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World Cup Wonderland

Eighty years, 18 World Cups, a million memories


Nick Moore

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90: The age of the great goalkeeper


Sunday 23 May 2010 10:00

The general consensus is that World Cup 1990 was a stinker. Beyond memorable moments from Milla, Gazza and Schillaci, the tournament was plagued by dishwater-dull, defensive games and a chronic lack of goals: Argentina made it to the final after scoring only five times, and five knockout matches – including both semis – were settled on penalties.

But if the strikers were thwarted and neutrals trudged home with numbed minds, one group of men could consider the Italian summer a triumph: goalkeepers. The globe’s custodians boarded their return planes with a record-breaking 31 clean sheets, and only nine games out of 52 saw a team concede three or more times. Strong defences must take huge credit – Italy’s ruthless backline boasted Maldini, Baresi, Ferri and Bergomi – but this was also a golden time for goalkeeping: across the competition, proud behemoths stood between the sticks.

Men like Spain’s Andoni Zubizarreta, who would play over 700 professional games, 126 for his country and four consecutive World Cups. Hans van Breukelen, who minded Holland’s nets for over a decade. Brazil’s Taffarel, who found himself eliminated from Italia 90 despite letting in just two goals. Packie Bonner, who patrolled the Irish goalmouth for 15 years. And USSR’s Rinat Dasayev, nicknamed ‘the Iron Curtain’ and rated by many as the best keeper of the 1980s.

Five other men, however, have got genuine claims as the summer’s premier glovesman. Germany won the tournament in no small part down to Bodo Ilgner, who was in exceptional form throughout. He marshalled his backline with authority and was near unbeatable one-on-one. His semi-final penalty save against Stuart Pearce saw Germany through, where Ilgner would become the first man to keep a clean sheet in a World Cup final.


Illgner holds off England one-handed

The other finalists, Argentina, also owed much to their No.1, Sergio Goycochea. After keeping a clean sheet in the defeat of Brazil, he was the star of two crucial shoot-outs: against Yugoslavia in the quarter-finals, and again in the semis against Italy, where he blocked efforts from Roberto Donadoni and Aldo Serena. El Goyco also got close to saving Brehme’s penalty in the final. He was selected for the All-Star Team by FIFA jointly as the best keeper of the tournament.

The man who shared this honour was Costa Rica’s Luis Gabelo Coneja. Although he played just three group games and let in two strikes, Conejo made a string of brilliant, athletic saves against Scotland, Sweden and Brazil. Unfortunately, he was injured for the second round game against Czechoslovakia, who scored four past his depleted side.

Peter Shilton surely also had a claim: the Englishman who clocked up 1005 career games and 125 international caps over a 33-year career was at his commanding best in 1990, where he managed three shutouts, helping set a still-unbeaten record of ten World Cup clean sheets.

Italy’s Walter Zenga, however, can probably consider himself the unluckiest stopper in the tournament – and perhaps the history of the World Cup. The Italian legend broke the record for the length of time between letting in World Cup goals, not conceding once in the group stages, second round, or quarters. Unfortunately, when he finally did, it was a clanger.

After 517 minutes of goallessness spanning two tournaments, Zenga failed to grab a high ball against Argentina, allowing Caniggia to nod home. Italy drew 1-1, lost the shootout and Zenga was crucified by the press for his mistake. Even during a record-breaking summer, the world’s No.1s were getting it in the neck, begging the age-old question: who’d be a goalkeeper?

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About Nick Moore

Nick Moore started his journalistic career working for his boyhood heroes, Liverpool FC, on their programme from 1999 and 2001. It's been mainly downhill for both Nick and Liverpool since – he briefly edited a pamphlet about youth hosteling – but he occasionally manages to contribute to Q, Army and various newspapers.
He's a regular feature writer for FourFourTwo and has been doing Ask A Silly Question for four years, once making national news when Peter Crouch confessed that he regularly dreamt about being a dwarf.
He combines journalism with drumming for cult psychedelic Welsh rock heroes Howl Griff.

Comments

  May 23, 2010 10:50

Mr Eugenides said:

Good piece.

On a tiny point of pedantry, Goycochea was not Argentina's No.1, though - he came on in the second game of the tournament after their veteran keeper Nary Pumpido had been injured. This is why the famous Cameroon goal against Argentina in the opening game features Pumpido, not Goycochea.

  May 23, 2010 15:16

PaddyL15 said:

Although he had a good tournament, I remember Ilgner getting beat one on one through the legs by Colombian Freddy Rincon in the last game of the group phase. This was a dramatic injury-time leveler that allowed Valderamma's bunch to make it to the second round.

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