Disgrace of Gijón

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West Germany v Austria
200px
El Molinón held the match
Event 1982 FIFA World Cup
Date 25 June 1982
Venue El Molinón, Gijón, Spain
Referee Bob Valentine (Scotland)
Attendance 41,000

The Disgrace of Gijón refers to the 1982 FIFA World Cup football match played between West Germany and Austria at the El Molinón stadium, Gijón, Spain, on 25 June 1982. The match was the last game of the first-round Group 2, with Algeria and Chile having played the day before. With the outcome of that match already decided, a win by one or two goals for West Germany would result in both them and Austria qualifying at the expense of Algeria, who had beaten West Germany in the first game. After 10 minutes, West Germany took the lead. Thereafter, neither team scored, and few scoring chances were created, along with much own-half passing and few tackles: with both sets of players flamboyantly missing with no clear attempt to guide the ball whenever they shot on goal.[1]

As a result of this, and similar events at the previous World Cup in Argentina, FIFA revised the group system for future tournaments, so that the final two games in each group would be played simultaneously.[2] In German, the match is known as Nichtangriffspakt von Gijón (lit. "Non-aggression pact of Gijón") or Schande von Gijón (lit. "Disgrace of Gijón"),[3] while in Algeria and the rest of the world it is known as the Anschluss (in reference to the unification of Austria and Nazi Germany in 1938).[4]

Background

  • Note: 2 points for a win, 1 for a draw, first tie-breaker is goal difference.
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Austria 2 2 0 0 3 0 +3 4
 Algeria 3 2 0 1 5 5 0 4
 West Germany 2 1 0 1 5 3 +2 2
 Chile 3 0 0 3 3 8 −5 0

Algeria began their campaign by recording a shock 2–1 win over West Germany on the opening day, referred to as the "greatest World Cup upset since North Korea beat Italy in 1966" at the time,[5] and retrospectively as "one of the biggest shocks in World Cup history".[6] Algeria became the first African team to defeat a European team at the FIFA World Cup. They then went on to lose 0–2 to Austria before beating Chile 3–2 in their final match. The Chile victory made Algeria the first African team to win twice at a World Cup.[6]

As Algeria played that final match the day before West Germany met Austria, the two European teams knew what result they needed in order to qualify for the next round. A German win by one or two goals would see both West Germany and Austria qualify. A larger West German victory, by three goals or more, would see West Germany and Algeria qualify (because Algeria had scored more goals than Austria, they would qualify even with the same goal difference) while a draw or an Austrian win would eliminate the Germans.

Match summary

After ten minutes of furious attack, West Germany succeeded in scoring through a goal by Horst Hrubesch. After the goal was scored, the team in possession of the ball often passed between themselves in their own half until an opposition player came into the vicinity of the ball. The ball was then passed back to the goalkeeper. Isolated long balls were played into the opposition's half, with little consequence. For the next 80 minutes there were few serious attempts on goal, e.g. by Wolfgang Dremmler of West Germany. The only Austrian player who seemed to make any effort at livening the game up was Walter Schachner, though he had little success.

This performance was widely deplored by all observers. German ARD commentator Eberhard Stanjek at one point refused to comment on the game any longer. Austrian commentator Robert Seeger bemoaned the spectacle and actually requested that the viewers should switch off their television sets. George Vecsey, a New York Times journalist writing in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette stated that the teams "seemed to work in concert", though added that proving such would be impossible.[5]

Likewise, many spectators were not impressed and voiced their disgust with the players. Chants of "Fuera, fuera" ("Out, out"), "Argelia, Argelia" ("Algeria, Algeria"), and "Que se besen, que se besen" ("Let them kiss, let them kiss") were screamed by the appalled Spanish crowd,[7] while angry Algerian supporters waved banknotes at the players. The match was criticized even by the German and Austrian fans who had hoped for a hot rematch of the 1978 World Cup match, the so-called "Miracle of Córdoba", in which Austria had beaten West Germany; one German fan burned the national flag in protest.[8][9] El Comercio, the local newspaper, printed the match report in its crime section.[10]

Match details

25 June 1982
17:15 CEST
West Germany  1–0  Austria
Hrubesch Goal 10' Report
El Molinón, Gijón
Attendance: 41,000
Referee: Bob Valentine (Scotland)
West Germany
Austria
GK 1 Harald Schumacher
SW 15 Uli Stielike
RB 20 Manfred Kaltz
LB 2 Hans-Peter Briegel
CB 4 Karlheinz Förster
CM 3 Paul Breitner
CM 6 Wolfgang Dremmler
CM 14 Felix Magath
RF 11 Karl-Heinz Rummenigge Substituted off 66'
FW 9 Horst Hrubesch Goal 10' Substituted off 68'
LF 7 Pierre Littbarski
Substitutes:
GK 21 Bernd Franke
GK 22 Eike Immel
DF 5 Bernd Förster
FW 8 Klaus Fischer Substituted in 68'
MF 10 Hansi Müller
DF 12 Wilfried Hannes
FW 13 Uwe Reinders
FW 16 Thomas Allofs
MF 17 Stephan Engels
MF 18 Lothar Matthäus Substituted in 66'
DF 19 Holger Hieronymus
Manager:
Germany Jupp Derwall
GK 1 Friedrich Koncilia
DF 2 Bernd Krauss
DF 3 Erich Obermayer
DF 4 Josef Degeorgi
DF 5 Bruno Pezzey
MF 6 Roland Hattenberger
FW 7 Walter Schachner Booked 32'
MF 8 Herbert Prohaska
FW 9 Hans Krankl
MF 10 Reinhold Hintermaier Booked 32'
DF 19 Heribert Weber
Substitute:
GK 21 Herbert Feurer
GK 22 Klaus Lindenberger
MF 11 Kurt Jara
DF 12 Anton Pichler
DF 13 Max Hagmayr
MF 14 Ernst Baumeister
MF 15 Johann Dihanich
MF 16 Gerald Messlender
MF 17 Johann Pregesbauer
FW 18 Gernot Jurtin
FW 20 Kurt Welzl
Manager:
Austria Felix Latzke & Georg Schmidt

Aftermath

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 West Germany 3 2 0 1 6 3 +3 4
 Austria 3 2 0 1 3 1 +2 4
 Algeria 3 2 0 1 5 5 0 4
 Chile 3 0 0 3 3 8 −5 0

With West Germany's 1–0 victory, they joined Austria and Algeria with four points in three matches. The teams were separated by goal difference, with West Germany and Austria progressing to the next round of the tournament at the expense of Algeria.

It appears that this was a case of spontaneous match-fixing, in which Austria gave up their opportunity to be first in the group (by winning or drawing the match) in exchange for a sure opportunity to advance. The bargaining positions of the two teams was affected by West Germany being in danger of elimination if it failed to win, but also being the higher-ability team.[11]

The Algerian football officials were furious and lodged an official protest. However no rules were technically broken as a result of the match, so FIFA declined to take any action or investigation and the outcome was allowed to stand. Both teams denied any collusion during the match.[12] West Germany manager Jupp Derwell defended his team from the criticism, pointing out that Uli Stielike and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge were both unfit.[13]

In addition, the president of the Algerian Football Federation opined that referee Bob Valentine should have intervened and his failure to do so was worthy of complaint.[14]

The West Germans made it to the final, where they lost to Italy 3–1. Austria fell at the next group stage, to the benefit of eventual fourth-place finishers France.

The direct consequence of the game was that from Euro 1984 and World Cup 1986 onward, the final pair of group matches in international tournaments always start at the same time.[15]

In Euro 2004 Group C, it was alleged that Denmark and Sweden deliberately played to a 2–2 draw which saw both teams advance at the expense of Italy.[nb 1] UEFA refused to investigate.[16][17]

At the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the last ten minutes of the group match between Chile and Spain saw similar behaviour.[18]

Germany (the inheritor of the West Germany side from 1982) played Algeria in the last 16 of the 2014 FIFA World Cup. Lakhdar Belloumi, who scored the winning goal in 1982, claimed that the 2014 Algerian side would be "inspired" to gain "revenge" due to the events 32 years before.[19] However, Germany went on to win 2–1 in extra time after a hard-fought match.[20]

Notes

  1. The 2–2 draw between Denmark and Sweden ensured the elimination of Italy, which simultaneously played its last group match against already-eliminated Bulgaria, because UEFA's tiebreakers took into consideration head-to-head results before overall goal difference. Because both Sweden and Denmark had lower-scoring draws with Italy, and because both teams had beaten Bulgaria, it was known prior to the final pair of group matches that a draw of 2–2 or higher score would eliminate Italy regardless of the result of their match with Bulgaria.

References

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  7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=290&v=PosNh9VGMPI
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External links