Tuesday, 13 March 2018
945 World Cup 1990
First viewed : 8 June 1990
This certainly wasn't the greatest of World Cups with the losing Finalists almost certainly the worst team ever to get to the last match but for all sorts of reasons it was a significant and memorable one. The Finals were hosted by Italy meaning all the games were broadcast at a reasonable time for UK viewing. I think in terms of how many games I saw this was probably my most watched tournament.
England had slugged their way through the qualifying group in unconvincing fashion and manager Bobby Robson was quitting after the tournament so expectations weren't high. On top of that, the English FA had lobbied the organisers to base England in Cagliari to keep troublesome supporters off the Italian mainland for as long as possible. And then, as per usual, there were injury doubts about captain Bryan Robson who had to pack it in during the second game. England's group was dubbed the "Group of Sleep" because five of the six games ended in draws. England and Ireland started the sequence with a 1-1 draw , a dire game now remembered for Gary Lineker's little "accident" on the pitch and it went on from there. England actually broke the deadlock with a 1-0 win over Egypt. Ireland and Holland were playing at the same time and after Niall Quinn's equaliser in the 71st minute, photographers captured a chat between the respective captains Mick McCarthy and Ruud Gullitt suggesting that the remainder of the game wasn't going to be too competitive as both teams would go through with England as results stood.
The surprise package of the tournament were The Cameroons who managed to beat holders Argentina with only nine men in the opening match. Their star player was the 38 year old Roger Milla who'd only joined the squad at the last minute at the request of the country's president. With Romania also putting in a strong showing, Argentina only scraped into the next round in third place.
I remember the Romania v Argentina game for the unusual family circumstances. I came home from work to find we had unexpected visitors, my uncle Ben ( who I hadn't seen for the best part of 20 years ) together with Aunt Nancy and my cousin Peter ( neither of whom I'd met before ) were staying in Manchester and had dropped in unexpectedly. Much to his parents' displeasure, Peter, who I think was around 18 or 19 at the time , wanted to get involved in the car trade and the only thing he found remotely interesting about me was the ex-army left hand drive Chevette I was driving at the time. I very unwisely said I'd bought it from my friend Chris's brother who dealt in ex-military vehicles. Peter of course wanted to meet him and even more foolishly I said he might be in the Red Lion. So I ended up taking him down there. The pub was nearly empty - it was a Monday evening - and there was no sign of Chris's brother but I had a devil of a job persuading Peter to call it quits and return to the house for the match. in which, it was obvious, he had no interest whatsoever. Sometimes, you're better off just keeping your mouth shut. I've never seen Peter since but apparently he's now a teacher living in Quebec, the car thing not having worked out.
Scotland made their customary early exit, their fate sealed by a first match loss to Costa Rica while the USA, the hosts for the next tournament, lost every match.
The Second Round was where things got tasty. The Argentinians achieved their best result by beating arch-rivals Brazil by 1-0. West Germany and Holland's game was characterised by their usual bonhomie with Rijkard and Voeller sent off for fighting after Rijkard had spat in Vioeller's perm. Cameroon got past Colombia with the winner gifted to them by Colombia's textbook crazy keeper Higuita
Yugoslavia, fielding a number of outstandingly talented individuals , got the better of Spain thanks to a wonder goal by erratic superstar Dragan Stojkovic. It didn't look promising when a hard cross looped off a Yugoslav head towards Stojkovic ten yards out from the far post with two men on him. Stojkovic took it down with a sublime touch which left Spain' s Martin-Vasquez lunging into thin air and stroked the ball home with all the time in the world. It was outrageously good.
I watched Ireland's match against Romania in a pub in Ashton. We had a sizeable contingent of Manchester Irish where I worked and I stayed behind to watch the game with them. It was OK for a 0-0 with Mick McCarthy somehow managing to avoid a booking for a string of poorly-timed tackles. I recall helping my friends re-arrange the furniture when David O' Leary's penalty went in. Ireland were then in the Quarter-Finals without having won a match.
I saw all of England's subsequent matches at my friend Carl's house. England, with the hype around their new young star Paul Gascoigne mushrooming, played a tense game with Belgium with the sides evenly-matched until the relatively unsung David Platt scored a dramatic winner in the last minute of extra time. Gary Lineker's gaping grin as the players piled on Platt became one of the defining images of the tournament.
In the Quarters, Argentina scraped past 10-man Yugoslavia on penalties with both Maradona and Stojkovic missing their kicks. Yugoslavia were by far the better side and it's sad to recount that shortly afterwards their team was rent asunder as the country fell apart so that the likes of Savicevic, Pancev and Prosinecki could never play in the same side again. Ireland's adventure ended as Italy squeezed past them with a single goal by their bug-eyed striker Schillaci. West Germany did what they needed to against an impressive Czech side.
England were lined up to be The Cameroons' next scalp and that looked well on the cards when the Africans went 2-1 up with 25 minutes to go. However the undisciplined defending that was their Achilles heel eventually undid them and two clinical penalties from Gary Lineker saw England safely through to the Semi-Finals.
The game against West Germany in the Semis was the most significant game for English football in the past 30 years. England matched the Germans stride for stride and after both sides hit the post in extra time it finished 1-1. Apart from the two goals, the most significant event was the booking of Gascoigne for a rash tackle which meant he would miss the Final were England to get through, prompting a flood of tears. The Germans got through after Stuart Pearce and Chris Waddle missed their kicks in the penalty shoot-out making the yellow card academic but it was Gazza's tears that came to symbolize the heroic defeat.
England's run to the brink of the World Cup Final put an emphatic full stop to a dismal decade for the game. Financial mismanagement, endless broadcasting wrangles, hooliganism , the European ban and three stadium tragedies in five years had made English football more of a pariah sport than the national game in the eighties. Gazza's tears washed away all that and renewed the country's love of the game, re-establishing a grip on the nation's psyche that it's never looked like relinquishing since. The guy's now an unemployable alcoholic after an unfulfilled career but you can never take that away from him.
Argentina got through on penalties again, putting the hosts out after a 1-1 draw leaving the English fan with something of a dilemna over who to back in the Final. You had to go with the Germans though. Argentina had only won two games and were a mediocre side relying on Maradona, himself not the force he was four years earlier, and a decent striker in Canigga. They finally ran out of luck in a dismal Final settled by a penalty with the Argentinians finishing with only nine men. It was West Germany's final game before unification with the East Germans that October.
One other thing I recall which blighted ITV's coverage of the tournament was the constant running of an annoying ad featuring lisping ex-Blue Peter man Peter Purves walking into an empty stadium to advertise National Power. It came on at every commercial break and drove me to distraction.
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This came about as my interest in football developed into something deeper. Man United has just won the FA Cup and everyone at school loved "World in Motion". However, with Robson out, the only real United-related moment of note was Jim Leighton spannering a long range shot to allow a Brazil winner that sent Scotland home.
ReplyDeleteThough Paul Gascoigne took the headlines, for me it was David Platt who was the hero of the English team, scoring the opener vs Cameroon and keeping a cool head to slot away his penalty in the semis.
Which does lead to the old chestnut of whether Bobby Robson should have subbed Shilton before the shoot out? For all his talents, Shilts only saved one spot kick in 15 for England, his short height (relative to most keepers) can't have helped...