930s. But similarly to the other arts, painting and sculpture did not produce major works. Football resists artistic representations. In my view, it is because the high drama of the real sport. No representation can make it livelier or more dramatic. No representation can substitute the real game – representation is always cheap substitute, pale and lifeless, predictable. Even the notorious lack of culture characterizing both players and fans is not important here: the sport itself prohibits artistic representation, because it is art itself, containing all artistic elements and tensions. Thus, football art comforts to realism – a statue of an old star adorns a stadium or two, preferably a faithful copy of the real person. Photography is favoured most: from collectors to club museums, it is the photos collected and displayed. Fine art is left for the official posters of big tournaments. Yes, Juan Miro made the official poster for World Cup finals 1982. I, however, prefer another one:

– the poster for the first World Cup in 1930, Uruguay. The art-deco design of Guillermo Laborde (1886-1940).
No real football fan can be fooled by some highfalutin ‘art’ – he knows art. He knows this:

toothless Joe Jordan, wearing the national jersey of Scotland. Yes, he was known as ‘Dracula’ in England and ‘The Shark’ in Italy because of absent teeth, but football was still ‘the poor man ballet’ in the 1970s.

May be a ballet of a special kind, considering football aesthetics. Later kits will be discussed in length, yet, a hint here: the colour brown. Can’t blame football people for lack of taste – the away kit of Coventry City from the second half of the 70s speaks loud and clear: .

Ian Wallace’s hair is a perfect match to the ill-famed ‘chocolate brown’, known as ‘excrement’ to Coventry’s fans in 1976. Voted the worst kit ever in England. However, no need fans to die of shame – they are not alone. Two other clubs proudly display brown – C. A. Platense from Argentina and Sanct Pauli from Germany. Brown is not their reserve kit either – brown and white are their original colours. Platense, a smaller club from Vicente Lopez, Greater Buenos Aires, nicknamed ‘Calamares’ (the Squids), founded in 1905, finally ascended to the First Division in 1976:
First row: Niro, Orlando, Pinasco, C. Gómez  y  Ulrich.
Standing: F. P . Rivero, Morelli, Peremateu, Belloni, Miguelucci, Gianetti.
This is the squad in 1977, when they finished 20th in the 23-club league, barely escaping relegation. The Squids managed to survive in the top league until 1999, achieving a cult status by their last minute escapes from relegation. Apart from that, the only interesting fact about them is one David Trezeguet, who played in brown jersey before moving to Monaco and fame.
FC Sankt Pauli is the second club of Hamburg, hailing from the notorious district of the same name. Similarly to Platenese, St. Pauli has cult status and oceanic nickname – ‘The Pirates’.

Similarly to Platense, they reached First Division for the first time in 1977. They did not last at top level. Actually, the Pirates are very unstable – moving up and down between first and third division, but more or less preferring the second Bundesliga. This is a club with a sense of humor – unlike everybody else, St. Pauli is not founded in 1910, but ‘non established since 1910’. And similarly again with Platense: the only known players gracing the brown jersey were the Czech national player Ivo Knoflicek and more recently the Croat Ivan Klasnic. Klasnic, like Trezeguet, became famous after moving away from brown jersey. Here are the brown Pirates in 1997-98, getting ready for some Second Division action:

First time in the Bundesliga, 1977:

Aufstiegs-Elf 1977 v.l.n.r.: Höfert, Rynio, Rosenfeld, Gerber, Mannebach, Frosch, Neumann, Tune-Hansen, Oswald, Ferrin, Demuth. Foto aus “Wunder gibt es immer wieder”, von René Martens
Perhaps one more club should be added to the brown cohorts: Dukla. Unlike Platense and St. Pauli, this is newer club associated with establishment. It was found in 1948 as a club of the Czechoslovakian army and thus representing the Communist Party in a way: it was to be the correct proletarian club, opposing the old ‚bourgeaosie’ clubs. In the familiar pattern of Communist East Europe, Dukla was a club from the capital, Prague, heavily promoted by having free hand in recruiting the best players from the country.

Naturally, it was successful club, winning 11 Czechoslovakian titles – the only brown club not struggling to avoid relegation. Dukla’s best years were the 1950s and 1960s. Unlike the rest of the ‚browns’ Dukla had many great players, including Josef Masopust, voted European Footballer of the Year in 1962.

The star in the famous brown and yellow jersey… but is it brown? Or is it Rouan red? Or terra cotta red? Whatever it was, it was changed by the middle of the 1970s – Dukla started playing in yellow (keeping the brown for away kit, however). The changed look in 1976-77:

Sitting, left to right: Netolicka, Stambachr, Samek, Vejvoda (coach), Brumovsky (assistant coach), Nehoda, Bilsky, Viktor.
Second row: Dr. Minarz (medic), Pelc, Fialka, Novak, Stastny, Tabor, Borovan (masseur).
Third row: Gajdusek, Mikus, Macela, Dvorak, Svehlik, Bendl, Rott, Vizek.
Good days… 11 national players from various years; 3 European champions from 1976 in the above foto. Good days ended after the fall of Communism. By 1993-94 Dukla had financial difficulties and was relegated directly to 3rd Division in part because of them. Having been ‚Communist club’ did not help either – there was no more enthusiasm for saving the club in post-Communist Czech Republic. Eventually, it was merged with another club under the name Marilla and moved to the small city of Pribram. Recently Dukla was revamped as indepependent club (the other club in Pribram existing separately), currently playing in the 2nd Division. The curse of the brown, I may think – no ‚brown’ club is successful in a long run. And, to end with similarities, like Platense and St. Pauli, the only famous donning brown jersey in the last 20 years – Pavel Nedved – achieved fame elsewhere. Tough legacy for Coventry fans… are they not in Second Division now? Whoever wears brown goes down.
Brown kits came late to me. When I lounched my collection club colours were big problem. I was ignorant of most clubs and my first fotos were black and white. Like this very rare now picture of:

Orlin (Pirdop) finished 9th in the Second Bulgarian Division in 1964-65. Standing from left to right: Gaydarsky, Spasov, Hristov, Mishev, Milenov, Georgiev, Serafimov.
First row: Kostov, Stoynov, Georgiev, Banov.
The club from the small city of Pirdop was founded in 1945. Since the name is personal male name, most likely the club was named after some unknown to me Communist ‘hero’, according to the custom of the time. Not the real name of the ‘hero’, mind, but his underground nickname. The name posed no problems in the long run and survived the fall of Communism – ‘Orlin’ is a name based on the Bulgarian word for eagle, and thus appropriate for club name (think predatory and glorious club). Seems alright without obsolete Commie mythology. The club was renamed once – in 1997 it became FC Pirdop, but in 2000 returned to the old name. Its last season was 2003-04, when it finished 10th in 13-club 4th Division Sofia Region tournament – one place above the new local rival Spartak 2001 (Pirdop). The club withdrew from participation before the beginning of next year season and this is the last known info about it. It may be reincarnated yet, who knows. Of course the club was modest one: largely dwelling in 3rd and 4th divisions. Its glory came in the 1960s: due to reorganization of Bulgarian football Second Division expanded in 1962 – 40 clubs were to participate, divided in two groups – Northern and Southern. Orlin, winning the Sofia Region championship, was included in the Southern group. It was not only the expansion, though: at that time Valko Chervenkov was still the leader of Bulgarian Communist Party , the most powerful man. He was born in Pirdop and in the custom of dictators showered his birthplace with gifts: brand new metallurgic plant was constructed, which immediately killed and poisoned its surroundings. The new industry benefited the football club – although not immediately attached to the plant, care was taken via hot Party lines: it was only proper a city of industrial glory to have corresponding glory in sports, and what better sport than football. Money went from plant to club; ‘amateur’ players received salaries as ‘industrial workers’ and Pirdop enjoyed Second Division football until 1970, when the club ended in the relegation zone and never came back. By that time Chervenkov was forgotten and the plant was no longer neither big news, nor profitable. (Only its poisonous fumes remained constant.) Orlin’s best season was 1966-67 – they finished 4th in the Southern Second Division and reached 1/16 finals in the national cup tournament. Apart from politics, rather typical story of small club from small town. And because of that, I have no way – so far – to establish neither team colours, nor club’s logo. Judging by team photo, white may be ruled out, but that is the end of guesswork.
Orlin (Pirdop) may not be big deal compared to other colour headackes. The first glance at Ajax (Amsterdam) puzzled me:

I was happy to take a look at the fresh winners of the Cup of European Champions, but which was Ajax and which – Panathinaikos? It looks like the ‘dark’ players scored here… which led me to think Ajax were the ‘dark’, since they won 2-0. The first colour pictures of both finalist reinforced my youthful mistake: my first Ajax (now lost, regretfully) was dressed in blue and white and my first Panathinaikos was in white jerseys. Not knowing yet that I got reserve kits of both clubs, it took some time until I corrected my ignorant mistake. By the way, the first time I saw Ajax, they played again in their reserve kit against Bulgarian champion CSCA (my Bulgarian archenemy, since I am Levsky fan). Actually both clubs played in reserve kits for their first kits were red and white. Captains looking for the ball – Johann Cruiff in blue and white and Dimitar Penev in white. CSCA eliminated Panathinaikos in the 1/16 finals after curious three games – thanks to Soviet referee mistake, the second match was annulled and replayed. Ajax eliminated CSCA in the 1/8 finals, winning both legs – 3-1 in Sofia and 3-0 in Amsterdam.
Blast the colours! The kid, beginning his collection, struggled to get pictures of teams dressed in football gear. The kid hated – and still hates – teams in civilian cloths. Photos like this were collected regretfully:

Dimitar Penev is invisible here, but he was a member of the Bulgarian national team climbing the stairs to Mexico bound airplane in the summer of 1970. Second from left is the coach ‘Dr.’ Stefan Bozhkov – one of the biggest Bulgarian stars in the 1950s and disastrous national coach in 1970. Bulgaria qualified for the World Cup finals and the good doctor (he had medical degree, although never practiced medicine – one reason for me to place his title in parenthesis) deigned that the best way to prepare the national team for the summer Mexican heath was to stage winter high-mountain training camp. Plowing in January snow was his view of acclimatization. Penev later ‘coached’ Bulgaria to 4th place in World Cup 1994. Wisely, he tackled USA summer heath by not staging any training camps and not coaching at all. For this he was voted Bulgarian coach of the 20th century and was nicknamed ‘The Strategist’. Without irony! (Which is the biggest irony.) However, here is the opportunity to move away from team colours and return to football issues. Back to 1970 and forget about suits.

The 1960s – The Negative Side

Bright decade for football. Bright? Let’s see the other side. Criticism was mounting and everything optimistic was also highly negative. Point by point in reverse, then.
This collage of Gerd Muller tells one thing: players think only of money and don’t care about the sport. Football is the last thing in their minds.

Becoming blown-up public face, the football player is more and more preoccupied with business activities having nothing to do with his profession. Advertisement contracts go well beyond the acceptable. Players are ready to do everything for money.
The acceptable advertising – sports products, clothing, shaving cream…
Gerd Muller posing with naked model. This photo brought heavy criticism from every possible quarter, including Bayern Munich. This was not acceptable. Ironically, Muller was not a playboy, but his image confronted the ‘values of the game’. Players had to be humble… yet, flashy.
Beppe Savoldi ‘bought’ Naples – his transfer from Bologna to Napoli in 1975 was considered almost insanely inflated. Players were becoming unreasonably rich.
Beckham’s Palace… unlike Savoldi’s, this one is real. The transformation started in the 1970s – from models of castles to real ones, so to speak. There is no football ground in Savoldi’s model and no football ground on Beckham’s property – critics were perhaps right? The new player cares for everything else, but football.

An interesting one of Cruiff, dressed hippie-style, the ball, and the vault. Players were seen pretty much like Led Zeppelin, the rock phenomena of the same decade – fun, outrages, badly behaved, but fantastic performers. The fans loved them; the critics hated them. Yet, when the smoke cleared, Led Zeppelin were shrewd businessmen and bank vaults were constantly on their minds. They never said so, though… Cruiff did not either. He looked like a mellow hippie, happy to be on the pitch and play his fantastic football. Behind the façade – and even his chain smoking was part of the good myth: so many cigarettes and still running like a horse, a liberating image, contrasting to the ascetic idea of a footballer created in the 1960s – was the tough businessman.
Do you imagine payment for a goal scored in one’s own net? You should… World Cup 1974: Holland demolished Bulgaria 4-1, but Krol scored in the Holland’s net. Match over, Cruiff demanded payment for Krol’s goal. The team had a contract with a sponsor, who was to pay a bonus for every goal they scored. The contract did not say in which net, though, and Cruiff, the primary negotiator for the Dutch players went for the letter of the contract. The bonus was paid. Perhaps Holland should had scored another two goals in their own net…
But it was not only that: Cruiff played with different kit than the rest of Holland. He had personal contract with another firm.

World Cup 1974: The captains of Holland, Johan Cruiff, and Argentina, Roberto Perfumo, shaking hands before the start of the match. Note Cruiff’s kit.

Pleasant exchange of opinions between Neeskens and Maier at the World Cup 1974 final. Neeskens fitted with Adidas kit, as every other Dutch player, except their captain.

The transfer from Ajax to Barcelona in 1973. It was rumored for months, but both Cruiff and Ajax were evasive. It did not look sure thing, if one listened to the player – Cruiff hinted he was not moving. It must have been tough bargaining, because Barcelona bought another foreign player – the Peruvian star Hugo Sotil – before Cruiff. Spain lifted the old ban on foreign players that year, but only one foreigner was allowed to play. Buying Sotil did not make much sense, unless Cruiff’’s transfer was so tough to be actually uncertain possibility.
World Cup 1978. Cruiff refused to play for Holland. He was not alone – many players did not want to play in protest of the brutality in Argentina, ruled by military hunta. Cruiff’s refusal went along at the time and only later the real reasons were unearthed: Cruiff wanted Holland to wear kits either made by Cruiff’s firm, or a firm Cruiff had personal contract with. Cruiff retaliated by refusing to play for national team.

He was hardly the only one. Most stars of the great Ajax have very few appearances for the national team. Much too often they refused to play for Holland. Breitner and Netzer quitted the West German national team in 1975 – they were outraged, because their girlfriends were not invited to official dinner given by the German Federation. From behind the Iron Curtain, those refusals were seen as expressions of freedom, but in the West such attitudes were severely criticized – rich and spoiled stars frivolously ignoring their duties. Some refusals seemed very whimsical indeed.
Colin Todt (Derby County) and Alan Hudson (Chelsea) simply did not show up for the English Under-23 national team match. They did not feel the match was important and did not see reason to join the team, preferring to do something else with their time – the explanation was along those lines. Apparently, the players no longer cared much for their country and their football.
The players were spoiled brats.

Colin Todt (Derby County) in more serious days – player of the year and eventually national player.

Alan Hudson (Chelsea) against Bobby Charlton (Manchester United). Responsibility vs frivolity. Considered one of the brightest hopes of British football in the early 1970s, Hudson quickly sunk into obscurity.

The clubs were no better – they thought only money too. By the end of the 1960s the idea of international league came about. The culprits? The same clubs, which now are called G-14 and want the same: a big league of big clubs. It looked a bit more exciting years ago – the domestic championships were not yet deflated and with still scarce television coverage, one more tournament was not so bad. But it was – the idea was opposed, because it was going to affect immediately both domestic and international tournaments: the same fear as today. Television was not seen as a blessing even then: even big clubs opposed television coverage, because they still depended largely on ticket sales. Smaller championships felt particularly threatened – live coverage of the English championship took away from stadiums many fans in Holland. It was felt that big clubs were getting richer at the expense of smaller ones and the game in general – they started buying players for larger and larger sums, thus forcing smaller clubs to spend more, if wanting to compete, spending went out of control as a result and bankruptcy was coming. Almost every club was running big deficits. The situation was particularly bad in South America, where financial troubles were common feature already in the 1960s – most clubs had to sell and sell player after player in the hope just to exist. Good players were concentrating in the big clubs, which decreased competitiveness. In a increasing downfall, the small clubs were losing supporters, therefore, money, and had no hopes. The big clubs increasingly did not see any reason to play against small clubs, because such matches were sinking funds instead of increasing revenue. Players were more and more expensive in the same time – if Bosman Rule was not a good news, it was only a replay of the late 1960s. Jimmy Hill was the Chairman of the Professional Footballers Association since 1957 and in 1961 he successfully campaigned to have the Football League scrap the 20-pounds maximum wage. After that wages steadily increased and affected transfer fees as well. After 1970 transfer fees became ‘insane’ and raising. The scrap of the cap of wages was blamed for that and many clubs cried murder – transfers were leading clubs into bankruptcy. It was one thing to buy and sell stars, but quite another to pay 6-numbers fees for ordinary players. But who was to say what is a ‘real price tag’?
Jimmy Hill – he played for Brentford, Fulham, and Doncaster Rovers. Not much of a footballer, but he was influential and strong chairman of PFA and later – a legendary TV commentator. Like Bosman, he was blamed for opening the floodgates of commercial insanity, killing football. Wages soared and transfer fees soared, and clubs went bankrupt.
Jean-Marc Bosman – the virtually unknown Belgian football player, who changed the transfer system. A saint or a devil?

Who was playing, mockingly asked many a critic, pointing at the adds on team’s jerseys.
Second row,left to right: Tresor, Franceschetti, V Zwunka, Carnus, Lopez JP, Bosquier
First row: Magnusson, Buigues, Skoblar, Keruzore, Kuszowski
Olympique Marseille or Michel Axel?
Advertising was nothing new to football, but so far had been reserved for billboards – permanent or temporary – on the stadiums. Adds on jerseys was felt to be too much, too commercial. It was weaker championships at first, so there was some justification for them – what else to do clubs not exactly getting big gates in France, Austria, Belgium? Only the pragmatic Germans introduced shirt adds from the big football countries at first, but by the end of the 1970s everybody was doing it and grumble increased. It was felt football clubs were becoming secondary appendages to commercial giants. Not football, but increasing sales of products was the priority.
At the end, an absurd conclusion was synthesized: Commercialization was killing football, but in order to survive, football needed commercialization.

At the beginning of the 1970s, the mood was optimistic: new money and opportunities combined with total football were looking great. Yet, very soon an evidence of crisis was equally present – domestic championships suffered. Some countries reorganized their leagues – no matter what was said, it was depressing reduction of formats and clubs started to disappear. Austria ended 1973-74 season with the traditional format of 16 clubs league. Next season the league was ‘reformed’ and reduced to 10 clubs. Fiscal stability was required on one hand (and Austrians are strict about that to this very day). The other reason was the quality of football: it was clear that there were not enough good players for 16-team format. Financial stability with better competitiveness was believed to increase the quality of Austrian football. Well, the reform did not help – a string of mergers, name changes, and bankruptcies characterize Austrian domestic football ever since. Sponsor’s names were incorporated often into club names, to confuse the situation further. An example: the Innsbruck club, one of the most successful Austrian clubs, ended 1970-71 still FC Wacker. In the summer it merged with WSG Swarovski (Wattens) under the name FC Tirol. Other Tyrolean clubs protested and the federation ordered the new club to change the name – now it was SG Swarovski-Wattens-Wacker (Innsbruck), abbreviated to SSW Wacker. Under this name the club was champion next season. Since the world famous firm Swarovski was part of the venture, the future was to be… bright? In 1975-76 the name was changed to Swarovski-Schwarz-Weiss Tirol (Innsbruck) or SSW Tirol. Under this name the club finished last in 1978-79 and was relegated. The name changed to WSG Swarovski Wacker. In 1980-81, still in the second league, the club split to WSG Swarovski (Wattens) and SG Sparkasse Wacker (Innsbruck) (Sparkasse is a bank). Next year the Innsbruck club was renamed again to FC Wacker. In 1985-86 it was FC Swarovski-Tirol. In 1991-92 – FC Wacker again. Next season: FC Capillaris Tirol. In 1994-95 – FC Tirol. In 1997-98: FC Tirol-Milch. Today it is Wacker again, freshly renamed from Wacker Tirol on July 1,2007. At least the club stays in one city.
But here is the final Austrian table for 1973-74:
Austria 1973/74
Nationalliga

1.VÖEST Linz 32 18 11 3 51-28 47
2.Wacker Innsbruck 32 19 8 5 57-21 46
3.SK Rapid 32 18 9 5 74-33 45
4.FK Austria/WAC 32 16 7 9 59-37 39
5.SK Sturm Graz 32 14 6 12 28-35 34
6.Donawitzer SV Alpine 32 13 7 12 51-48 33
7.FC Admira/Wacker 32 11 9 12 50-48 31
8.SV Austria Salzburg 32 10 11 11 35-35 31
9.Linzer ASK 32 11 8 13 38-48 30
10.Wiener Sport-Club 32 10 9 13 43-60 29
11.1. Simmeringer SC 32 10 8 14 49-47 28
12.Grazer AK 32 9 10 13 31-41 28
13.SC Eisenstadt 32 11 6 15 36-52 28
14.Austria Klagenfurt 32 8 11 13 33-44 27
15.Radenthein/Villacher SV 32 6 14 12 33-40 26
16.First Vienna FC 32 8 8 16 38-54 24
17.FC Vorarlberg 32 5 8 19 31-66 18

Compare to the current league:
Austria 2007/08
First Level (Bundesliga)

Table:

1.SK Rapid Wien 31 16 6 9 57-33 54
2.RB Salzburg 31 15 8 8 53-37 53
3.LASK Linz 31 14 10 7 50-39 52
4.FK Austria Wien 31 12 12 7 38-29 48
5.SK Sturm Graz 31 12 11 8 52-34 47
6.SV Mattersburg 31 10 13 8 46-39 43
7.SV Ried 31 10 6 15 36-48 36
8.SC Rheindorf Altach 31 7 10 14 33-55 31
9.SK Austria Kärnten 31 7 7 17 21-51 28 [*2]
—————————————————–
10.FC Wacker Innsbruck 31 5 11 15 29-50 26 [*1]

[*1] Wacker Tirol changed name to Wacker Innsbruck on July 1, 2007
[*2] Pasching moved to Klagenfurt and changed name to Austria Kärnten

Financial stability somehow never came even for the big clubs. It is hard to support a club changing names almost every year. Gates are low, in part because of that. Old clubs sunk or disappeared altogether – Grazer AK, Wiener Sport-club, First Vienna FC and others.
It was not only Austria – Belgium and Scotland were early victims of the 1970s too. 1974-75 was the last traditional 1st division of 18 clubs. Low attendance, low game quality, bad stadiums, and financial difficulties urged the Scottish Federation to introduce reforms – instead of 1st Division, a new Scottish Premier Division was unveiled. 10 clubs. Today it is increased to 12, but did it solve any problems? Yes, the new name sounds grand…
Belgium, in contrast, did not reduce the league size – actually, the league was enlarged from 16 clubs in 1973-74 to 20 in 1974-75. Today – 18, the number established in 1976-77. But the clubs?
The final table of the last ‘small season’
Season 1973-1974

First Division
1 RSC Anderlechtois 30 17 6 7 72 38 41
2 R. Antwerp FC 30 15 6 9 48 33 39
3 RWD Molenbeek 30 13 4 13 50 25 39
4 R. Standard de Liège 30 12 8 10 43 30 34
5 Club Brugge KV 30 13 11 6 61 43 32
6 RFC Liégeois 30 11 10 9 42 42 31
7 KV Mechelen 30 10 9 11 34 35 31
8 KSV Cercle Brugge 30 8 11 11 46 48 27
9 KSV Waregem 30 8 11 11 38 49 27
10 SK Beveren 30 7 10 13 24 30 27
11 R. Beringen FC 30 9 13 8 29 48 26
12 FC Diest 30 8 12 10 44 51 26
13 Beerschot VAV 30 8 12 10 36 47 26
14 Berchem Sport 30 7 11 12 33 45 26
15 K.Lierse SK 30 6 11 13 35 51 25
16 R. St.-Truidense VV 30 6 13 11 30 50 23

and the current season:
Belgium 2007/08
Table:

1.R. Standard de Liège 27 17 10 0 51-17 61
2.Club Brugge KV 27 16 6 5 34-20 54
3.Cercle Brugge KSV 27 15 7 5 55-25 52
4.RSC Anderlecht 27 15 7 5 44-26 52
5.KFC Germinal Beerschot 27 14 6 7 40-24 48
6.KAA Gent 27 12 8 7 49-36 44
7.SV Zulte-Waregem 27 11 5 11 36-44 38
8.KVC Westerlo 27 10 8 9 38-28 38
9.KRC Genk 27 9 8 10 39-42 35
10.R. Charleroi SC 27 9 6 12 27-34 33
11.KV Mechelen 27 8 8 11 34-40 32
12.R. Excelsior Mouscron 27 8 6 13 31-37 30
13.KSC Lokeren OV 27 6 12 9 21-26 30
14.FC Verbroedering Dender EH 27 8 5 14 27-43 29
15.KSV Roeselare 27 6 9 12 29-47 27
16.RAEC Mons 27 6 7 14 30-41 25
——————————————————-
17.K. Sint-Truiden VV 27 4 8 15 23-44 20
18.FC Brussels 27 4 4 19 22-56 16

After mergers, bankruptcies, movements, splits, and new amalgamations, one has to go to club histories and careful encrypting of the abbreviations to uncover what happened. Here the mergers were not only between clubs of one city – more often clubs of different cities merged. And later dissolved. And merged again. Take Racing White (Brussels), the Belgian champions for 1974-75. The details are too many to be traced here, but it was a club of previous mergers – Racing and White Star Club (the oldest of all incorporated). Before the start of their glorious season, they merged with Daring Club (Brussels), technically more famous club than Racing White. Main reason was low attendance. Legal reasons – rules of registration – forbid the new club to use the old record of Daring Club. And probably to preserve some coherence, in Europe the club was better known as Racing Club, but in Belgium it was R.W.D. Molenbeek (Brussels). Until 2002, when the club went bankrupt. Did it disappear? Not at all – it merged with K.F.C. Strombeek, located near Brussels, and became F.C. Molenbeek Brussels Strombeek, playing at the stadium of Molenbeek, in Brussels, but registered in Strombeek. Please, do not despair! FC Brussels is this club today – promoted to the First Division in 2004, and adopting the current name. Dead last too, as you can see above. End of story? Not at all. Group of fans formed and registered new club in 2003 – it is called… R.W.D. Molenbeek. It started in the 4th Brabant Provincial Division, the very bottom of Belgian football (Level 8). And keeping with ‘tradition’, the club absorbed another one in 2006, taking its place in Brabant 1st Division (Level 5). So… who won the Belgian championship in 1974-75? Where exactly those clubs play? To which city they belong?

Small leagues – big deal, who cares. Right? Big boys matter and they were alright, right? Wrong. Domestic football in Argentina and Uruguay was financial disaster since the 1960s. Corruption was well known feature of Italian football also from the 1960s. The Brazilian championship was plagued with corruption, back room deals, and instability from day one. The league was enlarged to accommodate big clubs finishing at the bottom and due to relegation. At one point the league had more than 40 clubs participating in cryptic championship. Big clubs forming concurrent championship, yet, somewhat incorporated in the national scheme, so it was hardly clear who was the ruling body and what constituted legal championship – at the end, every championship is legal in Brazil. The mighty British clubs were increasing debts and heading toward bankruptcy. The enormously rich Chelsea? A disaster in the 1970s, finally sold for 1 pound in the early 1980s. The ascent of Greek football, started in the 1970s, went hand in hand with heavy corruption, reaching to the top of the political system and government. Ah, Southern temperaments and British stubbornness to preserve traditional ways instead of adapting to the new realities… At least, everything was sound in the cooler climates north of France. And under the hawkish gaze of Communists behind the Iron Curtain. Hm… who should be first? The Soviets or the Germans? Soviets win after a flip of coin.
Zarya from Voroshilovgrad (today – Lugansk in Ukraine) won the Soviet title. It was somewhat pleasant surprise. One has to remember that until 1960 no club outside Moscow ever won a title. The exception was 1944, if we count that: because the Second World War was still strong, there was no championship in USSR, but a cup tournament was organized in 1944. Mostly to boost moral. And for the same reason the winner was Zenit (Leningrad – now St. Peterburg)- the heroic Leningrad, a symbol of fighting spirit and resistance, appropriately won against the army club CDKA. Even the result is suspicious – 2-1, with 2 goals scored in the 35th minute (Chuchelov for Zenit; Grinin for CDKA). And again, in the name of moral and propaganda, the cup final is included in the list of Soviet championships. After that everything was back to normal – it was understood that only Moscow clubs should be champions (propaganda and ideology ruled). Dinamo (Kiev) was the first champion outside Moscow – in 1961. During the 1960s the situation shifted – instead of internal Moscow rivalries, the battle for the title became Moscow-Kiev, with Kiev taking the upper hand and occasional challenge from Dynamo (Tbilisi, Goergia). Zarya (Lugansk) was promoted to the 1st Division after winning the 2nd Division in 1966. Their most memorable moment until 1972 was in 1970, when the city apparently got new name – Voroshilovgrad. It was nice to see nobodies becoming champions in 1972, 5 points ahead (still the old system – 2 points for a win, 1 for a tie) of Dinamo (Kiev). There were no famous players in the squad, with the exception of Vladimir Onishtchenko, who got his first national team caps then, but he did not last in the club: originally a Dinamo (Kiev) player, he moved to Zarya in 1972 and was back in Dinamo by 1974.

Zarya or Zorya (the current spelling is in Ukrainian) 1972.
Vladimir Onishtchenko scoring for the national team (against France). The only player of notice from the champion squad.

After 1972 Zarya immediately went back to obscurity, finishing last in 1976 spring championship, but it was a year of yet another ill-fated reform of Soviet football, so there were no relegations in the spring, but only after the separate fall championship of the same year. Zarya was finally relegated in 1979, end of story. Only years later the truth was spelled out – Zarya became champion after bribing left and right. It was rumored at the time, but the officials were not only silent – Zarya players were numerous in the Soviet Olympic team in 1972:

The Soviet Olympic Team 1972. Zarya players with capitals.
First row, left to right: A. Andriasyan, I. Sabo, YU. ELISEEV, V. KUKSOV, Yu. Istomin, V. ONISHTCHENKO, V. Kolotov, G. Evryuzhikhin.
Second row: A. Ponomaryov – head coach, V. Pilguy, V. Kaplichny, O. Zanazanyan, O. Blokhin, A. Yakubik, E. Lovchev, E. Rudakov, S. Olshansky, R. Dzodzuashvili, G. ZONIN – assistant coach, V. SEMENOV, M. Hurtzilava.
Since USSR run spring-fall championship, the Olympics came in the middle of the championship in progress. That may have been the reason for inclusion of the coach and the players from Zarya at the time: Soviets greatly preferred to select national players from the current leading clubs. Although the Olympic team finished 4th and was heavily criticized for the failure, a corruption scandal was highly undesirable for possible political implications. In any case, a scandal would have been internationally humiliating: the Soviets preferred to pretend normality.

A moment of Zarya – SCA (Rostov). V. Semenov in attack. A lot about the briberies is still unknown, but it is believed that Zarya bought the games with smaller clubs like SCA, the bulk of the Soviet league.
So the title stays in records and the club history. Nothing happened, nobody was punished. It is curious, though – the Soviets tolerated high level corruption, but were punishing severely low level corruption. Zarya was small club, from unimportant city without high-placed influence and back up – ripe for ‘cleansing’ and ‘fight against unsocialist behaviour’.

In sharp contrast to the Soviet case, the West German bribery scandal in 1971 was heavily investigated and publicized. It was a heavy blow: the Bundesliga was only 7 years old and already corrupt, and on top of it – it was German corruption, something ‘unthinkable’. By today’s ‘standards of corruption’, the affair is almost laughable – it started with the effort of the president of lowly club to avoid relegation. But it ended with interesting results: 9 out of 18 Bundesliga clubs were involved; two clubs were expelled; one was ruined; 53 players were suspended and fined, some among them national players; few functionaries were banished from football. Well, at least the punishment was in line with German strictness… Not quite.
The President of Kickers (Offenbach) – Horst Gregorio Canellas – decided to save the club from relegation and organized intricate system of bribing players and fixing results, which gradually involved other clubs as well.
Horst Gregorio Canellas

It was not simply the usual mania of an organizer to keep his pet at the top no matter what: West Germany did not have second division yet and relegation meant going to regional leagues, where semi-professional and amateur clubs kicked the ball around in front of few bored geezers. Going down spelled bankruptcy for a professional club: high payroll and small gates were the deadly mix. More or less, Canellas was driven by fear – he wanted to save the club from financial disaster. Soon Arminia (Bielefeld) discovered something fishy – they were also candidates for relegation, and Kickers was aiming largely to stay in Bundesliga at Arminia’s expense. At the end – funnily enough – Arminia ended at the safe 14th place and Kickers – next to last, 17th in the final table. So Arminia bribed and fixed better. Hertha (West Berlin), Eintracht (Braunschweig), Schalke 04(Gelzenkirchen), MSV Duisburg, FC Koln, VfB Stuttgart, and Rot Weiss (Oberhausen) gradually got involved in the scheme. Some were involved on high level, but others were not – only players were bribed from outside.
During the investigation, strange things were uncovered: for instance, Hertha was heavily in debt and near bankruptcy. The club welcomed bribes in hope, or at least the players did. On the other hand, many players were incomprehensibly greedy, since they played for strong clubs. It was also a very mixed bunch: from stars to lowly nobodies, but almost entirely Germans. Only two Hungarian refugees were foreign culprits.
More or less, the as most evidence were considered the actions of two players: the goal Bernd Patzke (Hertha) scored in his own net, thus fixing the result in favour of Armininia againt Hertha.

Patzke scores in his own net, looking innocent. Suspension? What suspension? South Africa is just a plain ticket away.

The other was the goalkeeper Manfred Manglitz (FC Koln), who received money for allowing goals against Rot Weiss (Essen) and Kickers (Offenbach).

Manglitz can’t stop the ball… kind of. His career ended here.

So penalties followed: Arminia and Kickers were expelled from the Bundesliga. It hardly mattered to Kickers, relegated anyway. Hardly any grief, though: these two clubs never made any strong contribution to the league.
Six functionaries were suspended and fined – from those Canellas was the only one more or less banished from football.
The rest of the punishment went to various players.

Given the severity of illegal activities, one expected corresponding punishments. Reality was suspiciously different: the media attention focused on Manfred Manglitz, Bernd Patzke, and Tasso Wild (Hertha).

Left to right: Wild, Patzke, and Manglitz, going to the hearing. The media focused on them.

But one of the most involved was Jurgen Neumann (Arminia) – he was rarely mentioned by the media. These four players received the harshest suspensions: Manglitz for life, the other three – for 5 years. Only two of them served their punishment in full – Manglitz and Neumann. The other 49 players received decreasing terms of suspensions and fines, or only fines. Almost all initial suspensions were reduced. The penalties were strangely small, given the involvement: 16 players from Eintracht (Braunschwieg), 15 from Hertha (West Berlin), 13 from Schalke 04 (Gelzenkirchen), 3 from VfB Stuttgart, 2 from MSV Duisburg, 2 from Arminia, and 1 from FC Koln. Practically only the shortest suspensions were served – some of the culprits did not miss even a month of playing. The German Federation may have been naïve, expecting players to honour the penalties, which were valid only in West Germany. Well, they did not – Patzke moved to Durban City (South Africa), where he finished his career. Zoltan Varga (Hertha) went to Aberdeen (Scotland) until his suspension ended, and returned to Hertha a year later. Reinhard Libuda (Schalke 04) went to play for Strasbourg (France).
But who was involved? Well, a very mixed bag. If Neumann was little known player, others were high profile players – Manglitz participated in the World Cup Finals 1970. Patzke was part of two World Cups – 1966 and 1970. Zoltan Varga was Olympic champion in 1964 with Hungary, and won the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (which became the UEFA Cup) in 1965 with Ferencvaros (Budapest). Reinhard ‘Stan’ Libuda was a star of the West German team at the World Cup 1970. His teammate in Schalke 04 Klaus Fichtel was considered the rival of none other than Franz Beckenbauer. The goalkeeper of Eintracht (Braunschweig) Horst Wolter was also occasionally selected in the national team. These were established stars. Others were solid professionals or young players which became famous in later years: Volker Danner (MSV Duisburg), Wolfgang Gayer (Hertha), Dieter Burdenski (Schalke 04) became national players. Rolf Russmann (Schalke 04) was part of the World Cup winning team in 1974 and played in the World Cup 1978. His teammate Klaus Fischer also played in the World Cup 1978, and if his career did not coincide in time with the great Gerd Muller, Fischer would have played much more for West Germany. Klaus Fichtel, also a Schalke 04 player, was a World Champion in 1974 too.
The two foreigners had different fate: Varga (who is interesting in two other subjects – foreign players in Great Britain and East Europeans playing in the West) played not only for Hertha and Aberdeen, but eventually moved to Borussia (Dortmund) and Ajax (Amsterdam), where he ended his career. The other Hungarian, Laszlo Gergeli (Hertha), was a nobody and his suspension for one year effectively finished his career.
Lazslo Gergeli still a Hertha player. Game over for him, though.
Zoltan Varga will be Hertha player again. Suspended in West Germany, he left long lasting fond memories in the hearts of Aberdeen fans.
Who really suffered then? The penalties looked like a joke, or affected insignificant clubs and players. Those who disappeared from the football scene – Manglitz, Neumann, Gergeli – were old and near their careers anyway. Well, there were sufferers – although, unexpected ones.
Schalke 04 was practically destroyed. In the beginning of the 1970s the club was quickly becoming potential rival of Bayern and Borussia (Moenchengladbach). It was exciting team and bright future was forecasted. The scandal and the suspensions of 13 players was practically the end: the club quickly sunk and eventually was relegated. Financial troubles rocked it too. Yet, Schalke 04 was rather minor participant in the result fixing scandal. From the players, Schalke 04 and West German star Stan Libuda probably suffered most – nobody forgave him and his reputation was ruined. His profile was the highest among all involved; he was much loved footballer… involvement in the scandal and defiance of the imposed penalty destroyed him: he never played again in West Germany, and after one year in France he had to quit football. In a sharp contrast, Hertha (West Berlin) seemingly prospered from the scandal – they avoided bankruptcy by selling their stadium ‘Plumpe’, remained in the Bundesliga and played their best football in the years immediately following 1971. The bribing scandal ended suspiciously – with more then a hint of glossing over and cover up.

Libuda in happier days: outsmarting the Bulgarian defender Milko Gaidarski at the World Cup 1970. West Germany won 5-2.

Schalke 04: the team of big promise in 1971 never recovered from the scandal.
Standing, left to right: Becker, Fichtel, Pohlschmidt, van Haaren, Russmann, Scheer, Galbierz, Wittkamp, Cendic (assistant coach)
Middle: Rausch, Sobieray, Gutendorf (coach), Vanderberg, Senger, Pirkner, Libuda, Lichtenfeld (trainer)
Sitting: Fischer, Kuzmirz, Beverungen, Burdenski, Nigbur, Pfeiffer, Hausmann, Lutkebohmert, Wust

International club tournaments were also under heavy criticism. The ugly inheritance from the 1960s reached new level at the Intercontinental Cup – Ajax Amsterdam refused to play and the European Champions Cup runners-up Panathinaikos replaced them in 1971. Next year Ajax played, but Cruiff received death threats in Argentina and had to be heavily guarded. In 1973 Ajax refused again and Bayern also refused in 1974. Liverpool refused in 1977. In 1978 the Intercontinental Cup was not contested at all, and in 1979 Nottingham Forest refused to play.
In Europe the Cup Winners Cup was visibly in decline – what was meant to be the second important European club tournament failed to live up to expectations – the once upon a time shaky Inter-cities Fairs Cup was not only stabilized after renamed into UEFA Cup, but became much more attractive tournament for the fans. The reason was quite obvious: in domestic cup tournaments often little clubs won, thus reducing the quality of the international tournament and along with that – the sponsorship revenue. At the same time strong rivals of national champions were playing in the UEFA Cup.
But the most acute problem emerged in 1974. The final of the Champions Cup between Atletico (Madrid) and Bayern ended in a draw after 120 minutes (regular time ended 0-0, and both teams scored a goal in the 30 minutes extra time). Under the rules, the match had to be replayed. It was the first time the final ended undecided, and the occasion revealed a complex problem. One side was commercial – what happens now? Were television stations to pay for broadcasting the replay or not? Advertisement and sponsorship? The fans? The final was scheduled for May 15 at the ill-fated (in the 1980s) Heysel Stadium, Brussels. The replay – on May 17. The attendance for the second game dropped alarmingly: from 65 000 at the first match to 23 000 at the second. Hardly a surprise – since finals were and are staged in the middle of the week, people simply could not afford to be absent from work another two days. The crowd at the replay was only 1/3 of the original attendance, leaving the feeling that replay was not generating public interest at all. Quite right, too – after spending their emotions during the first game, people could not bring themselves to the same level of enthusiasm. I remember my own reaction: so excited at the first game, I was hardly interested in watching the second. I was cold and indifferent. Yet, the replay, and not the first match was to decide the Cup winner.
The game itself was hardly a contest – Bayern won 4-0. The two games were dramatically different: the tough Spaniards of the first game did not exist in the second. The Germans, with their supreme physical condition, were fresh in the second match, as if they did not play 120 minutes of physical football less than 48 hours ago. Atletico was entirely exhausted, not even a shadow of the team, which almost won on May 15. It was obvious from the first minute that the replay was unnecessary formality. What the replay revealed in sporting terms was terrible: different training attitudes were to be decisive – for a physically fit and tactically disciplined team it was enough to outrun the opposition, not to outplay it. Dragging the match into extra time or replay, guaranteed victory – a victory achieved by exhausting the opposition, not playing better. After all, Bayern equalized the result in the first match by sheer will – the stopper Schwarzenbeck scored in the 120th minute, the last one!
As for Atletico… the truth was, they were not the better team in the first game. They played ugly and calculated football. It will be enough to cite the Celtic fans opinion from the semi-finale opposing Atletico and Celtic (Glasgow): ATLETICO MADRID line-up according to Celtic’s fans: Thug; Psycho, Punch; Spit, Hatchet, Bludgeon; Hammer, Thump, Wallop, Gouge, Axe-Murderer.
It was the first and last replay – after that year ties were broken by penalty shoot-outs. The commercial requirements were part of the reason for the change of rules, but not the only reasons. For years it had toyed with ideas for breaking ties in international tournaments. None was satisfactory. At first it was a drop of coin – now, imagine how plausible would be to decide the World Champion by a game of chance. This rule was replaced by the replay – not really a solution and even more troublesome, for now commercial factors were involved. So, the shoot-out… and who likes that? Nobody.
Tactical minded football leaves little chances the game to end with a winner – hence, finals are decided by chance… The logical question would be why playing at all.

Miguel Reina, Atletico and former Spanish national goalkeeper, desperately tries to clear the ball from Bayern’s midfielder Franz Roth. Never a national player, Roth will be instrumental in two more Bavarian wins of European Champions Cup, scoring important goals in 1975 and 1976. As for Reina, his name isn’t forgotten yet – but I am speaking of his son. Liverpool anyone?
Ramon ‘Cacho’ Heredia, the Argentinian central-defenseman of Atletico, was a key player in the first final match.
Heredia’s face says it all… the replay spelled doom for Atletico Madrid.
Ruben ‘Raton’ (the Mouse) Ayala and Ramon ‘Cacho’ Heredia moved from San Lorenzo (Buenos Aires) to Atletico (Madrid) in 1973. Only one foreigner was allowed to play by Spanish rules then. Why Atletico did not play Ayala in the final against Bayern, where Spanish rules did not apply, is a mystery. Both played for Argentina in the World Cup 1974. It was a disastrous performance by the Argentines and perhaps the only memorable impression came from Ayala – he was the player with the longest hair among the finalists: 45 centimeters long.

If everything was bad in club football, at least the World Cup was great. Was it? Critics were quick to point out scandals. World Cup 1970 was tarnished by ‘the Soccer War’ between Honduras and El Salvador. True, the conflict was not exactly because of football, but the war started with the qualification match between the two countries. The actual war lasted 4 days, but it had heavy consequenses for both countries. In football terms, it is somewhat even more wicked: El Salvador was advancing military and only international diplomatic intervention led to withdrawal. Correspondingly, El Salvador went to the World Cup finals… ‘the strongest always win’? Looks like it…
El Salvador reached for the first time World Cup final stage in 1970. Hardly the ‘Soccer War’ placed them at the finals – because Mexico was host and automatically qualified, the lowly CONCACAF had an open spot.

The other scandal in 1970 was the arrest of Bobby Moore in Colombia – he was accused of stealing, unbelievable story, but it was tense at the time. England went to Colombia as part of their preparation for the World Cup in Mexico. The arrest of Moore was and is regarded as deliberate provocation, aiming at weakening Team England, still the World Cup holders.

Bobby Moore and England against Czechoslovakia in World Cup 1970. England won 1-0, but Moore was not at his usual top form. His shaky performance was attributed to spending 4 days in Colombian jail for allegedly stealing a jeweled bracelet. He was proved innocent, but it is still believed that the Colombian trouble spoiled his form. Speaking of ‘alleged’…
Right of him is Czechoslovakian player, examplefying the wrongness of ‘old football’ – it will be awkward in English, but the Bulgarian saying was ‘he plays the letter Ф’ (F), that is, walking hands on hips around, and participating rarely in the game.

USSR refused to play the second leg of the qualification deciding the last spot at 1974 finals against Chile. The first match, in Moscow, finished 0-0. Before the second, General Pinochet led the coup d’etate against the Socialist government of Salvador Allende. The Soviets refused to play for political reasons and Chile went to the finals by default, yet, was it only politics? May be it was – imagine the Soviets losing the qualification from a country with fresh right-wing regime. General Pinochet should go into football history with one fantastic sentence – well, at least it sound fantastic in English. He said to the team’s star – Carlos Caszely – ‘I know you are left-wing, but you are right-wing.’ The unintentional pun, so awkward in English, is the referral to the political views of the player and his post on the football field – the politically involved Caszely was Leftist, but his position on the football pitch was right-wing. What Pinochet really meant was more prosaic and may be more sinister – Caszely was not to be arrested for patriotic reasons. And it was not only Chile – Zaire and Haiti played at the World Cup 1974. What fun were the ambitions of the dictators of those countries… but it will be too long here, I am saving the story for another time.
‘El Chino’ (The Chinese) Carlos Caszely, the star of the strongest Chilean club Colo-Colo (Santiago de Chile). Although one of the most vocal opposing General Pinochet’s junta, he played for the national team in World Cup 1974. And in World Cup 1982. And more… he moved to Spain in 1973, supposedly for political reasons – played for Levante and Espanol (which in Catalonia is regarded somewhat right-wing club) until 1978. Then he returned to Chile and Colo-Colo. Either ‘El Chino’ with Hungarian-sounding name was really ‘left-wing, which is right-wing’, or General Pinochet’s regime was not as bad as pictured, or footballers have no morals and convictions, or his career was not going as well as expected, or he became home sick. Which reason was the true one?

1974 World Cup was West German problem. On one hand players were accused of shameless commercialization: the stars demanded very lucrative sums, and the German Federation considered replacing them with another selection, presumably, more patriotic and less cynical. Commentators lamented the good old days of ‘pure’ football and predicted the end of the game killed by greed. Yet, the Dutch outdid the Germans in the money matters – see Cruiff above.
On the field, there was the highly suspect round robin match between West and East Germany. The West lost and finished second in their group, which placed them in the easier semi-final group with Poland, Sweden, and Yugoslavia, instead of Brazil, Holland, and Argentina. West Germany ended as World Champions, but were severely criticized for under-performing and scheming. The old story of 1954 scheme against Hungary was recalled. Then, the shame of 1982 came… 1974 was hardly an incident.
It was to be the clash of political systems: Breitner (left) and Beckenbaur (right) ‘squeeze’ the East German player. East and West Germany met for the first time on the pitch at the World Cup 1974. The West was to win not only for political ‘rightness’ – their team simply was superior.

East Germany arriving in West Germany for the World Cup 1974. Long flight from Berlin to Hamburg. Translator in the middle? Sorry… hostess.

East Germany won 1-0. This is the winning goal, scored by Jurgen Sparwasser (blue shirt, in the middle). Ironically, Sparwasser defected to West Germany in the 1980s – after his football career was over (why not in 1974? He played for 1.FC Magdebourg, which won the Cup Winners Cup just then and he was a hot item. Mysteries, never mind.)
The West Germans maintain the match was real – the political side of the game was very important. But… I thought in 1974 they deliberately lost and all my friends thought the same back then. See, it was not calculation to avoid Holland in the next stage – Brazil, as dreadful as it was that year, was the bigger worry. Both met in the winter before the finals, when Brazil was touring Europe as part of their preparation for the finals. In West Germany, in winter, on snowy pitch Brazil won. The Germans never played well against Brazil and generally lost. Losing from East Germany, the West Germans finished second in their round robin group, thus, avoided facing Holland and Brazil (Argentina was not a problem in 1974) in the next stage. The lost match opened the road to the title. Honest match? Politically important? For the East Germans may be. But it is one Germany today, so… it was ‘honest’ somehow.

1978 World Cup in Argentina was much criticized for political reasons – the rule of the Argentinean military junta and the cruelties of its rule. Argentina became World Champion, but not before conveniently winning the match with Peru 6-0. The game started suspiciously late, when other critical games were more or less decided, and finished with result providing the goal difference needed for Argentina to go ahead. The Argentinean-born goalkeeper of Peru – Ramon Quiroga – was the suspected coward. Well, was he? Nobody knows, suspicion remains.
Ramon Quiroga in 1978. Six goals in his net? Brazil out, Argentina in. The man born in Rosario, Argentina, not a bit sympathetic, or bribed, or whatever? Was it just Argentinean supremacy and a lucky day?
More contemporary Quiroga, still involved with football in Peru – he was, and may be is now too, a coach. Constantly pleading ‘not guilty’ for 1978.