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10) Fabio Grosso's fall - Italy vs Australia 2006
Ask your average Australian
football fan (those without Italian heritage) who their most
hated individual is, and Fabio Grosso will be high up on the
list.
This all revolves around a
controversial incident during the 2006 World Cup second round
clash in Kaiserslautern. The Azzurri were in a very precarious
position - they were down to 10 men, had used their three
substitutes, and were starting to tire as the game moved towards
inevitable extra time.
Then, deep into injury time,
left back Grosso pounced on a mistake, cut into the area before
going down under the challenge of Lucas Neill. The referee
pointed to the spot, and Francesco Totti buried his penalty with
the last kick. Italy would go on to win their first World Cup in
24 years, but Australia still argue to this day that Grosso
dived
While Neill was na�ve in going to ground, and there was
definitely contact - at the same time it is clear that Grosso
was looking for the penalty. Nevertheless, Italy fans often
point out that they had been dominating the game until the 50th
minute when defender Marco Materazzi was given a straight red
card for an offence that wasn't worth any more than a yellow.
9) Schande von Gij�n (The Shame
of Gij�n) - West Germany vs Austria 1982
Algeria will make their first
World Cup appearance for 24 years, and if there is one team they
will be dying to face it will be Germany. Back in 1982, the
North Africans caused a sensation when they defeated the
European Champions West Germany 2-1 in the opening game of Group
2 thanks to goals from the legendary Rabah Madjer and Lakhdar
Belloumi.
Algeria attained four points
from their three games (two wins and a defeat), and would be
guaranteed a place in the next round providing West Germany
didn't defeat Austria by one or two goals in the final game of
the pool.
The West Germans launched wave
after wave of early attacks, taking a 10th minute lead through
Horst Hrubesch. For the following 80 minutes both sides, knowing
that the current scoreline would qualify them both, made
virtually no attempt to attack with the ball almost continuously
being passed sideways.
supporter was so ashamed that he burnt his national flag.
Algeria complained to FIFA, but their protest was rejected. This
game did result in one important change to the rules as from
Euro '84 onwards the last games of a group in international
tournaments always took place at the same time so that teams
didn't know in advance what result they required.
8) Spain vs Yugoslavia 1982
Spain's performance at their
own World Cup in 1982 was a really miserable one. They won just
once in five games, scoring only four goals - of which two were
controversial penalties.
Indeed the Spaniards wouldn't
have even made it out of the groups but for refereeing favours.
They trailed 1-0 to outsiders Honduras in their opening match
and only earned a 1-1 draw thanks to a disputed Roberto Ufarte
penalty, while they were humiliatingly defeated 1-0 by Northern
Ireland in their final match of Group 5.
Only a 2-1 win over Yugoslavia
saw them qualify for the second group phase, but this was
secured in infamous fashion. Trailing 1-0, Spain were awarded a
penalty for a Yugoslavian foul that occurred clearly two yards
outside the area. Ufarte struck his penalty wide, but the
referee then demanded a retake which Juanito made no mistake
from. Spain went on to win 2-1, while Yugoslavia would
eventually be eliminated despite going into the tournament as
one of the favourites.
Yugoslavia would earn their
revenge eight years later at Italia '90 when they defeated Spain
2-1 in the second phase, thanks to two brilliant goals from the
legendary Dragan Stojkovic.
7) From Russia with two
offsides - USSR vs Belgium 1986
Believe it or not, there are
some people who believe that Argentina vs England was not the
most controversial game of the 1986 World Cup. The alternative
is the round of 16 clash between the USSR and Belgium in Leon.
The match ended in a thrilling
4-3 extra time win for the Belgians, but it would not be unfair
to declare that the USSR were cheated out of the tournament. The
Soviets, who contained many of the exceptional Dynamo Kiev team
that had won the Cup Winners' Cup just a month earlier
(including star man Igor Belanov, who scored a hat-trick and won
the Ballon d'Or that year), were clearly the superior team and
created chance after chance throughout the 120 minutes.But they
were denied by a referee and two linesmen seemingly wearing
Belgian shirts. The USSR twice led in normal time, but twice
Belgium equalised through offside goals, the second from Jan
Ceulemans on 77 minutes in which he was an incredible five yards
ahead of play.
6) Rudi Voller's dive - West
Germany vs Argentina 1990
For many it was poetic justice
after a painfully negative Argentina side had somehow scraped
through all the way to the final, winning two penalty shootouts
along the way.In the Rome showpiece against West Germany, the
holders had again ridden their luck in arguably the dullest
final of all time. But they were then undone by the referee in
the closing stages. First Pedro Monzon became the first player
in history to be red carded in a World Cup final after a clear
dive by Jurgen Klinsmann on his challenge.
Then, with five minutes
remaining, the Germans were awarded a penalty when Rudi Voller
went down far too easily in the box. Andreas Brehme converted
the spot-kick and Germany were champions. Argentina cried foul,
claiming that no one wanted them to win after they had knocked
out hosts Italy in the semis
5) Schnellinger's super save -
West Germany vs Uruguay 1966
On the surface, it would seem
that no number of bad refereeing calls could give Uruguay reason
to complain about this World Cup quarter final from 1966.
The South Americans were
thumped 4-0 by the eventual finalists, with the goals scored by
Helmut Haller (2), Franz Beckenbauer and Uwe Seeler. But study
this game a little closer and you will see a match filled with
huge controversy.
Uruguay had dominated the early
part of the game and would have taken the lead but for a flying
save from Germany defender Karl Heinz Schnellinger, who
literally clawed the ball out of the top corner with his hands.
Incredibly, English referee Jim Finney waved play on.
The Germans took the lead
through Haller and the game was delicately poised before Finney
controversially sent off two Uruguayans in the second half. West
Germany scored three times late on for a flattering scoreline.
After the match, there were
mass conspiracy calls that we go into more detail below.
4) Antonio Rattin's �Violence
of the tongue' - Argentina vs England 1966
For many people in Argentina,
Diego Maradona's �Hand of God' in 1986 was revenge on England
for another World Cup quarter final between the two countries
twenty years earlier where the South Americans felt they were
cheated.
Hosts England won the game 1-0
through a 78th minute Geoff Hurst goal, but not before Argentina
had had captain Antonio Rattin scandalously sent off in the 35th
minute for arguing with referee Rudolf Kreitlein. Rattin
initially refused to leave the field, believing that the ref
wanted England to win, and when he did finally walk the
29-year-old insulted the Queen.
Three Lions manager Sir Alf
Ramsey let rip at the opposition with comments that were viewed
as racist in Argentina. "We have still to produce our best, and
this is not possible until we meet the right sort of opponents,
and that is a team that comes out to play football and not act
as animals," sniped Ramsey.
Post match statistics showed
that Argentina had committed only 19 fouls in the game, to
England's 33, while the referee spoke no Spanish so could not
have understood what Rattin said to him.
Back in Argentina, it was
pointed out that the referee in the England game was German,
while the official in Germany's equally controversial quarter
final was English. The events surrounding the refereeing draw
for these two games added further suspicions.
The representatives of
Argentina, Uruguay, Spain and the Soviet Union were invited to a
London hotel for the draw. They arrived on time, but found out
that the draw had already been made without them, with the only
witnesses being FIFA's English president Stanley Rous, a German
representative, and a couple of Africans. This dubious situation
strengthened conspiracy talk, and led to Dutch referee
infamously declaring that "FIFA is controlled by three people -
Sir, Stanley, Rous."
3) Korea 2002 - Italy, Spain &
Portugal cry conspiracy
The 2002 World Cup has gone
down in infamy due to the huge number of refereeing mistakes
that helped eliminate a string of top nations, and also ensured
that co-hosts Korea made it all the way to the semi-finals.
During their final two group
games against Croatia and Mexico, Italy had four perfectly good
goals disallowed, but somehow managed to scrape through to the
second round where they met South Korea. Against Guus Hiddink's
men, Italy again had a valid goal chalked off, a golden goal
from Damiano Tomassi which would have taken them to the next
round.
Francesco Totti was sent off
for diving when replays suggested he had lost his footing, while
the Koreans were awarded a controversial penalty for a Christian
Panucci tugging offence. Italy eventually lost after Ahn
Jung-Hwan's golden winner, but the match and Ecuadorian referee
Byron Moreno have gone down in Italian football notoriety.
The Italian nation cried that
there had been a conspiracy against them, and they were soon
joined by the Spanish, who in the very next game against Korea
had two perfectly good goals disallowed as they were eliminated
on penalties. At the end of the game, Ivan Helguera had to be
held back by team-mates as he attempted to attack the referee.
Italy and Spain were not the
only team to be apparently wronged by Korea during the 2002
World Cup. In their final group game against Portugal, the
co-hosts continually appeared to win favours from the referee as
they won 1-0, thus eliminating the Europeans.
2) �Phantom Goal' - Geoff Hurst
vs West Germany 1966
Was it over the line or not?
This is a question that raged for years around the world
following England's controversial third goal against West
Germany in the 1966 World Cup Final at Wembley. With the scores
tied at 2-2 eight minutes into extra time, Geoff Hurst span in
the area only to see his shot crash off the underside of the
crossbar, bounce down on or over the line, before being
cleared.England players appealed for a goal, West Germans wagged
their fingers, but the goal was eventually given after Swiss
referee Gottfried Dienst had consulted with USSR linesman Tofik
Bakhramov. England went on to win the game 4-2 and lift their
one World Cup to date.
However, improvements in
technology have recently proved that the ball did not cross the
line. When asked on his deathbed why he told the referee that
Hurst had scored, linesman Bakhramov is alleged to have replied,
"Stalingrad", referring to the infamous battle between the
Soviets and the Nazis in World War II where more than two
million people were killed or wounded - the bloodiest in the
history of warfare.
1) �Hand of God' - Diego
Maradona vs England 1986
The most infamous goal in World
Cup history occurred during the quarter final of the 1986 World
Cup in Mexico between Argentina and England. With the score
locked at 0-0 six minutes into the second half, Maradona chased
a miss-hit clearance by England midfielder Steve Hodge, jumped
above goalkeeper Peter Shilton before flicking it past the
veteran with the outside of his left fist. The referee failed to
spot the infringement and Argentina took a one-goal lead.
Minutes later, Maradona would score the �Goal of the Century'
after dribbling past half of the England team - Argentina would
win 2-1 and go on to lift the World Cup.
After the quarter final
Maradona said that the goal had been scored "a little with the
head of Maradona and a little with the hand of God," also saying
it was revenge for the Falklands War between England and
Argentina four years earlier.
The current Albiceleste boss
became enemy No.1 on English shores following this incident and
24 years on he is still very much a hated figure
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