1986 FIFA World Cup final

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.[1][2]

1986 FIFA World Cup final
Argentina's Jorge Burruchaga scores the match-winning goal
Event1986 FIFA World Cup
Date29 June 1986
VenueEstadio Azteca, Mexico City
RefereeRomualdo Arppi Filho (Brazil)
Attendance114,600
1982
1990

Route to the final

ArgentinaRoundWest Germany
OpponentResultFirst roundOpponentResult
 South Korea3–1Match 1  Uruguay1–1
 Italy1–1Match 2  Scotland2–1
 Bulgaria2–0Match 3  Denmark0–2
TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
 Argentina321062+45
 Italy312054+14
 Bulgaria302124−22
 South Korea301247−31
Final standing
TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
 Denmark330091+86
 West Germany311134−13
 Uruguay302127−52
 Scotland301213−21
OpponentResultKnockout stageOpponentResult
 Uruguay1–0Round of 16  Morocco1–0
 England2–1Quarter-finals  Mexico0–0 (aet) (4–1 pen.)
 Belgium2–0Semi-finals  France2–0

Match

Summary

Argentina captain Diego Maradona and West Germany captain Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.

José Luis Brown opened the scoring for Argentina in the 23rd minute with a header after an error of the German Keeper Harald Schumacher on a free-kick from the right and it stayed at 1–0 until half-time. 11 minutes into the second half, Jorge Valdano doubled Argentina's lead with a low side foot finish after cutting in from the left past the advancing goalkeeper. Karl-Heinz Rummenigge pulled a goal back in the 74th minute from close range for West Germany, his first goal in the tournament. West Germany then equalised in the 81st minute, with Rudi Völler scoring with a header from close range. Although Diego Maradona was heavily marked by Lothar Matthäus throughout the game, his pass to Jorge Burruchaga in the 84th minute allowed Argentina to regain the lead at 3–2 when he slid the ball past the advancing goalkeeper from the right and into the corner of the net.[3][4]

Six yellow cards were issued in this match, which was a record number until the 2010 FIFA World Cup Final. Two of them were issued because of timewasting from Argentine players. As the clock expired, Argentina celebrated their second World Cup victory in three tournaments after having won the 1978 World Cup on home soil.

Details

Argentina  3–2  West Germany
Brown 23'
Valdano 56'
Burruchaga 84'
ReportRummenigge 74'
Völler 81'
Argentina
West Germany
GK18Nery Pumpido  85'
SW5José Luis Brown
CB9José Luis Cuciuffo
CB19Oscar Ruggeri
RWB14Ricardo Giusti
LWB16Julio Olarticoechea  77'
DM2Sergio Batista
CM7Jorge Burruchaga  90'
CM12Héctor Enrique  81'
SS10Diego Maradona (c)  17'
CF11Jorge Valdano
Substitutes:
GK15Luis Islas
DF8Néstor Clausen
DF13Oscar Garré
MF21Marcelo Trobbiani  90'
FW17Pedro Pasculli
Manager:
Carlos Bilardo
GK1Harald Schumacher
SW17Ditmar Jakobs
CB4Karlheinz Förster
CB2Hans-Peter Briegel  62'
RWB14Thomas Berthold
LWB3Andreas Brehme
CM6Norbert Eder
CM8Lothar Matthäus  21'
AM10Felix Magath  62'
CF11Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (c)
CF19Klaus Allofs  46'
Substitutes:
GK22Eike Immel
MF21Wolfgang Rolff
FW7Pierre Littbarski
FW9Rudi Völler  46'
FW20Dieter Hoeneß  62'
Manager:
Franz Beckenbauer

Assistant referees:
Erik Fredriksson (Sweden)
Berny Ulloa Morera (Costa Rica)

Match rules:

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Five substitutes named, of which two may be used

Aftermath

Diego Maradona (with the World Cup) and teammates celebrating the title

The second World Cup won by Argentina is regarded by many as the most important victory for an Argentine side.[5] Four years later, both teams met in the final of the 1990 World Cup, with West Germany winning. This marked the first time two World Cup finalists met twice, a record later shared with Brazil and Italy, the 1970 and 1994 World Cup finalists. Argentina and Germany met in the 2014 final for a record third time as finalists.

With the 1986 defeat, German manager Franz Beckenbauer gained the distinction of having lost a World Cup final as a player (in 1966) and a manager. In 1990 he managed Germany to victory, becoming a winner of the World Cup as player (in 1974) and as manager.

The games are won by the players on the field, but behind it there must be a machinery that works. There I include players, coaching staff and leaders. If you all pull in the same direction, you can think of titles. That's what happened in Mexico '86.[6]

— Carlos Bilardo, manager of Argentina

Argentina would not see another world title for 36 years until their win over France in the 2022 final.

See also

References

External links