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Transfers that did not happen, Part Four

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1- Prior to joining Bari in the summer of 1991, England midfielder David Platt also had an offer to join France’s big spending Olympique Marseille.
Platt himself stated that even though OM is a better team, the greater challenge was at Bari.

Photo From: Guerin Sportivo, September 18-24, 1991
(David Platt, September 15, 1991, Bari 1-Sampdoria 1)


2- AC Milan’s Ruud Gullit was seriously injured in 1989. His injury sidelined him for practically the season of 1989/90.
In case Gullit could not recover from his injury, the AC Milan management took an option on Steaua Bucharest’s Gheorge Hagi.
Gullit recovered and came back for AC Milan and Hagi joined Real Madrid in the summer of 1990.

Photo From: Don Balon, Chile Edition, August 20-26, 1996, Issue no 219
(Gheorge Hagi, June 26, 1994, World Cup, USA 0-Romania 1)


3- Liverpool’s Danish midfielder Jan Molby almost joined Barcelona in the November of 1990. However, the teams could not finally agree on a fee and the deal was called off.
Barcelona Manager Johann Cruyff was eyeing Molby, since Barcelona’s Dutch sweeper Ronald Koeman was expected to be injured for most of the season.

Photo from: Onze, November 1988
(Jan Molby and Pierre Littbarski, June 13, 1986, World Cup, Denmark 2-West Germany 0)


4-Diego Maradona created a controversy in the Summer and early Fall of 1989 when he delayed his return to Napoli from Argentina following duty during the Copa America.
Olympique Marseille’s ambitious President Bernard Tapie had made an offer for Maradona and the player was willing to join.
Maradona was showing early signs of the stress of playing in the Serie A and the relative stress free environment of the French League must have appealed to him.
In any case, Napoli would have none of it and Maradona was forced to return to Napoli with the season already already underway for weeks.

Photo from: World Soccer, September 1989
(Diego Maradona on the cover of World Soccer Magazine)



5-Real Madrid had made an offer to acquire Dinamo Kiev midfielder Leonid Burjak in the Fall of 1981.
This was during the cold war era, where Soviet player transfers to the west never happened.

Predictably, Soviet officials refused Burjak permission to join Real Madrid.

Photo from: Onze, September 1983
(Dinamo Kiev’s Leonid Burjak)


Events and Consequences, Part Four

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1- Event:
French player Xavier Gravelaine’s star performance vs. Real Zaragoza in the UEFA Cup on September 15, 1992 with Caen winning 3 to 2.

Consequence:
Xavier Gravelaine had been a Nantes youth product who had failed to make the grade there and had progressed through joining other smaleer teams.
Following this one performance, there was a public clamor for him to be selected for the National Team and he was.
He became the revelation of the season.
He played in France’s next match, a World Cup Qualifier on October 14thvs. Austria (2 to 0 win). He played three more times for France into the following year and earned a transfer to Paris St. Germain.
His career stalled after this move as his first team opportunitites became less and less.



Photo From: Onze-Mondial, February 1993
(Xavier Gravelaine in his second match for France, November 14, 1992, World Cup Qualifier, France 2-Finland 1)

2- Event:
England’s Friendly match vs. Mexico on June 1, 1969 (scoreless tie) about a year before the World Cup Finals.
When asked about Mexico, Alf Ramsey had a number of complaints.
He complained that a band played outside their hotel until 5 am every night and that a promised motorcycle escort failed to arrive on time.
He pointed out that his players were jeered and heckled by the crowd while inspecting the field.
A few days later, before the B-International with Mexico he pushed out Mexican journalists from the dressing room.

Consequence:
These incidents and statements were the main reasons why at the 1970 World Cup , England were mostly booed and unliked by the local crowds.
The resentment in the Latin World towards England from this episode might have also contributed to the farcical bracelet ‘theft’ incident in Colombia prior to the World Cup itself.


Photo From: (Magazine Source unknown) / Contribution From a blog viewer
(England Squad , June 1, 1969, Mexico 0-England 0, Top, left to right:  Geoffrey Charles Hurst, Keith Robert Newton, Brian Leslie Labone, Martin Stanford Peters, Terence Cooper, Francis Henry Lee,  Alan Patrick Mullery, Alan James Ball, Robert Charlton, Gordon West,  Robert Frederick Chelsea Moore)


3- Event:
AC Milan and Italy midfielder Gianluigi Lentini’s car accident on August 3, 1993.

Consequence:
Former Torino midfielder Gianluigi Lentini became the World’s most expensive player when he was acquired by Silvio Berlusconi’s AC Milan in the summer of 1992.
He was a regular for AC Milan and Italy and looked set for a starring role for Italy in the future.
This accident that nearly cost his life took him out of the game for many months and when he did come back he was naturally not fully fit and missed out on the 1994 World Cup adventure.
He did not regain his previous form and was confined to substitute appearances for AC Milan.
He had to leave AC Milan and joined his old Torino boss Emiliano Mondonico at Atalanta at the start of 1996/97 and actually somewhat regained his old form and even played in Arrigo Sacchi’s last match as Italy Manager vs. Bosnia in November 1996.

 
Photo From: Soccer International, November 1992

(Gianluigi Lentini with AC Milan 1992/93)

4- Event:
Uruguay goalkeeper Andrés Mazali breaking curfew at team’s hotel on the lead up to the 1930 World Cup held in Uruguay.


Consequence:
Mazali was dismissed from the team and sent home by Manager Alberto Suppici.
He missed out on the chance to win the inaugural World Cup at home.
Mazali who was a winner of the 1924 and 1928 Olympics, could have become a World Cup winner as well.

Photo From: IFFHS-Argentina (1902-1940)-Uruguay (1902-1940)
(Uruguay goalkeeper Andrés Mazali)

5- Event:
The Friendly match between English club Wolverhampton Wanderers and Hungary’s Honved Budapest on December 13, 1954, won 3 to 2 by Wolves.

Consequence:
The Wolves’ win vs. a team featuring Ferenc Puskas, Jozsef Boszik, Sando Koscis and Zoltan Czibor among others was greatly hyoed.
Hungary had demolished the English National team at Wembley just a year earlier.
The English press went overboard by declaring Wolves as the best team in Europe.
This led Former French International and now journalist Gabriel Hanot writing in L’Equipe to propose the idea of a European Cup where champions from each country would compete and thus the Champions Cup was born.


Photo From: L'Equipe, L'equipe de France de Football,La Belle Histoire
(Gabriel Hanot)

Magazine Awards, Part Three

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France Football’s Ballon d’Or:

Year 1985:
Player of the year: Michel Platini (Juventus and France)


Photo from: France Football, December 24, 1985 Issue 2072
(Michel Platini on the cover of France Football)



Onze’s Onze d’Or:

Year 1978:
Player of the year: Mario Kempes (Valencia and Argentina)

Photo from: Onze, December 1978
(Krankl, Kempes and Rensenbrink on the cover of Onze)



World Soccer’s Player of the Year:

Year 1984:
Player of the year: Michel Platini (Juventus and France)
Manager of the Year: Michel Hidalgo (France)
Team of the year: France


Photo from: World Soccer, December 1984
(Ian Rush, Zico and Michel Platini on the cover of World Soccer)


World Soccer Player of the Year

Short International Careers, Part Two

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1- Andrea Silenzi
Torino striker Andrea Silenzi earned his only cap for Italy in a Friendly vs. France on February 16, 1994 at Naples, that the Italians lost 0 to 1.
He was having his best personal season (1993/94) and scored 17 goals in the Serie A.
For this match he came on in the 65th minute to replace Pierluigi Casiraghi.
He was subsequently not called up again.

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 62, March 1994
(Andrea Silenzi with Torino, 1993/94)



2- Ernesto Valverde
Former Valencia and current Athletic Bilbao manager Ernesto Valverde earned his solitary cap for Spain in a UEFA European Championship Qualifying match vs. Iceland on October 10, 1990, won 2 to 1 by Spain.
He had just transferred that season from Barcelona to Athletic Bilbao.
He came on in the 71st minute to replace  ‘Carlos’ Antonio Munoz.

 
Photo From: Onze, February 1987

(Ernesto Valverde with Espanyol Barcelona, 1986/87)

3- Roland Wohlfarth
Despite being a prolific goalscorer with Bayern Munich, Roland Wohlfarth was often overlooked by Franz Beckenbuaer.
He did however earn two caps under Beckenbuaer three years apart.
His first cap was a Friendly vs. Spain on October 15, 1986 at Hannover that ended in a 2 to 2 tie.
He had to wait nearly three years for his next cap, another Friendly at Dublin vs. Republic of Ireland that ended in a one to one tie.


 
Photo From: Fussball Magazin, March April 1985

(Roland Wohlfarth and Paul Steiner, September 22, 1984, Bayern Munich 2-Koln 0)

4- Barry Venison
Former Liverpool defender Barry Venison’s international prospects seemed unlikely, when suddenly he was called up by new England Manager Terry Venables for a Friendly vs. USA at Wembley on September 7th, 1994 (2 to 0 win).
He had been a key player in the resurgence of Kevin Keegan’s Newcastle.
His second and final cap was a few months later in another Friendly at Wembley vs. Uruguay on March 29th, 1995 that ended in a scoreless tie.
 He always seemed like a short term option as he was past 30 when first selected and was not called up again.

Photo From: England, Player by Player, Author Graham Betts
(Barry Venison)



5- Claudemir Vitor
Defender Claudemir Vitor was part of Tele Santana’s Copa Libertadores winning squad of the early 1990s.
He earned his only two caps along this period.
His first cap was in a Friendly vs. Uruguay on November 26th, 1992 that Brazil lost 1 to 2.
His second was a few months later in another Friendly vs. Poland on March 17, 1993 ( 2 to 2 tie) when he replaced Luiz Carlos Winck in the 64th minute.
That summer (1993), Real Madrid approached Sao Paulo hoping to acquire Cafu but couldn’t so they set their sights on Vitor instead and signed him on loan.
His stay there was disappointing and he rejoined Sao Paulo months later, but never played for Brazil again.

The First Time ….., Part Two

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1-The First Time Brazil lost a World Cup Qualifier was on July 25, 1993 when they lost 0 to 2 to Bolivia by giving up the two goals in the last two minutes.
Many observers blamed LaPaz’s high altitude as the reason for Brazil’s sub-standard showing. Bolivia qualified along with Brazil to the World Cup.


Photo From : World Soccer, November 1993
(Carlos Borja, one of Bolivia’s key players in the 1993 World Cup Qualifiers, August 8, 1993, World Cup Qualifier, Bolivia 3-Uruguay 1)


2- The First Time that a substitution took place for the French National team was on May 10, 1908 in their match with Holland that they lost 1 to 4.
In the 55th minute, Victor Denis replaced his brother Julien Denis for an apparent injury.
Holland’s Captain Karel Heijting in an act of Fair Play did not object to the substitution.
Victor Denis revealed in 1949 that there was no injury. He really wanted to play so much that he pleaded to his brother at halftime to feign an injury so that he could come on.
Julien Denis was killed in action in 1915 fighting in World War I .

Photo From: Oranje Toen En Nu, Deel 1, 1905-1914, 2000-2001, Author: Matty Verkamman
(Holland and France squads, May 10, 1908, Holland 4-France 1)



3- The First Time a player scored in consecutive World Cup Finals matches was on June 17, 1962, when Vava scored Brazil’s third goal in their 3 to 1 win vs. Czechoslovakia. He had scored twice in the previous World Cup Final match vs. Sweden on June 29, 1958 in a (5 to 2 win).

Photo From: The World Cup 1930-1990, Author Jack Rollin
(Vava in front of England goalkeeper Colin McDonald, June 11, 1958, World Cup, Brazil 0-England 0)


Photo From: World Soccer, August 1963
(Vava scoring Brazil’s third goal past Czechoslovakia goalkeeper Viliam Schrojf, June 17, 1962, World Cup, Brazil 3-Czechoslovakia 1)



4- The First Time a Soviet player joined a club in the West German Bundesliga was on August 10, 1989, when Igor Belanov signed for Borussia Moenchengladbach.
At the time the Bundesliga II already had signed a soviet player, Alexander Borodjiuik.

Photo from: Onze, December 1988
(Frank Rijkaard and Igor Belanov, June 25, 1988,  UEFA European Championship, Holland 2-USSR 0)


5- The First Time the English national Team wore blue uniforms was in a Friendly with Germany on December 4, 1935 that they won 3 to 0.

Photo From: Chronik des deutschen fussballs, 2005
(Team Captains Edris Hapgood and Fritz Szepan with referee Otto Olssen of Sweden, December 4, 1935, England 3-Germany 0)

Soccer Memories-Part 19

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Marcelo Lippi, The Rebirth of Juventus

(Note: I would like to once again thank http://www.zani.co.uk/for uploading this article http://www.zani.co.uk/marcelo-lippi-the-rebirth-of-juventus )


When Giovanni Trapattoni departed as Juventus Manager (for the second time) in 1994, Juventus had not won the Scudetto since 1986, an eternity for a team of their standing.
They had won a couple of UEFA Cups during that spell, however, the Serie A title eluded them.
AC Milan had just won their third straight League Title and were effectively the best team in Europe.
During this year, 1994, the Fiat and Juventus owners (Gianni and Umberto Agnelli) decided for a new change in executive leadership more in tune for the modern era.
Long Term President Giampiero Boniperti departed (also for a second time) and a new triumvirate was formed consisting of former star Roberto Bettega, Antonio Giraudo and Luciano Moggi.

Photo From: France Football, May 2, 1995
(Roberto Bettega and the outgoing Boniperti, Marcelo Lippi and Didier Deschamps)

The new Management was very finance oriented and sought to limit costs as much as possible.
Many felt the decision to dispense of Trapattoni was a cost saving measure due to his salary.
In his place came a relative unknown Manager named Marcello Lippi. He had managed in successive seasons two teams to creditable showings with limited means, Atalanta (1992/93) and Napoli (1993/94).
No one could have foreseen that this appointment would transform Juventus’ fortunes.
In terms of player transfers, Brazilian defender Julio Cesar and German midfielder Andreas Moeller were jointly transferred to Germany’s ambitious Borussia Dortmund.
International midfielder Dino Baggio was transferred to rivals Parma. At first Baggio refused, but changed his mind after he saw the Juventus hierarchy had no confidence in him.

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 82, November 1995
(Gianluca Vialli, 1995/96)

Juventus nearly lost Alessandro Del Piero to Parma in the process, until Baggio’s transfer nullified the agreement.
Long serving Roberto Galia was also transferred out after six seasons.
Lippi brought with him from Napoli, former International defender Ciro Ferrara, who had been overlooked by the new National Team Regime of Arrigo Sacchi.
Croatia’s Robert Jarni and another former International Luca Fusi joined from cross-town rivals Torino, while future International Alessio Tacchinardi joined from relegated Atalanta.
Portuguese midfielder Paulo Sousa was signed from Sporting Lisbon and French International midfielder Didier Deschamps arrived from Olympique Marseille.
Most importantly, Lippi brought with him a physical trainer named Giampiero Ventrone whose training regimen would be credited for strengthening the squad and playing a key role in winning the League title.
Juventus started the 1994/95 season at a slow pace, they were picking up wins and points but were far from looking like potential champions.

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 75, April 1995
(Antonio Conte and Alessandro Del Piero, 1994/95)

Captain Roberto Baggio was injured in the early parts of the season and would go on to miss half of the league campaign.
This gave an opportunity for the young Alessandro Del Piero to show his worth and he would turn out to be the revelation of the season and go on to be one of Juventus’ longest serving players.
He seized his opportunity much like fellow striker Fabrizio Ravanelli (‘La Penna Bianca’) who had gained valuable playing time the previous season, due to the long-term injury of Gianluca Vialli.
Both Del Piero and Ravanelli became catalysts in Juventus’ glorious season.
Gianluca Vialli (captain in the absence of injured Baggio) was also finally fit after two injury stained seasons.
He had his best season at Juventus and finished as its top goalscorer.
Perhaps the match that underlined Juventus’ credentials and made themselves believe that they could win the title was the home match vs. Fiorentina on December 4, 1994.
Juventus fell behind 0-2 in the first half and it looked like they were heading for a defeat.
However, Juventus came back galvanized in the second half and scored three unanswered goals through the back-in-form Gianluca Vialli (two goals) and a beautiful chip from Alessandro Del Piero.

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 76, May 1995
(Fabrizio Ravanelli during the April 1995 UEFA Cup Semi-Finals series vs. Borussia Dortmund)

The following week they defeated title challengers Lazio away by a score of 4 to 3 and overtook the League leading position.
By now it was apparent that this Juventus could score many goals, but that the defense may not be as tight.
This was a Juventus that played to win even in away matches, and not try to tie, as would have been the customary tactic of many coaches.
By the turn of the year (1995), the top of the table clash took place at Parma, with Juventus as League leaders and Parma hot on their heels.
Despite falling behind in the second half, Juventus did not give up and kept pressing and scored three times against their nearest challengers away from home.
By spring time Juventus looked odds on favorites to triumph in the League, they were winning consistently, though they would lose the occasional match.
This was the first season that the Italian League was on a three points for a win system and Juventus benefited greatly form this. The team’s attacking and winning mentality was tailor made for this system.

Photo From: World Soccer, August 1995
(Roberto Baggio, April 30, 1995, Fiorentina 1-Juventus 4)

The importance of Physical trainer Giampiero Ventrone was also becoming more obvious as the players seemed fresh and invincible.
A number of players claimed that they were so fresh at the end of a match that at times they could play another match right after it.
Gianluca Vialli had said that in the beginning his training was so grueling that he would vomit, but he could see the dividends as they were so fit and less tired in the key late stages of matches.
By springtime, goalkeeper Angelo Peruzzi had been elevated as Italy’s number one goalkeeper and Fabrizio Ravanelli and Alessandro Del Piero had earned their first caps.
By the end of the season, Ciro Ferrara would also be back in the International fold, however, despite public clamor Gianluca Vialli was still overlooked by Arrigo Sacchi.
Juventus had also advanced in the Coppa Italia and UEFA Cup competitions and reached the Final of both competitions.
In May, Juventus were defeated in the Finals of the UEFA Cup to their Italian rivals Parma, but defeated the same team a few days later (4 to 0) in the League to claim their first Scudetto in 9 years.

Photo From: World Soccer, July 1995
(Didier Deschmaps)

Lippi’s attack oriented squad had managed to win 23 out of their 34 League matches that season; eleven of those wins were away from home.
While not very solid defensively, their offensive punch more than made up for it.
They also defeated Parma in the Finals of Coppa Italia to claim the double.

World Soccer, September 1995
(Marcelo Lippi after Juventus clinched the double, June 11, 1995, Coppa Italia, Parma 0-Juventus 2)

At the conclusion of the season, Roberto Baggio found himself the victim of the austerity measures of this new business oriented Juventus.
He would not accept a reduction in his salary; therefore he transferred out and joined AC Milan.
His loss was not considered critical as Del Piero was seen as the future of Juventus.
Similarly, German defender Jurgen Kohler was transferred to Borussia Dortmund after four solid seasons.
Juventus raided Sampdoria and acquired a trio of veteran defender Pietro Vierchowod, International winger Attilio Lombardo and Yugoslav midfielder Vladimir Jugovic.
From Torino came defender Gianluca Pessotto and Michele Padovano arrived from Reggiana as an attacking option.
Future Argentina Captain Juan Pablo Sorin also joined from Argentinos Juniors, though his stay was short lived and departed after a few months.
For the 1995/96 season, Juventus concentrated more in the Champions League and were off the pace in the League and finished runners-up to AC Milan.
However, they did manage to win the coveted Champions League by defeating defending Champions Ajax Amsterdam in a penalty kick shoot-out.
This win ended a cycle for Juventus, as the Management sought to rejuvenate the team before stagnation had set in place.
Despite the success of this squad, the managing triumvirate were convinced that in the past Juventus had not replaced players in time and the squad had suffered and in the process lost time as well as financial benefits from the transfer of these players at higher prices.
With the Bosman Ruling now in effect, many players could leave to other Leagues for higher fees.
Captain Gianluca Vialli and Fabrizio Ravanelli departed to the English Premier League (Chelsea and Middlesbrough respectively).
Veterans Pietro Vierchowod, Massimo Carrera and Giancarlo Marocchi were all transferred out to other Italian clubs.
After a somewhat disappointing second season, Portuguese midfielder Paulo Sousa was transferred to Borussia Dortmund (a favorite destination of former Serie A and specially Juventus players).
Young up and coming stars were acquired to present a much younger and competitive Juventus.
From Atalanta arrived young striker Christian Vieri and rugged Uruguayan defender Paolo Montero.
Croatian forward Alen Boksic arrived from Lazio and defender Mark Iuliano arrived from Salernitana.
Italian striker Nicola Amoruso joined from Padova.
Most importantly young French playmaker Zinedine Zidane arrived from Bordeaux after making all of Italy take notice following his starring role in the elimination of AC Milan from the UEFA Cup in March of 1996.
After a slow start much like Platini a decade before him, Zidane adapted to the Serie A and made a significant contribution to Juventus’ winning season.

Photo From: World Soccer, February 1999
(Juventus’ Zinedine Zidane with the 1998 Ballon d’Or)

This younger squad regained the Scudetto title for the 1996/97 season and also lifted the UEFA Super Cup (vs. Paris St Germain) and the Intercontinental Cup (vs. River Plate).
The highlight of the season was perhaps the demolition of AC Milan by a score of 6 to 1 in April away from home. In a way this match heralded the end of the great AC Milan generation and a power shift to Juventus.
By now Christian Vieri had become a full International and was the toast of Italy and a much sought after player.
Juventus did manage to reach the Champions League Final once again, however, they lost to a Borussia Dortmund side containing many former Juventus players by a score of 3 to 1.
In the summer of 1997, once again the Management prioritized Fiscal concerns by selling the very in-demand striker Christian Vieri to Atletico Madrid for a large fee.
Similarly, Vladimir Jugovic and Alen Boksic were transferred to Lazio and Attilio Lombardo joined Crystal Palace and defender Sergio Porrini joined Rangers Glasgow.
Atalanta’s top goalscorer Fillipo Inzaghi arrived to replace Vieri and AS Roma’s Uruguayan striker Daniel Fonseca was added as an attacking cover option.
Italians Alessandro Birindelli and Fabio Pecchia joined from Empoli and Napoli respectively.
Midway through the season, AC Milan’s out of favor Dutch midfielder Edgar Davids joined Juventus to great effect.

Photo From: World Soccer, March 1998
(Edgar Davids)

That season, 1997/98, Brazilian striker Ronaldo had joined Internazionale Milano amid much fanfare and Inter seemed to be heading to a title triumph in the early going, however, by the second half of the season Juventus overtook them and won the Serie A title for the third time in four seasons under Lippi.
Alessandro Del Piero had an excellent season and had one of his most prolific scoring seasons and formed a successful striking partnership with Fillipo Inzaghi.

Photo From: World Soccer, June 1998
(Fillipo Inzaghi)

The Champions League was a repeat of the previous season, where Juventus reached the Final only to lose this time to Real Madrid.
This defeat seemed to signal the turning point in Lippi’s reign.
The following season (1998/99) started with AS Roma Manager Zdenek Zeman’s claim that Juventus had been using banned substances to strengthen their players.
He remarked the muscular development of Gianluca Vialli and Del Piero in the previous seasons as examples.
This prompted the State Prosecutor to investigate and disrupt Juventus’ preparations as players were summoned for questioning.
The squad was mainly unchanged; defender Moreno Torricelli had joined Fiorentina.
The arrivals included little known and uncapped French midfielder Jocelyn Blanchard from Metz, Yugoslav defender Zoran Mirkovic from Atalanta, Croatian defender Igor Tudor from Hajduk Split and Italian Simone Perrotta from Reggina, none of whom would make much of an impression.
After a solid start to the season, Alessandro Del Piero was lost to a serious injury, vs. Sampdoria on November 1st that sidelined him for the entire season.
It was after this point that Juventus’ season seemed to go downward.
Juventus suffered four losses in November and December (vs. AS Roma, Bologna, Lazio and Fiorentina) that essentially ruled them out of the title race.
Juventus also just barely qualified from their Champions League group after five consecutive ties, had left them needing to win their very last match to go through.
Despite the midseason arrivals of Argentinean Striker Juan Esnaider and young French Striker Thierry Henry, the results did not improve.
The breaking point for Lippi was Juventus’ heavy home loss vs. Parma by a score of 2 to 4 on February 7, 1999.
He resigned following this match after one loss too many.
Carlo Ancelotti, who was to take over at the end of the season, was appointed with immediate effect and somewhat salvaged Juventus’ season.
Lippi managed Internazionale Milano for the following season (1999/2000) and only the First match of the season after (2000/2001), after a public outburst against his own squad forced President Massimo Moratti to dismiss him.
During this time, Juventus under Ancelotti earned two runners-up finishes.
This was not satisfactory to the Juventus Management, so in the summer of 2001, Lippi returned to the fold to Manage Juventus once again.
He won two new Scudettos in 2002 and 2003 and once again losing in the Champions League Final vs. AC Milan in 2003.
He left Juventus in 2004, disappointed in not winning the Champions League.
He was appointed as Italy National Team Manager and lead Italy to World Cup triumph in 2006.
Upon taking over he had declared his intent to win the World Cup.
Marcello Lippi is responsible for placing Juventus in their accustomed position at the top of the Serie A after many years of disappointment, where Juventus was playing second fiddle to the Milanese clubs and even Diego Maradona’s Napoli.
He is only one of two Managers (Vicente del Bosque being the other) of having won the Champions League and the World Cup. 

Old Match Photographs-Part 20i

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Photo From:  Voetbal International, October 26, 1985
(Ajax goalkeeper Stanley Menzo, 1985/86)

Photo From:  Voetbal International, Nov 29-dec 4, 1982
(Real Madrid’s Dutchman Johnny Metgod in a match vs. Atletico Madrid, 1982/83)


Photo From: Voetbal International, December 23, 1989
(PSV Eindhoven’s Danish striker Fleming Povlsen, on the right, October 18, 1989, Champions Cup, Steaua Bucharest 1-PSV Eindhoven 0)


Photo From: Voetbal International, December 15-27, 1980
(Liverpool’s Graeme Souness and Ipswich Town’s Paul Mariner, Frans  Thijssen and Arnold Muhren)

Photo From: Voetbal International, August 25-30, 1980
(PSV Eindhoven’s Adi Koster and Anderlecht’s Ludo Coeck)

Photo From:  Voetbal International, August 20, 1983
(An Adidas advertisement with a young Ruud Gullit)


Old Team Photographs-Part 20a

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Photo From: Onze-Mondial, August 1992
(Sweden squad, June 21, 1992, European Championship, Sweden 2-Germany 3, Top, left to right: Joakim Nilsson, Klas Ingesson, Roger Ljung, Joachim Björklund, Jan Eriksson, Thomas Ravelli, Bottom, left to right: Tomas Brolin, Roland Nilsson, Kennet Andersson, Martin Dahlin, Jonas Thern)
Photo From: Onze-Mondial, November 1992
(Argentina squad, October 20, 1992, Confederations Cup, Saudi Arabia 1-Argentina 3, Top, left to right: Fabián Armando Basualdo, Ricardo Daniel Altamirano, Sergio Fabian Vázquez, Sergio Javier Goycochea, Oscar Alfredo Ruggeri, Fernando Carlos Redondo, Bottom, left to right: Claudio Paul Caniggia, Diego Pablo Simeone, Gabriel Omar Batistuta, Leonardo Adrián Rodríguez, José Luis Villareal)

Photo from: Onze, Hors Serie 26, 1986
(Brazil squad, June 23, 1985, World Cup Qualifier, Brazil 1-Paraguay 1, Top, left to right: José ‘Leandro’ de Souza Ferreira, Wálter ‘Casagrande’ Júnior, José ‘OscarBernardi, Carlos’ Roberto Gallo, Edino Nazareth FilhoEdinho’, Leovegildo Lins GamaJúnior’, Bottom, left to right:Renato Portaluppi  ‘Renato Gaúcho’  , SócratesBrasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira, Antonio Carlos ‘Toninho Cerezo’, Artur Antunes CoimbraZico’, ‘ÉderAleixo de Assis)

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Europe 1, Special Coupe du Monde, Italie 1990
(USSR squad, June 18, 1988, European Championship, USSR 3-England 1, Top, left to right: Rinat Fayzrahmanovich Dassayev, Vagiz Nazirovich Khidiatullin, Oleg Vladimirovich Kuznetsov, Sergei Yevgenyevich Aleinikov, Alexei Aleksandrovich Mikhailichenko, Vladimir Vassilievich Bessonov, Bottom, left to right: Alexander Anatolyevich Zavarov, Vasili Karlovich Rats, Igor Ivanovich Belanov, Oleg Valeriyevich Protasov, Gennadi Vladimirovich Litovchenko)



Photo from:  IFFHS-Europameisterschaften 1958-1984, No 2
(Yugoslavia squad, June 13, 1984, European Championship, Belgium 2-Yugoslavia 0, Top, left to right: Velimir Zajec, Zoran Simovic, Srecko Katanec, Nenad Stojkovic, Faruk Hadzibegic, Ivan Gudelj, Bottom, left to right: Milos Sestic, Sulejman Halilovic, Safet Susic, Mehmed Bazdarevic, Zlatko Vujovic)



Photo From: World Soccer, April 1977
(Spain squad, February 9, 1977, Republic of Ireland 0-Spain 1, Top, left to right : Miguel AngelGonzález Suárez, Jesus Martinez Sanchez ‘Pirri’, IñakiCortabarriaArrabategui , José LuisCapon , José Antonio ‘Camacho’Alfaro, Miguel ‘Migueli’ Bernardo Bianqueti, Bottom, left to right : Jesus Maria ‘Satrustegui’ AzpirozAngel Maria Villar Llona, Enrique ‘Quini’ Castro Gonzalez, Juan Manuel ‘Asensi’Ripoll, José Francisco ‘Chechu Rojo’)


Photo From: Onze, Hors Serie 7, 1978
(Italy squad, October 15, 1977, World Cup Qualifier, Italy 6-Finland 1, Top, left to right: Francesco Graziani, Dino Zoff, Roberto Mozzini, Roberto Bettega, Claudio Gentile, Romeo Benetti, Bottom, left to right: Giancarlo Antognoni, Franco Causio, Giacinto Facchetti, Renato Zaccarelli, Marco Tardelli)

Photo From: Landsholdet-I medgang og modgang, Author: Palle "Banks" Jorgensen
(Denmark squad, May 24, 1967, European Championship Qualifier, Denmark 0-Hungary 2, Top, left to right: Bent Schmidt Hansen, René Møller, Jens Jørgen Hansen, Erik Sandvad, Tom Søndergaard, Ulrik le Fevre, Bottom, left to right: Johnny Hansen, John Worbye, Leif Nielsen, Kresten Bjerre, Finn Laudrup)



Photo From:  Landslaget, Det Norske Fotballandslagets Historie, authors Egil Olsen, Arne Scheie,Per Jorsett, Otto Ulseth, 1997
(Norway squad, September 3, 1967, European Championship Qualifier, Norway 3-Sweden 1, Top, left to right: Kjell Kaspersen, Roar Johansen, Tore Børrehaug, Nils Arne Eggen, Finn Thorsen, Trygve Bornø, Bottom, left to right: Sven Otto Birkeland, Harald Sunde, Odd Iversen, Olav Nilsen, Harald Berg)

Photo From: England, The Complete Post-War Record, Author Mike Payne
(England squad, October 21, 1953, FA 90th anniversary, England 4-Europe XI 4, Top, left to right: James Mullen, Alfred Ernest Ramsey, Derek Gilbert Ufton, Gilbert Harold Merrick, James William Dickinson, William Eckersley, Bottom, left to right: Stanley Matthews, Stanley Harding Mortensen, William Ambrose Wright, Nathaniel ‘Nat’ Lofthouse, Albert Quixall)

Photo From: Österreichs Fußball Länderspiele Chronik 1902 – 1993, Author: Anton Egger
(Austria squad, July 3, 1954, World Cup, Austria 3-Uruguay 1, Top, left to right: Ernst Ockwirk, Kurt Schmied, Robert Dienst, Robert Körner, Leopold Barschandt, Theodor Wagner, Karl Koller, Erich Probst, Walter Kollmann, Ernst Stojaspal, Gerhard Hanappi)

(Argentina squad during the 1946 Copa America, Top, left to right: Guillermo Stábile (Manager), Vicente De la Mata, Norberto Doroteo Mendez, Adolfo Alfredo Pedernera, Angel Amadeo Labruna, Felix Loustau, Bottom, left to right: Jose Salomon, Juan Carlos Sobrero, Juan Carlos Fonda, Leon Strembel, Claudio Vacca, Natalio Agustín Pescia)


Photo From: Forever England, A History of the National Side, Authors Mark Shaoul, Tony Williamson
(England squad, May 6, 1936, Austria 2-England 1, Left to right: Edward Sagar, Harold Henry Frederick Hobbis, Richard Spence, Clifford Sydney Bastin, George Charles Male, John William Barker, Wilfred Copping, George Henry Camsell, Edwin Raymond Bowden, William John Crayston, Edris Albert Hapgood)



Photo from: Bialo Czerwoni 1921-2001, Author Andrzej Gowarzewski
(Poland squad, September 25, 1938, Poland 4-Yugoslavia 4)

Photo From: IFFHS-Norge  (1908-1940), Suomi (1911-1940)-Essti (1920-1940)
(Finland squad, May 29, 1921, Sweden 0-Finland 3)

Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la Seleccion Argentina
(Argentina squad, July 9, 1912, Argentina 0-Swindon Town (England) 1 )


Photo From: Het Nederlands Elftal, De Histoire van Oranje, 1905-1989
(Holland squad, May 13, 1906, Holland 2-Belgium 3)



Debate Topic, Part Four

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Topic
Awards season is coming up and it made me think of previous France Football’s Ballon d’Or Winners.
Some winners were easy to predict and undisputed, while naturally over the years there were some winners that were controversial and/or deemed unworthy.
As an example Hristo Stoichkov was groomed to be the 1992 winner only to lose to Marco van Basten after the Dutchman scored 4 goals vs. IFK Gothenburg in the Champions League just weeks before the award.
The Liberian George Weah in 1995 is another example, while no one questioned his talent, most questioned his election after only 7 League goals for PSG. Again, most observed that his last few months in the Serie A with AC Milan tipped the balance.

Can  You think of other cases? Maybe cases that you personally disagreed with?



Photo From: France Football, May 3, 1983
(Juventus’  Paolo Rossi, winner in 1982)

Photo From: European Football Yearbook 1988
(AC Milan’s Ruud Gullit, winner in 1987)

Old Team Photographs-Part 20b

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Photo From: Onze, Issue 41, May 1979
(Barcelona squad , April 11, 1979, Cup Winners Cup, Barcelona 1-Beveren 0, Top, left to right: Pedro Artola, Josep Albaladejo, Johann Neeskens, Rafael Zuviria, Antonio Olmo, ‘Migueli’ Bernardo, Bottom, left to right: Carlos Rexach, Heredia, Hans Krankl, Manuel Asensi, Francisco Martinez)
Photo From:  Onze, Issue 17, May 1977
(Athletic Bilbao squad 1976/77)

Photo From:  Onze, Issue 2, February 1976
(Borussia Moenchengladbach squad, 1975/76, left to right: Alan Simonsen, Uli Stilieke, Hans-Jurgen Wittkamp, Ulrich Surau, Dietmar Danner, Lorenz-Gunter Kostner, Herbert Wimmer, Henning Jensen, Juup Heynckes, Wolfgang Kleff, Berti Vogts)

Photo From:  Mondial, new series, issue 62, May 1985
(Juventus squad from 1930s)


Photo From: Mondial, new series, issue 30, August 1982
(Barcelona squad, 1982/83, Top, left to right: Pedro Artola, Antonio Olmo, Juan Jose Estella, Jose Alexanco, Josep Lluis Nunez (President), Udo Latteck (Manager), Suini, Urbano Ortega, Manolo, Middle, left to right: Anguera (coach), Romero (physical trainer), Javier Urruticoecha, Migueli Bernardo, Gerardo Miranda, Jose Moratalla, Amador, Diego Mradona, Moran, Bern Schuster, Langa (masseur), Bottom, left to right: Mur (masseur), Esteban Vigo, Francisco Carrasco, Allan Simonsen, Julio Alberto, Jose Sanchez, Marcos Alonso, Pichi Alonso, Pericho Alonso, Victor Munoz)

Photo From: Mondial, old series, issue 23, October 1978
(World XI squad, August 30, 1978, Unicef Match, New York Cosmos 2-World XI 2, left to right: Leonardo Cuellar (masked), Iraj Danaiefar, Andranik Eskandarian (masked), Cesar Cueto, Kazimierz Deyna, Temime Lahzami, Emerson Leao, Jorge Olguin, Oscar, Wim Rijsbergen, Alberto tarantini, Zbigniew Boniek, Gallego, Roberto Rivellino, Grzegorz Lato, Teofilo Cubillas, Johnny Rep (masked))


Photo From: Seleccao Brasileira -90 Anos 1914-2004, Authors Antonio Carlos Napoleao, Roberto Assaf
(Argentinean Club CS Barracas that played the Brazil National Team in 1917 to a one to one tie)



Photo From: L'Equipe, L'equipe de France de Football,La Belle Histoire
(France squad, November 1, 1906, France 0-England (Amateur) 15, left to right:  Emile Sartorius, Charles Wilkes, Marius Royet, Zacharie Baton (behind Royet masked), Fernand Canelle, Henri Moigneu, André Francois, Pierre Allemane, Gaston Cypres, Louis Schubart, J. Verbrugge)

Photo From: La Nazionale Italiana, Supplement 3, 1980-82
(The cover of La Gazzetta with 1982 Italy World Cup Champions)


Photo From:  Kicker, 40 Jahre Bundesliga, 2003
(TSV Munich 1860 squad, Bundesliga Champions 1965/ 1966)

Photo From: Guerin Sportivo, October 21-27, 1992
(Spain squad, September 9, 1992, Spain 1-England 0, Top, left to right: Andoni ‘Zubizarreta’ Urreta, José Miguel ‘Michel’ Martín del Campo, Juan Manuel ‘Juan Lopez‘ Martinez, ‘Juan Vizcaino’ Morcillo, Antonio ‘Toni  Muñoz’ Gomez, Gregorio ‘Fonseca’ Recio, Bottom, left to right: Guillermo ‘Amor’ Martinez, Albert ‘Ferrer’ Llopis, Jose Maria ‘Bakero’ Escudero, Roberto ‘Solozabal’ Villanueva,  Rafael Martin Vazquez)

 
Photo From: Guerin Sportivo, May 18-24, 1988
(Republic of Ireland squad, April 27, 1988, Republic of Ireland 2-Yugoslavia 0, Top, left to right: Patrick ‘Paddy’ Bonner, Kevin Bernard Moran, Michael Joseph  ‘Mick’ McCarthy, Paul McGrath, Francis Anthony ‘Frank’ Stapleton, Mark John Kelly, Bottom, left to right: John Joseph Sheridan, David Thomas Kelly, Raymond James Houghton, Christopher Barry Morris, Christopher William Gerard Hughton)


Photo From: Guerin Sportivo, June 17-23, 1987
(Brazil squad, May 28, 1987, Finland 2-Brazil 3, Top, left to right: William Douglas Humia Menezes, ‘Josimar’Higinio Pereira, ‘Carlos’ Roberto Gallo, Nelson Luis KerchnerNelsinho’, Ricardo Roberto Barreto da Rocha,    ’Geraldão’Dutra Pereira, Bottom, left to right: Luís Antônio Corrêa da Costa‘Müller’ , ‘Raí’Souza Vieira de Oliveira, Francisco Ernandi Lima da Silva ’Mirandinha’  , Carlos EduardoEdu Marangon’, ’Valdo’ Cândido Filho)

Photo From: Guerin Sportivo, June 5-11, 1991
(Kaiserslautern squad, West German Champions, 1950/51, Top, left to right: Fritz Walter, Heinz Jergens, Werner Bassler, Horst Eckel, Helmut Rasch, Ernst Liebrich, Ottmar Walter, Werner Liebrich, Bottom, left to right: Bernhard Fuchs, Karl Adam, Werner Kohlmeyer, Karl Wanger)


Photo From: Fussball Magazin, January February 1984
(Denmark squad, October 26, 1983, European Championship Qualifier, Hungary 1-Denmark 0, Top, left to right: Morten Olsen, Ole Kjær, Michael Laudrup, Soren Busk, Soren Lerby, Bottom, left to right: Jens Jorn Bertelesen, John Lauridsen, Jesper Olsen, Klaus Berggreen, Ivan Nielsen, Allan Simonsen)


Photo From:  Fussball Magazin, December 1989
(West Germany squad , November 15, 1989, World Cup Qualifier, West Germany 2-Wales 1, left to right: Jürgen Klinsmann, Andreas Möller, Hans Dorfner, Thomas Häßler, Andreas Brehme, Stefan Reuter, Klaus Augenthaler, Guido Buchwald, Rudolf 'Rudi' Völler, Bodo Illgner, Pierre Littbarski)


Photo From: European Football Yearbook 1988
(Everton squad 1987/88)


Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1921-30
(El Grafico cover with 1927 Copa America Champions, Top, Segunda Luna, Manuel Seoane, Alfredo Carricaberry, Manuel Ferreira, Middle, Humberto Recanatini, Octavio Diaz, Ludovico Bidoglio, Bottom, Juan Evaristo, Luisito Monti, Juan Maglio, Adolfo Zumelzu)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, April 2000
(AC Milan squad 1955/56)

Photo From: El Grafico, No. 3667, 1990
(Argentina squad, January 10, 1990, AS Monaco (France) 2-Argentina 0, Top, left to right: Sergio Daniel Batista, Ricardo Omar Giusti, Julio Cesar Falcioni,  Pedro Damian Monzón, Jose Luis Brown, Nestor Ariel Fabbri, Bottom, left to right: Jorge Alberto Francisco Valdano, Nestor Raul Gorosito, José Horacio Basualdo, Gabriel Humberto Calderón, Julio Jorge Olarticoechea)


Debate Topic, Part Five

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Topic
Matthew Le Tissier was probably one of the most talented players of his generation. However, England National Team Managers seldom picked him for various reasons.
Given his talents, do you think they should have actually built the team around his talents and not ignore him.


Photo From:  Don Balon, January 23-29, 1995
(Southampton’s Matthew Le Tissier)

February 19, 1992-England 2-France 0

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February 19, 1992
England 2-France 0
Friendly
Venue: London - The Empire Stadium Wembley
Attendance:58,723
Referee: Aron Schmidhuber (Germany)
Goalscorers: (England): Alan Shearer 43, Gary Lineker 73
                    (France): None

Lineups:
England:
1- Christopher Charles Eric Woods  (Sheffield Wednesday Football Club) [28 / 0]
2-Robert Marc Jones (Liverpool
Football Club) [1 / 0]
3- Stuart Pearce
(Nottingham Forest Football Club) [44 / 2]
4- Martin Raymond Keown (Everton
Football Club-Liverpool)  [1 / 0]
5- Desmond Sinclair Walker
(Nottingham Forest Football Club) [39 / 0]
6- Mark Wright (Liverpool
Football Club) [41 / 1]
7- Neil John Webb (Manchester United
Football Club) [21 / 3]
8- Geoffroy Robert Thomas (Crystal  Palace
Football Club-London)  [9 / 0]
9- Nigel Howard Clough (Nottingham Forest
Football Club) [5 / 0]
10-Alan Shearer (Southampton
Football Club) [1 / 1]
11- David Eric Hirst  (Sheffield Wednesday
Football Club) [3 / 1](12-Gary Winston Lineker  (Tottenham Hotspur Football Club-London)  [72 / 47] 46th)

Coach: Graham Taylor

Team Captain: Stuart Pearce
Official Kit Supplier/Designer: Umbro
Uniform Colors: White Shirts, Navy Blue Shorts, White Socks


France:
1-Gilles Rousset (Olympique Lyonnais) [2 / 0]
3-Jocelyn Angloma (Olympique de Marseille) [7 / 0]
4-Basile Boli (Olympique de Marseille) [32 / 1]
5-Laurent Blanc (Societa Sportiva Calcio Napoli / Italy) [20 / 4]
2-Manuel Amoros (Olympique de Marseille) [77 / 1]
6-Bernard Casoni (Olympique de Marseille) [26 / 0]
7-Didier Deschamps (Olympique de Marseille) [18 / 3]
8-Luis Fernandez(Association Sportive de Cannes Football) [54 / 6] (13-Jean-Philippe Durand (Olympique de Marseille) [21 / 0] 71st)
10-Christian Perez (Paris Saint-Germain Football Club) [16 / 2](15-Amara Simba (Paris Saint-Germain Football Club) [3 / 2] 71st)
9-Jean-Pierre Papin (Olympique de Marseille) [33 / 17]
11-Eric Cantona (Leeds United Association Football Club / England) [21 / 12]

Coach: Michel Platini
Booked: Basile Boli 47th, Bernard Casoni 75th

Other Subs:
Pascal Olmeta (Olympique de Marseille)
Frank Silvestre (Football Club de Sochaux-Montbéliard)
Christophe Cocard (Association de la Jeunesse Auxerroise)

Team Captain: Manuel Amoros
Official Kit Supplier/Designer: Adidas
Uniform Colors: Blue Shirts, White Shorts , Red Socks


Photo From: Soccer International, May 1992
(France squad, Top, left to right: Gilles Rousset, Manuel Amoros, Bernard Casoni, Jocelyn Angloma, Basile Boli, Luis Fernandez, Bottom, left to right: Christian Perez, Didier Deschamps, Jean-Pierre Papin, Laurent Blanc, Eric Cantona)


Notes:

-Match number 677 for England and number 498 for France

-This was the 21st meeting between the nations. This does not include France’s matches vs. England (Amateurs) that France consider as Official.

-The previous match between the nations, as well as the previous match on French soil, was a Friendly at Paris’ Parc des Princes Stadium on February 29, 1984 that France won 2 to 0. France’s Manager Michel Platini scored both goals.
French players: Manuel Amoros, Luis Fernandez and Michel Platiniwere present that day (on the field and/or the substitutes bench).

-The previous match between the nations, in the same stadium, was a friendly on March 12, 1969 that England won 5 to 0.

- England’s previous win, as well as the previous match on neutral soil, was a World Cup Finals match in Bilbao, Spain, on June 16, 1982, that England won 3 to 1.
France’s Michel Platini was present that day (on the field and/or the substitutes bench).

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, March 1992
(Laurent Blanc, Manuel Amoros is in the background)

-The next match between the nations as well as the next macth on neutral venue, would be on ly a few months later during the UEFA European Championship Finals at Malmö, Sweden on June 14, 1992 that ended in a scoreless tie.
England players: Woods, Pearce, Keown, Walker, Shearer, Lineker, Clough and Webb and France Players: Boli, Blanc, Casoni, Amoros, Deschamps, Angloma, Fernandez, Perez, Durand, Cantona, Papin, Rousset, Silvestre, and Cocard were present that day (on the field and/or the substitutes bench).
Luis Fernandez was booked in that match.

Photo From: World Soccer, June 1992
(Jean-Pierre Papin and Des Walker)

-The next match between the nations on French soil, as well as England’s next victory,  would be during the  Tournoi de France at Montpellier on June 7, 1997,  that England won 1 to 0.
England players: Shearer, Pearce and Keown and France Players: Blanc and  Deschamps were present that day (on the field and/or the substitutes bench).
Alan Shearer scored England’s goal.

-The next match between the nations in the same stadium, as well as France’s next victory, would be a friendly on February 10, 1999 that France won 2 to 0.
England players: Keown and Shearer and France Players: Blanc and  Deschamps were present that day (on the field and/or the substitutes bench).

-This Friendly was specially significant since both teams were due to play one another in the upcoming UEFA European Championships.

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, March 1992
(Eric Cantona between Martin Keown and Neil Webb)

-This was Alan Shearer’s debut for the English National team and he also scored his first goal.
Martin Keown and Rob Jones also made their National team debuts.
Rob Jones was a Fourth Division player just five months earlier, he was discovered by Liverpool playing for Crewe Alexandra.

-France were missing starting goalkeeper Bruno Martini. Gilles Rousset started in his place. The day before the match Franck Sauzee also withdrew due to injury.
Winger Pascal Vahirua was also unavailable.

-The day before the match at London’s Loftus Road, the respective ‘B’ squads played and England won 3 to 0 from goals by Paul Merson , an own goal by France’s Franck Dumas and Paul Stewart.
France’s unused substitutes Pascal Olmeta,  Franck Silvestre and Christophe Cocard played in that match.

- On July 2, 1992, Michel Platini resigned as national team manager.
He was appointed to the organizing committee for the 1998 World Cup to be held in France.
Among reasons cited for his leaving was the fact that the clubs were not helpful in preparations by still insisting upon a 20 team first division as opposed to a smaller number.

-This loss ended France’s unbeaten streak at 19 matches. The unbeaten run stretched back to April 1989 with the World Cup Qualifying match vs. Yugoslavia.
Their last loss was a World Cup Qualifier vs. Scotland on March 8, 1989 (0 to 2 loss).

-France did not win a single match during this calendar year until October 14, 1992, when they defeated Austria (2 to 0) ina World Cup Qualfier.

-England were misisng David Platt, David Batty, John Barnes and Tony Adams.
Paul Gascoigne was out the entire season recovering from his serious injury suffered during the 1991 FA Cup Final.

-Stuart Pearce captained England as Gary Lineker did not start.

-Just before the half-time, Nigel Clough took a corner from the right side that was headed across by Mark Wright to an unmarked Alan Shearer, who spun around, and scored England’s first goal.

-At halftime, Gary Lineker replaced David Hirst.

-Basile Boli was booked after a dangerous tackle on Lineker.

-The match would be remembered for England midfielder Geoff Thomas’ miss. He received a pass from Lineker with a clear path to goal, he tried to chip the goalkeeper, however , he miscued his shot and the ball went completely wide.
This was his ninth and final cap.

Photo From: Goal, December 1995
(Geoff Thomas and his miss)


 -France dominated the early going and England scored their first goal against the general run of the play.
England Manager admitted Graham Taylor that he was affraid for the first 44 minutes.
Taylor praised France’s Christian Perez.

-England’s second goal was scored after across from the right by Shearer was volleyed by Clough. Rousset parried the shot, but Lineker was there to head in the rebound, first to the bar and then into the goal.

Photo From: World Soccer, August 1992
(Gary Lineker heading England’s second goal)


-Eric Cantona was selected despite having only played two matches for his new club Leeds United.
In December 1991, he had ‘retired’ following his suspension that was increased after he insulted the disciplinary panel. He had a trial with Sheffield Wednesday before joining Leeds United.
He won the English League Title at the end of that season.
He joined Manchester United the following season.

-France played in a 5-3-2 formation.

Photo From: Soccer International, May 1992
(Rob Jones and Luis Fernandez)


-France’s Manuel Amoros became Franc’s National team’s appearance record holder by playing in his 77th match. He broke Maxime Bossis’ record of 76 matches. This record would stand until 1999, when Deschamps would become the record holder.

-Michel Platini declared that this defeat was good for his players on a psychological level, as it brought them down to earth after a long unbeaten run and made them realize there is work to be done.
In addition his players learned that the English are not superior to them.
Despite these comments, many observers felt that this defeat forced Platini to be field a more defensive set up vs. England during the Euros in June.

Photo From: France Football, Issue 2757, February 9, 1999
(Eric Cantona)


-England scored through their only two shots on goal during the match.

-Gary Lineker had already announced his retirement from the English National team at the end of the season after the Euros.
This was a reason cited by Taylor to not to start him. Taylor wanted to try out new strikers.
The English Press were mostly critical of his exclusion from the starting lineup.


Photo From: France Football, February 25, 1992, Issue 2394
(Rob Jones and Manuel Amoros)

-France’s Amara Simba was injured before the Euros and did not make the Finals squad.

-England’s Rob Jones, Mark Wright, Geoff Thomas and David Hirst also missed the Finals cut. In Jones and Wright’s cases it was due to injury.

-Olympique Marseille’s English midfielders Trevor Steven and Chris Waddle were not called up for this match. In Waddle’s case, his omission was controversial due to his fine form in France.

-France’s squad contained 7 Olympique Marseille players. Six on the pitch, one on the substitutes bench.

-France’s Jocelyn Angloma, Basile Boli, Manuel Amoros, Bernard Casoni, Didier Deschamps ,Jean-Philippe Durand , Jean-Pierre Papin and Pascal Olmeta won the French League title that season.

Photo From: France Football, February 25, 1992, Issue 2394
(Diagrams of England’s goals)


-Napoli based Laurent Blanc was the only other foreign based player (in addition to Cantona) in France squad.

-France’s Laurent Blanc managed the France National team (2010-2012), Didier Deschamps is the current France National team coach.

-France’s substitute Frank Silvestre’s cousin Mikael, played in the English Premier League for Manchester United (1999-2008) and Arsenal (2008-2010).

-Laurent Blanc also played in the English Premier League for Manchester United (2001-2003).
Didier Deschamps played for Chelsea (1999/2000).

-France’s Jean-Pierre Papin had won France Football’s Ballon d’Or award in December.
He transferred to AC Milan at the end of the season.

-Alan Shearer transferred to Blackburn Rovers at the end of the season.

-England’s Stuart Pearce managed the English National team for just one match in February 2012 vs. Netherlands.

-France’s Blanc and Deschamps won the World Cup with France in 1998.

-This was Rousset’s second and final cap. This was also Amara Simba’s third and final cap for France.

-This was David Hirst’s third and final cap for England.

-Des Walker was charged with the task of marking Jean-Pierre Papin.

-Before the match, Papin had praised Stuart Pearce as the toughest defender in Europe if not the world.

-England played in a 3-5-2 formation with Mark Wright as sweeper.

-This was Neil Webb’s first cap since 1990.



Match Reports:

Match Video / Highlights:


Trivia and Facts-Part 30

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1- During Australia’s friendly match vs. Czechoslovakia on February 9, 1980 (2 to 2 tie), Australia was forced to take the same penalty kick 4 times.
For the first three times, Czech goalkeeper Dusan Keketi moved before the kick was ordered to be taken. Finally the fourth kick was scored.

Photo From: se Lvickem na prsou-Authors O.Bartunek, J.Kalat
(Dusan Keketi of Czechoslovaki and Spartak Trnava, 1980)

2-During the 1936 Olympics, on August 8, Peru defeated Austria (4 to 2) by scoring twice in the last 4 minutes of overtime.
After the Fourth goal in the 119th minute, Peruvian fans had invaded the field to celebrate.
As a result, Austria protested and the result was cancelled by the jury of appeal and ordered to be replayed by FIFA.
Peru did not show up for the replay because all their Olympics delegation
had returned home in disagreement with the ruling.


Photo From : Calcio 2000, August 2000
(Peru squad, August 8, 1936, Olympic Games, Peru 4-Austria 2)


3- In 1985, a Belgian Television reporter noted that Everton’s Pat van den Hauwe had a Belgian father and an English mother.
He was having an excellent season with his club and won the League title and Cup Winners Cup.
He was therefore eligible for Belgium. He notified Guy Thys who observed and visited him.
Van den Hauwe finally decided to represent Wales.

Photo From : Mondial, June 1985
(Everton’s Pat van den Hauwe, May 15, 1985, Cup Winners Cup, Everton 3-Rapid Vienna 1)


Photo From : Foot Magazine, March 1982
(Belgium Manager Guy Thys)


4-On September 23, 1973, Argentina were scheduled to play a World Cup Qualifier vs. Bolivia at LaPaz.
Argentina’s Managers Enrique Omar Sívori and Miguel Ignomiriello decided to take the squad away for an extended stay in Bolivia to acclimatize with the high altitude.
The secluded squad became known as ‘El Equipo Fantasma’ (Ghost Team).
The team traveled to the town of Tilcara, Province of Jujuy, at 2500 meters above sea level. 75 days before the match.
According to some of the players, The Argentina Federation ‘forgot’ about the team and did not send funds for supplies/hotel/food/etc.
Therefore, instead of the scheduled two friendlies, the team was forced to play six or seven to have enough money to buy food.
Ian all the team trained in Jujuy, Peru, Costa Rica and LaPaz.
The ‘Ghost Team’ photo was taken by Photographer Lucio Flores, the idea of the sheets was from Miguel Tapia, a Journalist from ‘Hoy’.
The match against Bolivia was won 1 to 0 and Argentina were on their way to qualify for the World Cup.

Photo From : El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1971-75
(Argentina’s El Equipo Fantasma, September 1973)


5-In 1966 in the Czech town of Olomouc , there was a team made of entirely of brothers aged 16 to 25.
There father, Josef Olbert, was a 63 year old greengrocer who wanted to form a family football team.


Photo From : World Soccer, August 1966
(Olomouc all family team 1966)

Old Match Photographs-Part 21a

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Photo From: Chronik des deutschen fussballs, 2005
(Thomas Haessler and Carlos Javier Mac Allister, December 15, 1993, Argentian 2-Germany 1)


Photo From: Soccer International, June 1992
(February 26, 1992, Brazil 3-USA 0)


Photo From: Mondial, Hors Serie, 1982
(November 29, 1981, World Cup Qualifier, Czechoslovakia 1-USSR 1)


Photo From: 80 år med Svensk Fotboll 1904-84, Author Glanell Thomas red
(Robert Prytz, May 15, 1983, EC Qualifier, Sweden 5-Cyprus 0)

Photo From: Mondial, October  1977
(August 31, 1977, World Cup Qualifier, Holland 4-Iceland 1)



Photo From: Onze, July 1977
(Team Captains Berti Vogts and Jorge Omar Carrascosa, June 5, 1977, Argentina 1-West Germany 3)

Photo From: Mondial, October 1978
(Glenn Myernik and Claudio Sulser, September 6, 1978, Switzerland 2-USA 0)

Photo From: France Football, Issue 2803, December 28, 1999
(Pele, June 25, 1966, Scotland 1-Brazil 1)


Photo From: World Soccer, December 1969
(September 10, 1969, World Cup Qualifier, Norway 1-France 3)

Photo From: 80 år med Svensk Fotboll 1904-84, Author Glanell Thomas red
(June 22, 1952, Nordic Cup, Sweden 4-Denmark 3)

Photo From: One Hundred Years of Scottish Football, Author: John Rafferty, 1973
(April 9, 1949, Home Championship, England 1-Scotland 3)

Photo From: Azzurri, Storia della Nazionale di calcio tre volte campioni del Mondo, 1910-1983
(February 27, 1949, Italy 4-Portugal 1)

Photo From: Het Nederlands Elftal, 1911-1955, Jan Mulder
(Team Captains Gerardus Henricus ‘Puck’ van Heel and Edmond Delfour, January 12, 1936, France 1-Holland 6)



Photo From: Scotland, The Team, Author Andrew Ward, 1987
(October 25, 1930, Home Championship, Scotland 1-Wales 1)

Photo From: Chronik des deutschen fussballs, 2005
(April 28, 1929, Italy 1-Germany 2)

Photo From: Il Libro Azzurro del Calcio Italiano, Authors: Pericle Pratelli, Pasquale Scardillo, 1974
(Wim Tap scoring Holland’s fisrt goal, December 2, 1928, Italy 3-Holland 2)

Photo From: IFFHS-Russia (1912-1920), Soviet Union (1923-1940),Polska(1921-1940),Lietuva(1923-1940)
(May 4, 1913, Russia 1-Sweden 4)


Old Match Photographs-Part 21b

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Photo From: Kicker WM-Sonderheft 1982
(Borussia Moenchengladbach’s Lothar Matthaus in an advertisement for Datsun)
Photo From: Kicker WM-Sonderheft 1978
(March 19, 1978, Castilla Cup, Argentina 3-Peru 1)



Photo From: Kicker WM-Sonderheft 1974
(Czechoslovakia goalkeeper Frantisek Planicka)

Photo From: Kicker WM-Sonderheft 1970
(Wolfgang Overath and Fritz Walter)


Photo From: Kicker WM-Sonderheft 1970
(Gerd Muller in an avertisement for Mars Bars)

Photo From: A photographic history of English Football, By tim hill, 2004
(Jimmy Greaves and Alan Ball, July 30, 1966, World Cup, England 4-West Germany 2)

Photo From: A photographic history of English Football, By tim hill, 2004
(Wales’ Charles brothers, John and Mel)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 131, November 1970
(Bobby Moore in action in his Testimonial match, November 16, 1970, West Ham United 3-Celtic Glasgow 3)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 131, November 1970
(Anderlecht’s Paul van Himst)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 89, June 1967
(Saint Etienne’s Algerian striker Rachid Mekloufi)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 68, September 1965
(Roger Piantoni in an adverisement for Patrick boots)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 45, October 1963
(Team Captains Yvon Douis and Ivan Kolev on the left, Aleksandar Shalamanov and Yvon Douis on the right, September 29, 1963, EC Qualifier, Bulgaria 1-France 0)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 30, July 1962
(June 3, 1962, World Cup, Hungary 6-Bulgaria 1)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 27, April 1962
(Tottenham’s Danny Blanchflower, 1962)

Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 18, July 1961
(Future France National Team Manager Michel Hidalgo as a player with AS Monaco)




Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 14, March 1961
(Internazionale Milano’s Argentinean born forward Antonio Valentin Angelillo at AC Milan’s headquarters observing a bust of Gunnar Nordahl)


Photo From: Football Magazine, Issue 12, January 1961
(Barcelona’s Luis Suarez)

Photo From: Don Balon, December 7-13, 2009
(Gunther Netzer in a match vs. Atletico Madrid)





Old Match Photograhs-Part 21c

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Photo From: El Grafico 1992, Issue 3794
(Gabriel Batistuta and Claudio Caniggia, June 18, 1992, Argentina 2-Australia 0)
Photo From: El Grafico 1991, Issue 3746
(Leonardo Astrada, Diego Simeone and Antonio Mohamed during the 1991 Copa America)


Photo From: El Grafico 1990, Issue 3684
(Diego Maradona, May 8, 1990, Switzerland 1-Argentina 1)

Photo From: El Grafico 1989, Issue 3639
(Gabriel Calderon and Alejandro Hisis, July 2, 1989, Copa America, Argentina 1-Chile 0)



Photo From: El Grafico 1986, Issue 3474
(Sergio Daniel Batista, April 30, 1986, Norway 1-Argentina 0)

Photo From: El Grafico 1983, Issue 3334
(Julian Camino and Tita, August 24, 1983, Copa America, Argentina 1-Brazil 0)

Photo From: El Grafico 1982, Issue 3260
(Pierre Littbarski celebrating West Germany’s opener, March 24, 1982, Argentina 1-West Germany 1)

Photo From: El Grafico 1980, Issue 3185
(October 15, 1980, Argentina 1-Czechoslovakia 0)

Photo From: Don Balon, Chile Edition, April 24, 1997
(Pele and Tostao)

Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 361, September 7-13, 1982
(Valencia’s Kempes and Barcelona’s Diego Maradona, September 4, 1982, Valencia 2-Barcelona 1)


Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 242, May 27-June 2, 1980
(Valencia’s Miguel Tendillo, 1978/79)



Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 192, June 12-18, 1979
(Barcelona’s Johann Neeskens and Sevilla’s former Barcelona player Francisco Fernandez Rodriguez ‘ Gallego’)


Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 192, June 12-18, 1979
(Real Madrid’s Argentinean player Enrique Wolff, 1978/79)


Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 34, May 25, 1976
(Atletico Madrid’s Brazilian Luis Edmundo Pereira, 1975/76)

Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 190, May 29-June 4, 1979
(Real Zaragoza and future Barcelona midfielder Victor Munoz, 1978/79)

Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 190, May 29-June 4, 1979
(A cartoon of Barcelona’s Carlos Rexach)

Photo From: Don Balon, Extra Futbol Total, 1983/84
(Barcelona’s Ramon Caldere)



Photo From: Don Balon, Extra Futbol Total, 1983/84
(Real Zaragoza’s Jorge Valdano)

Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 162, November 14-20, 1978
(Athletic Bilbao goalkeeper Jose Angel Iribar)

Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 128, March 9-15, 1978
(Enrique Castro Gozalez ‘Quini’)



Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 180, March 20-26, 1979
(Real Madrid’s Jose Martinez Sanche z ‘Pirri’)

Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 168, December 26, 1978-January 2, 1979
(Eugenio Leal and Franco Causio, December 21, 1978, Italy 1-Spain 0)


Photo From: Don Balon, Issue 168, December 26, 1978-January 2, 1979
(Barcelona’s Francisco Carrasco)


Photo From: Don Balon- Extra Liga 1980/81
(Barcelona players, Top, left to right: Jose Ramon Alexanco, Cecilio Zunzunegui, Bottom, left to right: Enrique Castro Gozalez ‘Quini’, Lorenzo Amador and Hans Krankl, 1980)


Photo From: (Magazine Source unknown) / Contribution From a blog viewer
(Aleksandr Chivadze and Lothar Matthaus, August 28, 1985, USSR 1-West Germany 0)


Photo From: Don Balon- Extra Liga 1988/89
(Jose Maria Bakero with Real Sociedad 1987/88)


Old Match Photographs-Part 21d

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Photo From: Goal, February 1996
(Jari Litmanen , September 13, 1995, Champions League, Ajax Amsterdam 1-Real Madrid 0)


Photo From: Fussball Magazin, September October 1977
(Borussia Moenchengladbach goalkeeper Wolfgang Kneib, 1977/78)


Photo From: Fussball Magazin, November December 1984
(Bayern Munich’s Roland Wohlfath and Jean-Marie Pfaff in training, 1984/85)

Photo From: Fussball Magazin, November 1989
(Lothar Matthaus and Roberto Tricella, Giuseppe Dossena is in the background, April 18, 1987, West Germany 0-Italy 0)

Photo From: Fussball Magazin, November 1986
(Dieter Eckstein , October 15, 1986, West Germany 2-Spain 2)

Photo From: Fussball Magazin, May 1987
(Uwe Rahn , November 27, 1985, UEFA Cup, Borussia Moenchengladbach 5-Real Madrid 1)


Photo From: Fussball Magazin, March April 1982
(Borussia Moenchengladbach’s Franck Mill between Bayern Munich’s Wolfgang Kraus and Bertram Beierlorzer, 1981/82)

Photo From: Fussball Magazin, June 1986
(Werder Bremen’s Benno Mohlmann, 1985/86)

Photo From: Fussball Magazin, January February 1984
(Kaiserslautern’s Andreas Brehme and Eintracht Frankfurt’s Ralf Falkenmayer, 1983/84)

Photo From: Fussball Magazin, December 1989
(Jurgen Klinnsman , November 15, 1989, World Cup Qualifier, West Germany 2-Wales 1)



Photo From: Fussball Magazin, April May 1977
(Eintracht Frankfurt’s Jurgen Grabowski, 1976/77)

Photo From: Foot Magazine, May 1983
(Ludo Coeck, April 27, 1983, EC Qualifier, Belgium 2-East Germany 1)


Photo From: Foot Magazine, March 1986
(Gordon Strachan, November 20, 1985, World Cup Qualifier, Scotland 2-Australia 0)



Photo From: Foot Magazine, January 1984
(Salvatore Bagni, October 15, 1983, EC Qualifier, Italy 0-Sweden 3)


Photo From: European Football Yearbook 1988
(Welsh striker Mark Hughes in his season on loan at Bayern Munich, 1987/88)


Photo From: El Libro de los Mundiales, 1966 Argentina la hora de la veridad
(Argentina players during 1966 World Cup, left to right: Nelson Juan Lopez, Anibal Roberto Tarabini, Mario Norberto Chaldu, Ermindo Daniel Onega and Oscar Osvaldo Calics)

Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1961-70
(El Grafico edition of June 10, 1964 with Jose Manuel Ramos Delgado, Carmelo Simone, Alfredo Hugo Rojas and Jose Agustin Mesiano)

Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1951-60
(Argentina players, Top: Eliseo Prado and Angel Labruna, Bottom: Oreste Corbatta, Norberto Menendez, Roberto Zarate)

Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1931-50
(Argentina Internationals Bernabe Ferreyra and Vicente de la Mata)

Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1921-30
(Argentina International from 1960s, Luis Artime)

Photo From: El Grafico, Historia de la seleccion Argentina, 1902-20
(Argentina Internationals and brothers Carlos and Hector Enrique)


Photo From: El Grafico , Issue 3447, 1987
(Emilio Commisso scoring for Argentina Juniors, October 24, 1985, Copa Libertadores, Argentinaos Juniors 1-America Cali 1)

Photo From: Die Nati, Die Geschichte der Schweizer Fussball-Nationalmanschaft, author Beat Jung, 2006
(May 11, 1946, Victory International, England 4-Switzerland 1)


Photo From: Azzurri, Storia della Nazionale di calcio tre volte campioni del Mondo, 1910-1983
(Italy manager Vittorio Pozzo with Luigi Allemandi)

Photo From: Azzurri, Storia della Nazionale di calcio tre volte campioni del Mondo, 1910-1983
(Torino’s trio delle meraviglie: Adolfo Baloncieri, Julio Libonatti and Gino Rossetti)



Photo From: år med Svensk Fotboll 1904-84, Author Glanell Thomas red
(Sweden goalkeeper Thomas Ravelli)



Photo From: år med Svensk Fotboll 1904-84, Author Glanell Thomas red
(May 4, 1913, Russia 1-Sweden 4)

Photo From: 100 Anni del Campionato del Calcio
(Internazionale Milano goalkeeper Giulliano Sarti and Fiorentina’s Enrico Albertosi)

Photo From: 100 Anni del Campionato del Calcio
(Internazionale Milano’s Sandro Mazzola and Torino’s Claudio Sala)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, November 1998
(Andrea Pirlo in his days with Brescia and Internazionale Milano)

Photo From: Foot magazine, April 1984
(Uli Stielieke and Walter Meeuws, February 29, 1984, Belgium 0-West Germany 1)

Photo From: Foot Magazine, April 1982
(Anderlecht defender Michel De Groote, 1981/82)


Photo From: El Grafico 1995, Issue 3933
(Marcelo Gallardo scoring one of his two penalty kicks, February 15, 1995, Argentina 4-Bulgaria 1)


Photo From: El Grafico 1994, Issue 3886
(Cafu, Carlos Dunga and Fernando Redondo, March 23, 1994, Brazil 2-Argentina 0)


Old Match Photographs-Part 21e

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Photo From: Onze, Issue 72, December 1981
(Alberto Tarantini and Ariel Krarsouski, November 1, 1981, River Plate 2-Boca Juniors 2) 
Photo From: Onze, Issue 58, October 1980
(Aston Villa‘s Des Bremner and Ipswich Town’s Eric Gates, September 6, 1980, Ipswich Town 1-Aston Villa 0)



Photo From: Onze, Issue 60, December 1980
(Fiorentina’s Giancarlo Antognoni and Internazionale Milano’s Giampiero Marini, October 19, 1980, Fiorentina 0-Internazionale Milano 0)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 44, August 1979
(Kaiserslautern and Bayern Munich goalkeepers Ronnie Hellstroem and Sepp Maier)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 34, October 1978
(Paolo Rossi with Lanerossi Vicenza, 1978/79)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 15, March 1977
(Republic of Ireland’s Player-Manager Johnny Giles with West Bromwich Albion, 1976/ 77)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 12, December 1976
(Dino Zoff making a save, November 17, 1976, World Cup Qualifier, Italy 2-England 0)

Photo From: Mondial, old series, issue 32, July 1979
(Nantes’ Henri Michel and Saint Etienne’s Oswaldo Piazza)


Photo From: Mondial, Old Series, Issue 5, June 1977
(Kevin Keegan and Berti Vogts, May 25, 1977, Champions Cup, Liverpool 3-Borussia Moenchengladbach 1)


Photo From: Mondial, new series, issue 105, November December 1988
(Nacional Montevideo’s Hugo De Leon)

Photo From: Mondial, new series, Issue 92, November 1987
(Cyrille Regis with Coventry City, 1987/88)

Photo From: Mondial, new series, issue 81, December 1986
(MitchellThomas, Niall Quinn and Richard Gough, September 6, 1986, Arsenal 0-Tottenham 0)

Photo From: Mondial, new series, issue 70, December 1985
(Antonio Cabrini wearing an exchanged jersey, December 8, 1985, Intercontinental Cup, Juventus 2-Argentinos Juniors 2)

Photo From: Mondial, new series, issue 55, October 1984
(Jean-Francois Domergue, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Yvon Le Roux, September 5, 1984, France 0-Internazionale Milano (Italy) 1)

 
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 22, January 1982
(USSR and Ararat Erevan’s Khoren Oganessian)



Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 14, May 1981
(Erwin Vandenbergh, April 2, 1980, Belgium 2-Poland 1)


Photo From: World Cup 78, Phil Soar
(A stamp featuring Bobby Charlton)

Photo From: Voetbal Weekblad, July 8-14, 1972
(Derby County’s Colin Todd)


Photo From: Shoot, February 28, 1970
(Manchester City’s Francis Lee, 1969/70)

Photo From: Seleccao Brasileira -90 Anos 1914-2004, Authors Antonio Carlos Napoleao, Roberto Assaf
(Brazil’s Edson, Nilton Santos and Djalma Santos on the cover of April 1957 Edition of Manchete Esportiva)

Photo From: Scotland, The Team, Author Andrew Ward, 1987
(A cartoon of 1920s Scotland International Alex Jackson)

Photo From:  Mondial-La Glorieuse Epopee de la Coupe du Monde
(Pele and his replacement during the 1962 World Cup Amarildo)


Photo From:  Les Bleus Author Denis Chaumier, 2004
(France’s Robert Budzynski , October 9, 1965, World Cup Qualfiier, France 1-Yugoslavia 0)



Photo From:  L'Equipe, L'equipe de France de Football,La Belle Histoire
(Patrick Battiston in an exchanged Portugal jersey, Manager Michel Hidalgo and Michel Platini , June 23, 1984, European Championships, France 3-Portugal 2)

Photo From:  L'Equipe, L'equipe de France de Football,La Belle Histoire
(France goalkeeper Alex Thepot , May 27, 1934, World Cup, Austria 3-France 2)


Photo From:  Landslaget, Det Norske Fotballandslagets Historie, authors Egil Olsen, Arne Scheie,Per Jorsett, Otto Ulseth, 1997
(Norway’s Nils Arne Eggen, Odd Iversen and Tom Lund)


Photo From:  La Nazionale Italiana, 1978
(Italy’s Giuseppe Ticozzelli , Angelo Cameroni and Renzo De Vecchi, January 18, 1920, Italy 9-France 4)


Photo From:  Kicker, 100 Jahre Deutsche landerspiele
(Germany players: Fritz Walter, August Klingler, Albert Sing, Ernst Willimowski, Karl Decker, August 16, 1942, Germany 7-Romania 0)
Note: Karl Decker was Austrian and Ernst Willimowski was polish, both were drafted in the German squad after Nazi occupation.
Ernst Willimowski scored 4 goals vs. Brazil during the 1938 World Cup for Poland

Photo From:  Guerin Sportivo, October 24-30, 1984
(AC Milan’s Agostino Di Bartolomei, October 14, 1984, AC Milan 2-AS Roma 1)

Photo From:  Guerin Sportivo, March 27-April 2, 1985
(Mauro Tassoti and Giampiero Marini , March 17, 1985, Internazionale Milano 2-AC Milan 2)


Photo From:  Guerin Sportivo, March 13-19, 1985
(Paolo Dal Fiume and Sergio Battistini, March 3, 1985, AC Miolan 2-Napoli 1)



Photo From:  Guerin Sportivo, June 5-11, 1991
(Sweden’s Martin Dahlin, May 1, 1991, Sweden 6-Austria 0)

Photo From:  Guerin Sportivo, January 15-21, 1992
(Real Madrid’s Brazilian defender Ricardo Rocha, 1991/92)

Photo From:  Guerin Sportivo, April 20-27, 1983
(Juventus’ Roberto Bettega in a match vs. AC Milan)

Photo From: Guerin Sportivo, April 11-18, 1989
(USSR’s Alexei Mikhailichenko on the right, September 22, 1988, Olympics, USSR 4-USA 2)

 
Photo From: Goal, July 1996
(Gary Neville , November 15, 1995, England 3-Switzerland 1)


Photo From: Goal, January 1996
(Juventus’ Antonio Conte, January 15, 1995, Juventus 3-AS Roma 0)


Old Match Photographs-Part 21f

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Photo From: World Soccer, October 1968
(Franz Beckenbauer and his book, ‘A Gentleman on the Ball’)
Photo From: World Soccer, November 1967
(Liverpool’s Tommy Smith and Manchester City’s Mike Summerbee)

Photo From: World Soccer, September 1966
(Argentina Captain Antonio Rattin in London during the 1966 World Cup)

Photo From: World Soccer, September 1965
(AC Milan’s Giovanni Trapattoni)


Photo From: World Soccer, September 1964
(West Ham United Manager Ron Greenwood, Eddie Bovington and Bobby Moore)

Photo From: World Soccer, November 1963
(Bill Bjorklund and Eusebio, October 31, 1962, Champions Cup, IFK Norkopping 1-Benfica 1)

Photo From: World Soccer, September 1962
(Czechoslovakia goalkeeper Viliam Schrojf)

Photo From: World Soccer, November 1961
(Pele and Didi)

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 83, December 1995
(Mario Basler with Werder Bremen, 1995/96)

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 70, November 1994
(Ricardo Alemao and Ruud Gullit, October 3, 1993, Atalanta 1-Sampdoria 4)


Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 59, December 1993
(Real Madrid’s Johnny Metgod and Barcelona’s Francisco Carrasco with Juan Jose looking on)


Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 41, June 1992
(Emmanuel Petit and Josef Kiprich, April 15, 1992, Cup Winners Cup, Feyenoord 2-AS Monaco 2)

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 33, October 1991
(Barcelona’s Dutch midfielder Richard Witschge, 1991/92)


Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 23, December 1990
(Didier Deschamps and Thomas Berthold, November 28, 1990, AS Roma 5-Bordeaux 0)

Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 10, November 1989
(Wim Kieft and Michel, April 20, 1988, Champions Cup, PSV Eindhoven 0-Real Madrid 0)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 148, April 1988
(Ajax’s Jan Wouters, 1987/88)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 143, November 1987
(Liverpool’s Peter Beardsley, August 29, 1987, Coventry City 1-Liverpool 4)

Photo From: Onze, Issue 132, December 1986
(Omar Sivori at River Plate, 1950s)


Photo From: Onze, Issue 117, September 1985
(Ac Milan’s Alberigo Evani and Internazionale Milano’s Giuseppe Baresi, 1985)


Photo From: Onze, Issue 107, November 1984
(France’s Didier Six at Aston Villa, 1984/85)

(Team Captains Maxime Bossis and Hans Krankl, September 14, 1983, Champions Cup, Rapid Vienna 3-Nantes 0)


Old Match Photographs-Part 21g

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Photo From: Goal, Issue 20, May 1997
(Coventry City goalkeeper Steve Ogrizovic and Brian Borrows after Woking’s equalizer, January 25, 1997, English FA Cup, Coventry City 1-Woking 1)
Photo From: Goal, Issue 12, September 1996
(England Manager Don Revie in an advertisemnt)

Photo From: Goal, Issue 2, November 1995
(West Ham United players 1970, Geoff Hurst, Harry Redknapp, Clyde Best, Trevor Brooking, Pop Robson, Ronnie Boyce, Johnny Ayris)
Photo From: France Football, October 14, 1986
(Emilio Butragueno and Julio Alberto, October 8, 1986, Real Madrid 1-Barcelona 1)

Photo From: France Football, July 31, 1984
(Bebeto with Flamengo, 1984)


Photo From: France Football, February 22, 1983
(Waterschei’s Eddy Voordeckers)


Photo From: Football Italia, May 1997
(Gabriel Batistuta and Ronaldo, April 10, 1997, Cup Winners Cup, Barcelona 1-Fiorentina 1)


Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 40, April 2001
(Juventus defender from 1920’s and 1930s, Virginio Rosetta)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 37, January 2001
(AC Milan and Scotland’s Joe Jordan)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 36 Suppplement, November-December 2000
(Juventus’ Marco Tardelli and Fiorentina’s Giancarlo Antognoni)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 30, May 2000
(Bayern Munich’s Udo Horsman and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge with an exchanged jersey, May 12, 1976, Champions Cup, Bayern Munich 1-Saint Etienne 0)


Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 24, November 1999
(Internazionale Milano’s Mario Corso)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 22, August 1999
(Thierry Henry and Thomas Helveg, May 8, 1999, Juventus 0-AC Milan 2)

Photo From: Calcio 2000, Issue 16, February 1999
(Lazio’s Giuseppe Wilson)


Photo From: Backpass Issue 3, spring 2000
(AC Milan teammates Gianni Rivera and Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, June 17, 1970, World Cup, Italy 4-West Germany 3)

Photo From: 100 Melhores do Futebol Portugues, Vol II, Author Rui Dias, 2002
(Paolo Futre with AC Milan, 1995/96)

Photo From: World Soccer, October 1995
(Brazil’s Roberto Carlos at Internazionale Milano, 1995/96)


Photo From: World Soccer, September 1990
(Rafael Martin Vasquez and Soren Lerby, April 20, 1988, Champions Cup, PSV Eindhoven 0-Real Madrid 0)

Photo From: World Soccer, September 1972
(Borussia Moenchengladbach’s Juup Heynckes and Gunther Netzer)

Photo From: World Soccer, November 1971
(England’s Goeff Hurst, Martin Chivers and Francis Lee)


Photo From: World Soccer, November 1970
(Bobby Moore and Pele, September 22, 1970, Santos 2-West Ham United 2)

Photo From: World Soccer, October 1969
(AC Milan’s Angelo Sormani)


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