1978 FIFA World Cup

1978 FIFA World Cup
Argentina '78

1978 FIFA World Cup official logo
Tournament details
Host country  Argentina
Dates 1 June – 25 June
Teams 16 (from 5 confederations)
Venue(s) (in 5 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Argentina (1st title)
Runner-up  Netherlands
Third place  Brazil
Fourth place  Italy
Tournament statistics
Matches played 38
Goals scored 102 (2.68 per match)
Attendance 1,546,151 (40,688 per match)
Top scorer(s) Argentina Mario Kempes (6 goals)
1974
1982

The 1978 FIFA World Cup, the 11th staging of the FIFA World Cup, was held in Argentina between 1 June and 25 June. Argentina was chosen as hosts by FIFA in July 1966. The 1978 World Cup was won by Argentina who beat the Netherlands 3–1 after extra time in the final. This win was the first World Cup title for Argentina, who became the fifth team (after Uruguay, Italy, England, and West Germany), to be both hosts and world champions. The official match ball was the Adidas Tango.

Contents

Qualification

     Countries qualified for World Cup      Country failed to qualify      Countries that did not enter World Cup      Country not a FIFA member

England failed to qualify for the second World Cup in succession, losing out to Italy. European champions Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and the Soviet Union also failed to make it through the qualifying tournament. Newcomers to the finals were Iran and Tunisia; Austria qualified for the first time since 1958, while France, Spain and Hungary were back for the first time since 1966.

Summary

Argentina was a candidate to host the 1970 World Cup, but since Mexico City was hosting the 1968 Summer Olympics and had constructed new football stadia, it went to Mexico.

First round

The format of the competition stayed the same as in 1974: 16 teams qualified, divided into four groups of four. The top two teams in each group would advance to the second round, where they would be split into two groups of four. The winners of each group would play each other in the final, and the second place finishers in the third place match. For the 1978 World Cup, FIFA introduced the penalty shootout as a means of determining the winner in knockout stages should the match end on a draw after 120 minutes. The method, however, was not put in practice as both the third-place match and the final were decided before 120 minutes. The first World Cup to feature a penalty shootout was the 1982 World Cup, in the semifinal match between France and West Germany.

A controversial fact surrounding the 1978 World Cup was that Argentina had suffered a military coup only two years before the cup. Because of this, some countries, most notably the Netherlands, considered publicly whether they should participate in the cup. Despite this, all teams eventually participated without restrictions. Allegations that Dutch star Johan Cruijff refused to participate because of political convictions were refuted by him 30 years later[1]. More controversy surrounded the host, Argentina, as all of their games in the first round kicked off at night, giving the Argentines the advantage of knowing where they stood in the group. This issue would arise again in Spain 1982, which prompted FIFA to change the rules so that the final two group games in subsequent World Cups would be played simultaneously.

The first round produced several surprises. Poland won Group 2 ahead of world champions West Germany, after holding the Germans to a goalless draw and then beating Tunisia and Mexico. The Germans then thrashed Mexico 6-0, and finally played out a second goalless draw against Tunisia. Although they failed to qualify for the second round, Tunisia made history by beating Mexico 3–1. It was the first time that any African team had won a match at the World Cup finals.

Peru pushed the Netherlands into second place in Group 4, where Scotland missed out on goal difference for the second successive tournament. Teofilo Cubillas was outstanding for Peru, scoring twice against Scotland in Peru's 3–1 win and hitting a hat-trick in their 4–1 victory over Iran. Rob Rensenbrink of the Netherlands also scored three times against Iran, scoring all the goals as the Dutch won 3–0. Scotland drew with Iran 1–1 and the only highlight of their campaign was a 3–2 victory over the Netherlands in their final group game which was not enough to prevent elimination. Iran, the reigning Asian champions, went out of the tournament winless. The Netherlands's Rob Rensenbrink's goal against Scotland was the 1000th goal of World Cup history. Scotland's Willie Johnston was expelled from the World Cup after he was found to have taken a banned stimulant during the opening game against Peru.

The biggest surprise of all came in Group 3, where Austria finished ahead of Brazil. The Austrians beat Spain and Sweden, while Brazil were held to draws by the same two teams. The draw with Sweden was especially controversial, due to Welsh referee Clive Thomas blowing the final whistle just as Zico headed the ball into the net. At the final minutes of the Brazil vs Sweden match, the Brazilians were awarded a corner kick that resulted in a goal (which would have given Brazil a 2–1 victory). However, the goal was not awarded, because the referee Clive Thomas had whistled the end of the game as the ball was being kicked into the area. The Brazilian players were not happy with the decision, but the final result remained a 1–1 draw. Brazil needed to beat Austria in their final group game to be sure of progressing to the second round, and managed a 1–0 win thanks to a goal from Roberto Dinamite. Brazil and Austria thus finished with the same number of points and the same goal difference, but Austria won the group by virtue of having scored more goals.

Group 1 had the strongest line-up of teams in the first round, featuring Italy, the host Argentina, France and Hungary. The two places in the second round were claimed before the final round of games, with Italy and Argentina both beating France and Hungary. The Italy-Argentina game decided who topped the group, and a goal from Roberto Bettega midway through the second half was enough to give that honour to Italy. It also forced Argentina to move out of Buenos Aires and play in Rosario.

The 1978 World Cup marked the only occasion during which a national team did not wear its own kit to play a match. The incident happened during the game between France and Hungary. The worldwide television broadcast of the games was in colour, but Argentina only had black-and-white television equipment in place; the team's tops were indistinguishable on the black-and-white TV sets, resulting in the French side electing to wear the jerseys of a local team from Mar del Plata, Club Atletico Kimberley; the jerseys had vertical green and white stripes.

Second round

In the all-European Group A, the Netherlands got off to a flying start by thrashing Austria 5–1, Johnny Rep scoring two of their goals. In a rematch of the 1974 final, the Dutch then drew 2–2 with West Germany, who had previously shared a goalless game with Italy. The Italians beat Austria 1–0, and so the Netherlands faced Italy in their last group game knowing that the winners would reach the final. Erny Brandts scored an 18th-minute own goal to put Italy ahead at half-time, but he made up for his mistake by scoring at the right end in the fifth minute of the second half. Arie Haan got the winner for the Dutch with 15 minutes remaining, and the Netherlands had reached their second successive World Cup Final. In the game known as the miracle of Cordoba, West Germany were surprisingly beaten by Austria 2–3 which marked their end as World Champions.

Group B was essentially a battle between Argentina and Brazil, and it was resolved in controversial circumstances. In the first round of group games, Brazil beat Peru 3–0 while Argentina saw Poland off by a score of 2–0. Brazil and Argentina then played out a tense and violent goalless draw, so both teams went into the last round of matches with three points. Argentina stalled their match that was supposed to be simultaneous to the Brazil and Poland game so Argentina would know how much they had to beat Peru by to advance to the final. Brazil beat Poland 3-1 and because Argentina stalled, they knew that they had to beat Peru by four clear goals which they managed to do with what some saw as a suspicious degree of ease. Trailing 2–0 at half-time, Peru simply collapsed in the second half, and Argentina eventually won 6–0. Rumors suggested that Peru might have been bribed into allowing Argentina to win the match by such a large margin (especially because the Peruvian goalkeeper, Ramón Quiroga, was born in Argentina)[2]; however, nothing could be proved, and Argentina met the Netherlands in the final. Brazil, denied a final place by Argentina's win over Peru, took third place from an enterprising Italian side with Nelinho scoring a memorable goal, and were dubbed "moral champions" by coach Cláudio Coutinho, because they did not win the tournament, but did not lose a single match either.

Final

The final, Argentina vs Netherlands, was also controversial, as the Dutch accused the Argentines of using stalling tactics to delay the match. The host team came out late and questioned the legality of a plaster cast on René van de Kerkhof's wrist, which the Dutch claimed allowed tension to build in front of a hostile Buenos Aires crowd. Mario Kempes opened the scoring for the hosts before Dick Nanninga equalized a few minutes from the end. Rob Rensenbrink had a glorious stoppage-time opportunity to win it for the Netherlands but his effort came back off the goal post. Argentina won the final 3–1 after extra time, after Daniel Bertoni scored and Kempes, who finished the tournament's top scorer with six goals, added his second of the day. The Netherlands, because of the controversial game events, refused to attend the post-match ceremonies after the match ended.[3] They had lost their second World Cup final in a row, both times to the host nation, after losing to West Germany in 1974. Argentina became the first team to win the World Cup after failing to win two matches at the finals (losing to Italy and drawing with Brazil).

Mascot

Gauchito

The official mascot of this World Cup was Gauchito, a boy wearing an Argentina strip. His hat (with the words ARGENTINA '78), neckerchief and whip are typical of gauchos.

Venues

Buenos Aires Buenos Aires Córdoba
Estadio Monumental Estadio José Amalfitani Estadio Cordoba
Capacity: 76,000 Capacity: 49,540 Capacity: 46,083
Estadio Monumental.jpg Estadio José Amalfitani.JPG EstadioCordoba.jpg
Mar del Plata Rosario Mendoza
Estadio José María Minella Estadio Gigante de Arroyito Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza
Capacity: 43,542 Capacity: 41,654 Capacity: 34,875
Minella-1978.jpg Estadio Gigante de Arroyito.jpg Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza.JPG

Match officials

AFC
  • Syria Farouk Bouzo
  • Iran Jafar Namdar
  • Israel Abraham Klein
CAF
  • Senegal Youssou N'Diaye
CONCACAF
  • Mexico Alfonso González Archundia
CONMEBOL
  • Uruguay Ramón Barreto
  • Brazil Arnaldo Cézar Coelho
  • Argentina Ángel Norberto Coerezza
  • Peru César Orosco
  • Chile Juan Silvagno
UEFA
  • West Germany Ferdinand Biwersi
  • Netherlands Charles Corver
  • Switzerland Jean Dubach
  • Sweden Ulf Eriksson
  • Portugal Antonio Garrido
  • Scotland John Gordon
  • Italy Sergio Gonella
  • Poland Alojzy Jarguz
  • Austria Erich Linemayr
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dušan Maksimović
  • Spain Ángel Franco Martínez
  • Hungary Károly Palotai
  • England Pat Partridge
  • East Germany Adolf Prokop
  • Romania Nicolae Rainea
  • Belgium Francis Rion
  • Wales Clive Thomas
  • France Robert Wurtz

Squads

For a list of all squads that appeared in the final tournament, see 1978 FIFA World Cup squads.

Seeding

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4

Results

     Champion      Runner-up      Third place      Fourth place      Quarter-finals      Round of 16      Group stage

First round

Group 1

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Italy 3 3 0 0 6 2 +4 6
 Argentina 3 2 0 1 4 3 +1 4
 France 3 1 0 2 5 5 0 2
 Hungary 3 0 0 3 3 8 −5 0
2 June 1978
13:45 ART
Italy  2 – 1  France Estadio José María Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 38,100
Referee: Nicolae Rainea (Romania)
Rossi Goal 29'
Zaccarelli Goal 54'
Report Lacombe Goal 1'

2 June 1978
19:15 ART
Argentina  2 – 1  Hungary Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 71,615
Referee: Antonio Garrido (Portugal)
Luque Goal 14'
Bertoni Goal 83'
Report Csapó Goal 9'

6 June 1978
13:45 ART
Italy  3 – 1  Hungary Estadio José María Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 26,533
Referee: Ramón Barreto (Uruguay)
Rossi Goal 34'
Bettega Goal 35'
Benetti Goal 61'
Report A. Tóth Goal 81' (pen.)

6 June 1978
19:15 ART
Argentina  2 – 1  France Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 71,666
Referee: Jean Dubach (Switzerland)
Passarella Goal 45' (pen.)
Luque Goal 73'
Report Platini Goal 60'

10 June 1978
14:30[4] ART
France  3 – 1  Hungary Estadio José María Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 23,127
Referee: Arnaldo Cézar Coelho (Brazil)
Lopez Goal 23'
Berdoll Goal 38'
Rocheteau Goal 42'
Report Zombori Goal 41'

10 June 1978
19:15 ART
Argentina  0 – 1  Italy Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 71,712
Referee: Abraham Klein (Israel)
Report Bettega Goal 67'

Group 2

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Poland 3 2 1 0 4 1 +3 5
 West Germany 3 1 2 0 6 0 +6 4
 Tunisia 3 1 1 1 3 2 +1 3
 Mexico 3 0 0 3 2 12 −10 0
1 June 1978
15:00 ART
West Germany  0 – 0  Poland Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 67,579
Referee: Ángel Norberto Coerezza (Argentina)
Report

2 June 1978
16:45 ART
Tunisia  3 – 1  Mexico Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
Attendance: 17,396
Referee: John Gordon (Scotland)
Kaabi Goal 55'
Ghommidh Goal 80'
Dhouieb Goal 86'
Report Vázquez Ayala Goal 45' (pen.)

6 June 1978
16:45 ART
West Germany  6 – 0  Mexico Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 35,258
Referee: Farouk Bouzo (Syria)
D. Müller Goal 14'
H. Müller Goal 29'
Rummenigge Goal 38'71'
Flohe Goal 44'89'
Report

6 June 1978
16:45 ART
Poland  1 – 0  Tunisia Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
Attendance: 9,624
Referee: Ángel Franco Martínez (Spain)
Lato Goal 42' Report

10 June 1978
16:45 ART
West Germany  0 – 0  Tunisia Estadio Olímpico Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 30,667
Referee: César Guerrero Orosco (Peru)
Report

10 June 1978
16:45 ART
Poland  3 – 1  Mexico Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
Attendance: 22,651
Referee: Jafar Namdar (Iran)
Boniek Goal 42'83'
Deyna Goal 56'
Report Rangel Goal 51'

Group 3

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Austria 3 2 0 1 3 2 +1 4
 Brazil 3 1 2 0 2 1 +1 4
 Spain 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 3
 Sweden 3 0 1 2 1 3 −2 1
3 June 1978
13:45 ART
Austria  2 – 1  Spain Estadio José Amalfitani, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 40,841
Referee: Károly Palotai (Hungary)
Schachner Goal 10'
Krankl Goal 79'
Report Dani Goal 21'

3 June 1978
13:45 ART
Brazil  1 – 1  Sweden Estadio José Maria Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 32,569
Referee: Clive Thomas (Wales)
Reinaldo Goal 45' Report Sjöberg Goal 37'

7 June 1978
13:45 ART
Austria  1 – 0  Sweden Estadio José Amalfitani, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 41,424
Referee: Charles Corver (Netherlands)
Krankl Goal 42' (pen.) Report

7 June 1978
13:45 ART
Brazil  0 – 0  Spain Estadio José Maria Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 34,771
Referee: Sergio Gonella (Italy)
Report

11 June 1978
13:45 ART
Spain  1 – 0  Sweden Estadio José Amalfitani, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 46,765
Referee: Ferdinand Biwersi (West Germany)
Asensi Goal 75' Report

11 June 1978
13:45 ART
Brazil  1 – 0  Austria Estadio José Maria Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 35,221
Referee: Robert Wurtz (France)
Roberto Dinamite Goal 40' Report

Group 4

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Peru 3 2 1 0 7 2 +5 5
 Netherlands 3 1 1 1 5 3 +2 3
 Scotland 3 1 1 1 5 6 −1 3
 Iran 3 0 1 2 2 8 −6 1
3 June 1978
16:45 ART
Peru  3 – 1  Scotland Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 37,927
Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)
Cueto Goal 43'
Cubillas Goal 70'76'
Report Jordan Goal 19'

3 June 1978
16:45 ART
Netherlands  3 – 0  Iran Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Attendance: 33,431
Referee: Alfonso González Archundia (Mexico)
Rensenbrink Goal 40' (pen.)62'78' (pen.) Report

7 June 1978
16:45 ART
Scotland  1 – 1  Iran Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 7,938
Referee: Youssou N'Diaye (Senegal)
Eskandarian Goal 43' (o.g.) Report Danaeifard Goal 60'

7 June 1978
16:45 ART
Netherlands  0 – 0  Peru Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Attendance: 28,125
Referee: Adolf Prokop (East Germany)
Report

11 June 1978
16:45 ART
Peru  4 – 1  Iran Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 21,262
Referee: Alojzy Jarguz (Poland)
Velásquez Goal 2'
Cubillas Goal 36' (pen.)39' (pen.)79'
Report Rowshan Goal 41'

11 June 1978
16:45 ART
Scotland  3 – 2  Netherlands Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Attendance: 35,130
Referee: Erich Linemayr (Austria)
Dalglish Goal 44'
Gemmill Goal 46' (pen.)68'
Report Rensenbrink Goal 34' (pen.)
Rep Goal 71'

Second round

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 3 2 1 0 9 4 +5 5
 Italy 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 3
 West Germany 3 0 2 1 4 5 −1 2
 Austria 3 1 0 2 4 8 −4 2
14 June 1978
13:45 ART
Austria  1 – 5  Netherlands Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 25,050
Referee: John Gordon (Scotland)
Obermayer Goal 80' Report Brandts Goal 6'
Rensenbrink Goal 35' (pen.)
Rep Goal 36'53'
W. van de Kerkhof Goal 82'

14 June 1978
13:45 ART
Italy  0 – 0  West Germany Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 67,547
Referee: Dušan Maksimović (Yugoslavia)
Report

18 June 1978
16:45 ART
Netherlands  2 – 2  West Germany Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 40,750
Referee: Ramón Barreto (Uruguay)
Haan Goal 27'
R. van de Kerkhof Goal 82'
Report Abramczik Goal 3'
D. Müller Goal 70'

18 June 1978
16:45 ART
Italy  1 – 0  Austria Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 66,695
Referee: Francis Rion (Belgium)
Rossi Goal 13' Report

21 June 1978
13:45 ART
Austria  3 – 2  West Germany Estadio Chateau Carreras, Córdoba
Attendance: 38,318
Referee: Abraham Klein (Israel)
Vogts Goal 59' (o.g.)
Krankl Goal 66'87'
Report Rummenigge Goal 19'
Hölzenbein Goal 72'

21 June 1978
13:45 ART
Italy  1 – 2  Netherlands Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 67,433
Referee: Angel Franco Martínez (Spain)
Brandts Goal 19' (o.g.) Report Brandts Goal 49'
Haan Goal 76'

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Argentina 3 2 1 0 8 0 +8 5
 Brazil 3 2 1 0 6 1 +5 5
 Poland 3 1 0 2 2 5 −3 2
 Peru 3 0 0 3 0 10 −10 0
14 June 1978
16:45 ART
Peru  0 – 3  Brazil Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Attendance: 31,278
Referee: Nicolae Rainea (Romania)
Report Dirceu Goal 15'27'
Zico Goal 72' (pen.)

14 June 1978
19:15 ART
Argentina  2 – 0  Poland Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
Attendance: 37,091
Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)
Kempes Goal 16'72' Report

18 June 1978
13:45 ART
Peru  0 – 1  Poland Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Attendance: 35,288
Referee: Pat Partridge (England)
Report Szarmach Goal 64'

18 June 1978
19:15 ART
Argentina  0 – 0  Brazil Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
Attendance: 37,326
Referee: Károly Palotai (Hungary)
Report

21 June 1978
16:45 ART
Poland  1 – 3  Brazil Estadio Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Attendance: 39,586
Referee: Juan Silvagno Cavanna (Chile)
Lato Goal 45' Report Nelinho Goal 13'
Roberto Dinamite Goal 58'63'

21 June 1978
19:15 ART
Argentina  6 – 0  Peru Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
Attendance: 37,315
Referee: Robert Wurtz (France)
Kempes Goal 21'49'
Tarantini Goal 43'
Luque Goal 50'72'
Houseman Goal 67'
Report

Third place match

24 June 1978
15:00 ART
Brazil  2 – 1  Italy Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 69,659
Referee: Abraham Klein (Israel)
Nelinho Goal 64'
Dirceu Goal 71'
Report Causio Goal 38'

Final

25 June 1978
15:00 ART
Netherlands  1 – 3
(a.e.t.)
 Argentina Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 71,483
Referee: Sergio Gonella (Italy)
Nanninga Goal 82' Report Kempes Goal 37'104'
Bertoni Goal 115'

Awards

Golden Boot Winner Best Young Player FIFA Fair Play Trophy
Argentina Mario Kempes Italy Antonio Cabrini  Argentina

Scorers

6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
  • Brazil Dirceu
  • Brazil Roberto Dinamite
  • Netherlands Johnny Rep
2 goals
  • Argentina Daniel Bertoni
  • Brazil Nelinho
  • West Germany Heinz Flohe
  • West Germany Dieter Müller
  • Italy Roberto Bettega
  • Netherlands Ernie Brandts
  • Netherlands Arie Haan
1 goal
  • Argentina René Houseman
  • Argentina Daniel Passarella
  • Argentina Alberto Tarantini
  • Austria Erich Obermayer
  • Austria Walter Schachner
  • Brazil Reinaldo
  • Brazil Zico
  • France Marc Berdoll
  • France Bernard Lacombe
  • France Christian Lopez
  • France Michel Platini
  • France Dominique Rocheteau
  • West Germany Rüdiger Abramczik
  • West Germany Bernd Hölzenbein
  • West Germany Hansi Müller
  • Hungary Károly Csapó
  • Hungary András Tóth
  • Hungary Sándor Zombori
  • Iran Iraj Danaeifard
  • Iran Hassan Rowshan
  • Italy Romeo Benetti
  • Italy Franco Causio
  • Italy Renato Zaccarelli
  • Mexico Víctor Rangel
  • Mexico Arturo Vázquez Ayala
  • Netherlands Dick Nanninga
  • Netherlands René van de Kerkhof
  • Netherlands Willy van de Kerkhof
  • Peru César Cueto
  • Peru José Velásquez
  • Poland Kazimierz Deyna
  • Poland Andrzej Szarmach
  • Scotland Kenny Dalglish
  • Scotland Joe Jordan
  • Spain Juan Manuel Asensi
  • Spain Dani
  • Sweden Thomas Sjöberg
  • Tunisia Mokhtar Dhouieb
  • Tunisia Néjib Ghommidh
  • Tunisia Ali Kaabi
Own goals

FIFA Retrospective Ranking

In 1986, FIFA published a report that ranked all teams in each World Cup up to and including 1986, based on progress in the competition, overall results and quality of the opposition.[5] The rankings for the 1974 tournament were as follows:

Final

  1.  Argentina
  2.  Netherlands

3rd and 4th place

  1.  Brazil
  2.  Italy

Eliminated at the second group stage

  1.  Poland
  2.  West Germany
  3.  Austria
  4.  Peru

Eliminated at the first group stage

  1.  Tunisia
  2.  Spain
  3.  Scotland
  4.  France
  5.  Sweden
  6.  Iran
  7.  Hungary
  8.  Mexico

Controversy

The government of Argentina that hosted the 1978 World Cup was a military dictatorship that seized power in 1976 during the National Reorganization Process. Less than a year before the World Cup was held in Argentina, in September 1977, Interior Minister General Albano Harguindeguy, stated that 5,618 people had recently disappeared to detention camps throughout Argentina. The 1978 World Cup's River Plate Monumental Stadium is located one mile away from the infamous Naval Mechanics School (known by its acronym ESMA), concentration camp where prisoners in the Dirty War reportedly could hear the roars of the crowd during the World Cup match[6]; prompting echoes of Hitler's manipulation of sports during the 1936 Berlin Olympics.[7]

Notes

  1. Doyle, Paul (16 April 2008). "Kidnappers made Cruyff miss World Cup". guardian.co.uk (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2008/apr/16/newsstory.sport15. Retrieved 20 June 2008. 
  2. "Keeping the Dark Side of Soccer Away From the City of Light". nytimes.com. 7 June 1998. http://www.nytimes.com/specials/worldcup/98/articles/060798soc-match-fixing.html. Retrieved 14 November 2009. 
  3. CNN. 4 July 1998. http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/soccer/world/events/1998/worldcup/news/1998/07/04/philjones_04/. Retrieved 20 April 2010. 
  4. Original kick-off scheduled for 13:45. Match delayed by 45 minutes due to both teams wearing identical kits (red, white & blue). The French eventually donned the kits of the local team Club Atlético Kimberley.
  5. http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/afdeveloping/technicaldevp/50/09/00/fwc_mexico_1986_en_part4_279.pdf page 45
  6. But Was This The Beautiful Game's Ugliest Moment?. 'Financial Times, June 21 2008'.
  7. McDonnell, Patrick J. (28 June 2008). "Argentina's bittersweet win". LA Times. http://articles.latimes.com/2008/jun/28/world/fg-mundial28. Retrieved 2010-04-07. 

External links