Jan Tomaszewski
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Born: | January 9, 1948 Wrocław, Poland |
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Occupation: | Football Goalkeeper |
Jan Tomaszewski (born January 9, 1948) is a retired Polish footballer, who was nicknamed "Tomek", the "Clown" and "The Man That Stopped England".
A goalkeeper, Tomaszewski is best remembered by some for his performance for Poland against England, in a qualifying match for the 1974 World Cup, which England needed to win. Tomaszewski had been labelled "a clown" by Brian Clough before the match (the two men however became quite friendly in later years), but had the last laugh as he turned in a man-of-the-match performance repeatedly denying England's attackers; the only goal he conceded being a penalty from Allan Clarke. Earlier, Jan Domarski had scored for the Poles. Poland drew the game 1-1 and Poland qualified for the finals in West Germany.
In The Story of the World Cup, Brian Glanville wrote: "In retrospect, to be eliminated by so fine a side as Poland seems no disgrace, but this is a posteriori reasoning. I doubt if England could have made so dazzling a contribution as Poland to the tournament, yet it should be remembered that the Poland which beat England and the Poland which took their place were two very different propositions". (p. 191, 2005 edn.)
Poland went on to claim third place during a tournament in which Tomaszewski saved two penalties in two different matches (from Staffan Tapper and Uli Hoeness) - the first 'keeper in FIFA World Cup history to do so. Tomaszewski went on to win a silver medal with Poland at the 1976 Olympics, and also played in the 1978 World Cup, where Poland disappointed in only managing to get as far as the second group phase.
Tomaszewski's club career was mainly at ŁKS Łódź, having been forbidden by Poland's communist government to play abroad before the age of 30, even after coming to international attention.
Olympic medal record | |||
Men's Football | |||
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Silver | 1976 Montréal | Team Competition |
After the 1978 World Cup, he moved abroad, first to Belgian club Beerschot, and then Hércules in Spain, before retiring in 1982. In all he won 59 caps for Poland, making him his country's most-capped 'keeper.
He now works as a commentator and sports journalist. However his reputation has been compromised due to his on-going complaints, pessimism and controversial statements.
Poland squad - 1974 FIFA World Cup Third Place | ||
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1 Fischer | 2 Tomaszewski | 3 Kalinowski | 4 Szymanowski | 5 Gut | 6 Gorgoń | 7 Wieczorek | 8 Bulzacki | 9 Żmuda | 10 Musiał | 11 Ćmikiewicz | 12 Deyna | 13 Kasperczak | 14 Maszczyk | 15 Jakóbczak | 16 Lato | 17 Szarmach | 18 Gadocha | 19 Domarski | 20 Kapka | 21 Kmiecik | 22 Kusto | Coach: Górski |
Poland squad - 1978 FIFA World Cup | ||
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1 Tomaszewski | 2 Mazur | 3 Maculewicz | 4 Szymanowski | 5 Nawałka | 6 Gorgoń | 7 Iwan | 8 Kasperczak | 9 Żmuda | 10 Rudy | 11 Masztaler | 12 Deyna | 13 Kupcewicz | 14 Justek | 15 Kusto | 16 Lato | 17 Szarmach | 18 Boniek | 19 Lubański | 20 Wójcicki | 21 Kukla | 22 Kostrzewa | Coach: Gmoch |
Categories: 1948 births | Living people | Polish footballers | Poland international footballers | Football (soccer) goalkeepers | Footballers at the 1976 Summer Olympics | Olympic competitors for Poland | Olympic silver medalists for Poland | Śląsk Wrocław players | Legia Warszawa players | ŁKS Łódź players | K. Beerschot V.A.C. players | FIFA World Cup 1974 players | FIFA World Cup 1978 players | La Liga footballers | Hércules CF footballers