The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for sports and athletics .(June 2024) |
Event | 1958 FIFA World Cup, first round, group 1 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||
Date | 15 June 1958 | ||||||
Venue | Olympiastadion, Helsingborg, Sweden | ||||||
Referee | Arthur Edward Ellis (England) | ||||||
Attendance | 16,418 |
The Disaster of Sweden (Spanish : Desastre de Suecia) [1] is the name given to the early elimination of the Argentina football team from the 1958 FIFA World Cup at the hands of the Czechoslovakia football team. The match was played on June 15, 1958, at the Olympiastadion in the city of Helsingborg, Sweden, the host country of the championship. That day, Czechoslovakia beat Argentina 6–1. The final result means the heaviest defeat for the Albiceleste team in a FIFA World Cup. [2] [3]
Before that meeting, the two teams had only met once, on August 16, 1956, at El Gasómetro in Buenos Aires with a 1–0 victory for the locals. [4] [5] [6]
Argentina arrived at the World Cup with the title of South American champion in tow, after the achievement obtained a year earlier in Peru. Many of the Argentinian football figures of that time, such as Amadeo Carrizo, Ángel Labruna (both members of River's La Maquina), Omar Corbatta, José Ramos Delgado (who later played alongside Pelé in Santos) and José Sanfilippo (historic goalscorer of San Lorenzo de Almagro) took place in the final squad that traveled to Sweden in search of the first world conquest of the Argentinian team and after 24 years of absence from the biggest event. [7] With Guillermo Stábile as coach, the Argentinian team reached qualification after eliminating Bolivia and Chile.
Czechoslovakia, for its part, had qualified in UEFA group 4 beating Wales and East Germany. As at that time there was still no official football championship between all the European teams (the UEFA Euro only began in 1960), the only rivals arose from the friendlies determined by FIFA, and from the Central European International Cup, a tournament which was played between the late '20s and '50s by the strongest teams in said continental region. The Czechoslovakian team entered the World Cup with 7 consecutive matches without defeat, 2 of them friendlies, 3 in the qualifying round and 2 in the Central European Cup.
In 1958, both teams met in Group A of the World Cup with West Germany and Northern Ireland.
After the dispute of the first two matches, Argentina arrived with 2 points as a result of a defeat against West Germany by 3-1 and a victory against the British team by the same score. Czechoslovakia, on the other hand, had achieved a single point due to a draw against the Germans and a narrow defeat against Northern Ireland, so they had to win to achieve a qualification attempt.
Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
West Germany | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 3 | +2 | 3 |
Argentina | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 2 |
Northern Ireland | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | –1 | 2 |
Czechoslovakia | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | –1 | 1 |
The Europeans quickly took control of the match and in the 8th minute defender Milan Dvořák scored the first goal with a shot from outside the area. At 17' the Czechs scored through Zdeněk Zikán after a failed rejection by Francisco Lombardo. At the end of the first half, at 40', Zikán scored again.
Already in the second half the South Americans tried to close the gap. Thus, at 65' Orestes Omar Corbatta made it 1-3 through a penalty. However, four minutes later Jiří Feureisl scored the fourth goal. Then Václav Hovorka would score twice, at 82' and 89', making the final score 6 to 1.
Czechoslovakia | 6–1 | Argentina |
---|---|---|
Dvořák 8' Zikán 17', 40' Feureisl 69' Hovorka 82', 89' | Report | Corbatta 65' (pen.) |
Czechoslovakia | Argentina |
|
|
The defeat, considered humiliating, brought immediate consequences and others that decisively influenced the subsequent development of Argentinian football. [8] [9]
The early elimination of the Argentinian team was echoed in the main graphic media of the time. Criticism began to fall on the president of the AFA, Raúl Colombo, and the coaching staff, while the team was received at the Ezeiza Airport with insults and throwing coins. [7] [10]
Guillermo Stábile resigned from the coach position after this episode, a position he had held since 1939 and in which he had achieved 6 South American Championship titles.
Ángel Labruna, forward of that team, later declared to the press:
We went blindfolded, blind. We were not physically or tactically prepared to face 3 games in one week. [11]
Amadeo Carrizo, the Argentinian goalkeeper, resigned from his country's national team, to which he returned, however, in 1964 for the Nations Cup. He would later reveal the following:
When we arrived in the country, after the elimination, the plane had to land on a farm in Monte Grande so they wouldn't kill us. Some Argentinian journalists who were in Sweden had asked people to go look for us at the air station with sticks and stones. There was a lot of anger, they wanted to kill us, they said we were traitors. Nobody was going to believe us that Argentina lacked organization and that none of us charged a single peso to play in that World Cup. [12]
The Argentina national football team, nicknamed La Albiceleste, represents Argentina in men's international football and is administered by the Argentine Football Association, the governing body for football in Argentina.
The Uruguay national football team, nicknamed La Celeste, represents Uruguay in international men's football, and is administered by the Uruguayan Football Association, the governing body for football in Uruguay.
Germán Darío Lux is an Argentine former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper.
César Luis Menotti, known as El Flaco ("Slim"), was an Argentine football player and manager who won the 1978 FIFA World Cup as the head coach of the Argentina national team.
Fernando Rubén Gago is an Argentine football manager and former player. He is the head coach of Primera División club Boca Juniors.
Marcelo Daniel Gallardo is an Argentine football manager and former professional player who is the current head coach of River Plate. During his playing career, Gallardo was an attacking midfielder and playmaker. He was regarded for his vision, technique, class, dribbling and especially his defence-splitting passing.
The Argentina women's national football team represents Argentina in international women's football. Like their men's counterpart, the women's team has been known or nicknamed "La Albiceleste".
Oreste Omar Corbatta Fernández was an Argentine footballer who played as right winger. Corbatta is regarded as the greatest idol in the history of Racing Club.
The Argentina national under-20 football team is the representative of Argentina in FIFA-sponsored tournaments that pertain to that age level.
The 1986 FIFA World Cup final was the final of the 1986 FIFA World Cup, held in Mexico. The match was held at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City on 29 June 1986 and had an attendance of 114,600. It was contested by Argentina and West Germany. Argentina won the match 3–2 in regulation time.
Francisco Olazar was an Argentine football player and coach. He played as a central midfielder.
This is a record of Costa Rica's results at the FIFA World Cup. The FIFA World Cup, sometimes called the Football World Cup or the Soccer World Cup, but usually referred to simply as the World Cup, is an international association football competition contested by the men's national teams of the members of Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the sport's global governing body. The championship has been awarded every four years since the first tournament in 1930, except in 1942 and 1946, due to World War II.
The history of the Argentina national football team begins with their first official match, played on 20 July 1902 against Uruguay, a 6–0 win in Paso del Molino, Montevideo. One year before, There had been a precedent when representatives from both sides met in a match also in Montevideo, although it was not organised by any association and therefore is not considered official.
Enrique Macaya Márquez is an Argentine sports journalist. He worked on Fútbol de Primera from 1985 to 2009. He has also worked for magazines Ten Points and El Campeón, and for the newspapers Noticias Gráficas, Convicción and La Nación. He has been declared a noteworthy personality of sport journalism by the legislature of Buenos Aires, on July 15, 2007.
The qualifying match for the 1994 FIFA World Cup between Argentina and Colombia is a historic football match played on 5 September 1993. It was the last day of qualifying matches in the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification – group A of the South American qualifiers. Argentina, in that time second of the group, needed to win in order to not play the intercontinental play-off against Australia. If Argentina didn't win, the qualification to the World Cup depended on the result of the other match of the group between Peru and Paraguay. For its part, Colombia being the first of its group could reach the qualification with a win or a draw. Colombia won 5–0.
Adolfo Julián Gaich is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a forward for Turkish club Antalyaspor on loan from the Russian club CSKA Moscow.
The 2021 Argentina rugby union tours of Europe were two tours by the Argentina national team on Europe that included a series of matches played in the continent. The first tour was in July, 2021, and was composed of three matches in Romania and Wales, as preparation for the 2021 Rugby Championship. Argentina played one match v Romania and two v Wales national teams.
The XIII(13th) FIFA World Cup was scheduled to take place in Colombia, between May 31 and June 29, 1986, after being selected as the venue in 1974. However, in November 1982 Colombia declined due to the impossibility of complying with the requirements that FIFA demanded to celebrate the event, marking an unprecedented and unrepeated event in the history of the World Cups.
Alejo Véliz is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a striker for La Liga club Espanyol, on loan from Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur.
The 1958 Copa Ibarguren was the 23nd edition of this national cup of Argentina. The final was contested by Racing Club de Avellaneda, and Liga Cordobesa de Fútbol of Córdoba Province, champion of 1952 Copa Presidente de la Nación.