Malta Independent

Confetti and controvers­y greet Argentina's 1st triumph

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Controvers­y and confetti. The 1978 World Cup in Argentina was awash with both.

Twelve years after being awarded the right to host the World Cup, Argentina was a very different country. It had been under the control of a military junta since 1976, after a coup overthrew the government of Isabel Peron. Its ruthless treatment of political opponents — tens of thousands would eventually disappear — cast a shadow over the tournament.

The pressure on coach Cesar Luis Menotti and the team to exploit their home advantage and become the third South American country after Uruguay and Brazil to win the World Cup was immense. But after nearly 50 years of trying, Argentina did just that, defeating the Netherland­s 3-1 in extra time in front of a confetti-laden home crowd.

Inspired by striker Mario Kempes, who scored twice in the final to take his tournament tally to six, Argentina inflicted the second straight final defeat on the Dutch, who almost won it at the end of normal time when Robbie Rensenbrin­k hit the post.

The Dutch were without Johan Cruyff following his lastminute withdrawal. Cruyff later revealed that he didn't board the plane to Argentina because of a kidnapping attempt months earlier. At the time, there was widespread speculatio­n that his absence was an act of protest against the junta.

Forty years later, Argentina's triumph still raises eyebrows.

In that World Cup, there was a second group stage that determined which teams made it to the final, but the scheduling did not allow for the final group matches to take place at the same time.

In Argentina's case, the team took the field knowing that a 40 victory over Peru was required after Brazil had won its last group match against Poland 3-1. Argentina won 6-0.

The hosts suffered just one defeat on their way to the trophy, a 0-1 loss against Italy. The Azzurri played their best attacking football for ages but had to settle for fourth place.

Raanan Rein, an Israeli professor of Latin American history, told a FIFA-hosted conference on World Cup history in 2010 that he was "100 percent persuaded" that the junta was somehow involved, collaborat­ing with "at least one foreign government" to fix the match.

Others argue that the Peru team just fell away after a strong start — it happens all the time — and were unnerved by the intimidati­ng atmosphere inside the stadium in Rosario.

Regardless, it was time for the joyous people of Argentina to let the confetti fly.

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 ??  ?? Mario Kempes runs off to celebrate his game-clinching goal in extra time, which helped lift Argentina to a 3-1 victory of the Netherland­s in the 1978 World Cup final.
Mario Kempes runs off to celebrate his game-clinching goal in extra time, which helped lift Argentina to a 3-1 victory of the Netherland­s in the 1978 World Cup final.
 ??  ?? Argentina captain Daniel Passarella holding the FIFA World Cup after his side’s triumph over the Netherland­s in the final.
Argentina captain Daniel Passarella holding the FIFA World Cup after his side’s triumph over the Netherland­s in the final.
 ??  ?? Argentina fans welcome their team onto the pitch with a deluge of confetti and toilet paper.
Argentina fans welcome their team onto the pitch with a deluge of confetti and toilet paper.
 ??  ?? Argentina coach Cesar Luis Menotti during the 1978 FIFA World Cup™ Final. Photo: FIFA
Argentina coach Cesar Luis Menotti during the 1978 FIFA World Cup™ Final. Photo: FIFA
 ??  ?? 1978 FIFA World Cup Argentina™ Official Poster. Photo: FIFA
1978 FIFA World Cup Argentina™ Official Poster. Photo: FIFA
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