Sportstar

Ferenc Puskas

— Appearance­s: 1954 (Hungary), 1962 (Spain) Matches: 6; Goals: 4

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Between June 1950 and February 1956, Hungary lost only one match out of 50. Unfortunat­ely for the Aranycsapa­t (Golden Team), that defeat was in the final of the 1954 World Cup. Despite being denied the Jules Rimet Trophy, the names of Gusztav Sebes’ Magical Magyars are today far more resonant than those of the victorious Germans, for this Hungary side revolution­ised the way the game was played.

Hungary’s most resonant performanc­e was undoubtedl­y its 6-3 win over England at Wembley in 1953, a game that blew apart the self-perpetuate­d myth of English football’s pre eminence. The most vivid moment in this pivotal day in football history was, of course, the first of Ferenc Puskas’ two goals, a trademark left-footed thump following a casual drag-back with the sole of his foot, which left his marker Billy Wright slide-tackling thin air. “Like a fire engine going to the wrong fire,” was how sports writer Geoffrey Green, covering the game for The Times, described Wright’s desperate lunge.

Puskas was undoubtedl­y Hungary’s biggest star. The elusive Nandor Hidegkuti may have made the Magyars tick, and Sandor Kocsis may have been a more prolific goalscorer, but the Galloping Major, a combinatio­n of power and dazzling skill in a stocky, borderline-overweight frame, enjoyed a longer reign in the eye of the West. Following the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1956, Puskas moved to Spain and won three European Cups at Real Madrid, where he forged a devastatin­g partnershi­p with Alfredo Di Stefano.

In the 1954 World Cup, Hungary scored a remarkable 27 goals in five matches, with Kocsis netting 11 and Puskas and Hidegkuti four each. An injured Puskas missed the quarterfinals and semisfinals, but returned for the final against West Germany, and left an indelible, if tragic mark on the ‘Miracle of Berne’. Puskas scored the game’s first goal, and following Germany’s stunning comeback from 0-2 to 3-2, slid home what he and the rest of the Hungary team believed was an equaliser three minutes from the end, only for the linesman to rule the goal offside.

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