[28][39] Two minutes later, Puskás appeared to have leveled the score once more when he converted a through ball from Tóth flicked on by Kocsis, but the attempt was ruled offside. [40] In the final minute of the game, Czibor had another chance to equalize, but his shot from close range was again stopped by Turek. [41] The whistle soon thereafter ended not only the match, but also the Golden Team's unbeaten run. Details[edit] GK Toni Turek RB Josef Posipal CB 10 Werner Liebrich LB Werner Kohlmeyer RH 6 Horst Eckel LH Karl Mai OR 12 Helmut Rahn IR 13 Max Morlock CF 15 Ottmar Walter IL Fritz Walter (c) OL 20 Hans Schäfer Manager: Sepp Herberger Gyula Grosics Jenő Buzánszky Gyula Lóránt Mihály Lantos 5 József Bozsik CH Nándor Hidegkuti József Zakariás 11 Zoltán Czibor Sándor Kocsis Ferenc Puskás (c) Mihály Tóth Gusztáv Sebes Statistics[edit] A match analysis by the website spielverlagerung.
Further, the data point to an excellent defensive performance by Liebrich, who – according to Zimmermann's commentary – blocked six shots, intercepted nine passes, and won all of his 10 one-on-one duels. Controversies[edit] Refereeing decisions[edit] Several calls by the English referee William Ling came under scrutiny after the final. These included: Germany's second goal. Grosics attempted to clear the corner kick by Fritz Walter in the air, but collided in the six-yard box with Schäfer. As a result, the ball went through to Rahn, who converted. Had Ling called a foul on Grosics, the goal would not have counted.
Background[edit] Hungary[edit] Hungary's legendary Golden Team – also known as the Mighty Magyars – was the favorite to win the 1954 World Cup. [3] In the five years prior to the final, it had remained unbeaten in 31 games (32 if counting a match against East Germany in 1952 that is not considered an official international).
[53][54] Szepesi – who later became the chairman of the Hungarian Football Federation – had been a household name in Hungary since his report of the Golden Team's 6–3 victory over England in 1953. [55] He started his commentary of the World Cup final with cautious confidence, reinforced after Hungary's opening goal: "Puskás shoots... GOAL... A WONDERFUL GOAL!... There is the lead. Öcsi's [i. e., Puskas'] foot is fine, this one could see with this shot.... And now: calmly, boys, just as we played at the 8–3". Doubts started creeping in after Germany shortened the lead – "the clouds are piling up in front of the mountains...
Today it is not a B-team. Today Germany's strongest squad is playing" – and second goal – "we have equalized, against Hungary, the technically most gifted squad that one knows! ". Self-esteem grew as the match progressed – "six minutes still to play in Bern in the first half. Score: 2–2. This is more than what we dared to hope in our wildest dreams" – including after Buzánszky cleared Rahn's shot on the goal line: "now, dear Hungarians, we have to say: now you have been lucky". When Turek stopped Hidegkuti's volley from close range, Zimmermann famously called him a "god" and "devil" in the same sentence: "shot – saved by Turek! Turek, you are a dare-devil, Turek, you are a football god! ". [This quote needs a citation] Proverbial in Germany are Zimmermann's description of the winning goal – "Bozsik, time and again Bozsik, the right half-back of the Hungarians, with the ball.
As a result, Germany missed the 1950 FIFA World Cup. In the early 1950s, Sepp Herberger – resuming the role as national team coach that he had already occupied between 1936 and 1942 – built the West German team around a nucleus of players from the club 1. FC Kaiserslautern, the German champions of 1951 and 1953, led by veteran playmaker Fritz Walter. [8] The players were semi-professionals (Vertragsspieler), who often worked in a second job or owned a business to support their incomes. Prior to the 1954 tournament, West Germany had played only a few friendly internationals and a short qualifying campaign (against Norway and the Saar).
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[70][71] In 1990, after the downfall of the Iron Curtain, the German Football Association invited the surviving members of Hungary's 1954 team to join celebrations for Fritz Walter's 70th birthday. [19] In the years that followed, both teams organized annual get-togethers, which Grosics described as follows: "I believe the friendship between the former Hungarian and German players can be called the world's most extraordinary.
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Few of the 1954 World Champions went into coaching; an exception is Liebrich, who is credited with saving his home club Kaiserslautern from Bundesliga relegation in 1965 – with Lóránt becoming Liebrich's successor in the following season. Some players had difficulties to cope with fame, and struggled at times with economic problems and alcoholism.
At the 1958 FIFA World Cup, only four players from the Mighty Magyars still featured – Bozsik, Budai, Grosics, Hidegkuti – but were unable to repeat earlier success. In the 1960s and beyond, Hidegkuti, Puskás, and Lóránt became prominent international coaches, managing clubs such as Panathinaikos (Puskás), Fiorentina (Hidegkuti), and Bayern Munich (Lóránt). Lóránt's admission to the German Sport University Cologne was arranged by Herberger. [68] Several other Golden Team members had success as coaches in the domestic Hungarian league.
[61] Reaction in Germany[edit] The unexpected win evoked a wave of euphoria throughout Germany, which suffered from a lack of international recognition in the aftermath of World War II, and where expressions of national pride were still tainted with the recent past. [62][63] Some publicists described the 1954 victory as a turning point in post-war German history, notably Arthur Heinrich[64][65] and Joachim Fest. In Fest's words: "It was a kind of liberation for the Germans from all the things that weighed down upon them after the Second World War... July 4, 1954 is in certain aspects the founding day of the German Republic. "[66] The World Cup final was also the first time since the Second World War that the German national anthem was played at a global sporting event.
Kudos to these boys, who can lose so gracefully, who have demonstrated to be true World Champions: when they once get beaten, they carry the defeat with dignity. "[This quote needs a citation] Post-match and aftermath[edit] Reaction in Hungary[edit] The loss came at a shock to Hungarian public. Spontaneous demonstrations erupted in Budapest and were directed not only against the team, but also the communist-authoritarian regime controlled by general secretary Mátyás Rákosi, which had used the Golden Team's prestige to boost its own reputation.
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The West German players became instantaneously famous in Germany as the Heroes of Bern. [69] Several received lucrative offers to play abroad, but none accepted, continuing instead as semi-professionals in German clubs. Herberger overhauled the national team after the tournament. Hence, of the winning 1954 side, only Eckel, Rahn, Schäfer, and a 37-year old Fritz Walter still played at the 1958 World Cup, reaching the semi-finals.
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