Las Vegas Review-Journal

A history of huge World Cup upsets

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DOHA, Qatar — The staggering loss for Lionel Messi and Argentina against Saudi Arabia at the World Cup is right up there with the biggest upsets in tournament history.

Here is a look at some of the other major World Cup surprises through the years:

Cameroon 1, Argentina 0 (1990)

Diego Maradona was establishe­d as the best player in the world and Argentina was favored to repeat its 1986 title. A little-known Cameroon team that was playing at only its second World Cup had other ideas in the tournament’s opening match.

Francois Omam-biyik scored with a second-half header for the African team, which was also down to 10 men at the time after a red card. Cameroon eventually finished the game with nine men after another sending off but kept Argentina and Maradona out.

Argentina did recover to reach the final — something that may raise Messi’s spirits slightly in Qatar

— but lost to West Germany in that deciding game.

Senegal 1, France 0 (2002)

France was also World Cup champion when it came up against another African underdog at the start of the 2002 tournament in South Korea and Japan.

France’s team was packed with some of the best players in the world and no one thought they could lose the game. But Papa Bouba Diop bundled in a goal in the 30th minute and Senegal kept its nerve for a famous win in its World Cup debut. France ended up exiting in the group stage. Senegal went on to reach the quarterfin­als, just as Cameroon did in 1990.

South Korea 2, Italy 1 (2002)

South Korea had beaten Portugal in the group stage but bettered that upset with anwin in extra time over Italy in the round of 16. Italy was a three-time champion at the time while South Korea had never won a World Cup game before the tournament.

Ahn Jung-hwan, who was playing his club soccer in Italy at the time, headed in a golden goal three minutes from the end of extra time to send the Italians home and reward a fanatical home crowd with a lasting World Cup memory.

United States 1, England 0 (1950)

Haitian-born Joe Gaetjens was the unlikely hero for the United States in the upset in Brazil. The American team was basically made up of part-timers and the result reverberat­ed across the game as one of the first big World Cup upsets.

North Korea 1, Italy 0 (1966)

Italy was on the wrong end of another upset in 1966 in England, when North Korea beat the Azzurri in the first World Cup it ever played in. The result eliminated the Italians and sent the North Koreans to the quarterfin­als.

North Korea wasn’t even expected to qualify for the tournament and didn’t play at another World Cup until 2010.

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