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REVENGE EXACTED IN AN UNINSPIRIN­G FINAL

West Germany defeated Argentina in a final which experts would describe as “the worst, most tedious, bad-tempered” in the history of the World Cup.

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It was a repeat of the previous edition final but with a change in script. West Germany was able to take revenge, but it was a final which experts would describe as “the worst, most tedious, badtempere­d” in the history of the World Cup. A final in which Diego Maradona was half crippled; in which Argentina’s dashing blond striker, Claudio Caniggia was suspended for a mere hand ball. Germans, despite looking uninspired, won through a penalty (which did not look genuine) but none watching the match would have complained, for such was the boredom.

After Holland’s brilliant win of the European championsh­ip two years earlier, its poor show in Italy was a big disappoint­ment.

That victory was inspired by the dazzling trio of Marco Van Basten, Ruud Gullit and Frank Rijkaard. But in Italy, the highly intelligen­t Van Basten, a superb finisher, did not find favour with the team coach; Gullit, a destroyer, was down with a series of injuries, and Rijkaard had been brought in the face of opposition.

Host Italy was under pressure, but looked threatenin­g from the start. Silvatore Schillaci grew in stature and finally became a household name and not surprising­ly, he also became the top-scorer of the tournament.

Roberto Baggio was another to turn popular. But after promising so much, Italy, rather sadly, went down to Argentina on penalties in the semifinals after the teams were locked 1-1.

Argentina had recovered from a horrendous start, losing to the rising African team, Cameroon. The country from the ‘Dark Continent’ provided us with an insight about the talent in Africa. Omam Biyik and Roger Milla became two popular figures.

Nonetheles­s, Argentina took the defeat in its stride to reach the final, and Cameroon fell to England in the quarterfinals. Brazil

did not look a happy outfit, with its players appearing disgruntle­d. Nonetheles­s, it sailed through the preliminar­ies before meeting Argentina and crashing out. Brazil missed several scoring chances before Maradona provided a brilliant pass for Caniggia to give the finishing touch.

West Germany warmed up. It’s grand win over Holland in one of the best matches in the tournament, was just the boost it needed to get into top gear. It defeated Czechoslov­akia in the quarterfinals, and then edged out England via penalties, in the semifinals.

On the other hand Argentina, stumbling, but holding on, had a lucky escape against Yugoslavia.

And then in the semifinals against Italy, once again, luck was to smile on the Argentines. Italy, without Baggio, still had Schillaci to give the side the lead. Then a goalkeepin­g blunder by Walter Zenga gave Argentina the reprieve.

In the final, Argentina’s sour, negative tactics did not make things any better. The absence of Caniggia left Argentina with one quality player short.

The poor physical condition of Maradona, too, contribute­d to the team’s downfall. Argentina had four players in the suspension list and two more followed. All told, it was a miserable outing for the Latin American side.

Referee Edgardo Codesal’s decision to award the West Germans a penalty when Rudi Voeller was brought down by Roberto

Sensini, was contested by Argentina.

And when Andreas Brehme promptly dispatched the penalty for the all important moment of the final, West Germany had won the World Cup.

Host — Italy

Teams — 24

Number of matches — 52

Goals scored — 115

Format — Group stage and knockouts

Winner — West Germany

Runner-up — Argentina

Top scorer — Salvatore Schillaci (Italy) — 6 goals Best player — Salvatore Schillaci (Italy) Best match — Cameroon vs England

 ?? THE HINDU PHOTO LIBRARY ?? World Cup glory: Lothar Matthaeus lifts the World Cup after West Germany’s victory over Argentina in the 1990 final in Rome.
THE HINDU PHOTO LIBRARY World Cup glory: Lothar Matthaeus lifts the World Cup after West Germany’s victory over Argentina in the 1990 final in Rome.
 ?? AFP ?? Scintillat­ing: Italian forward Salvatore Schillaci heads his team’s first goal past Czech goalkeeper Jan Stejsk. Schillaci grew in stature and finally became a household name and not surprising­ly, he also became the top-scorer of the tournament.
AFP Scintillat­ing: Italian forward Salvatore Schillaci heads his team’s first goal past Czech goalkeeper Jan Stejsk. Schillaci grew in stature and finally became a household name and not surprising­ly, he also became the top-scorer of the tournament.

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