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1990 - History of the World Cup
Host Country: Italy
Participants: 24
Countries: Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Cameroon, Colombia, Costa Rica, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, England, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Romania, Scotland, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, United States, USSR, West Germany, Yugoslavia
Championship: West Germany 1, Argentina 0
Top goal scorer: Salvatore "Toto" Schillaci, Italy (6)
MVP: Salvatore "Toto" Schilacci, Italy
For anyone
who likes to point out that there's no scoring in soccer, look
no further than the 1990 World Cup. Win at all costs was replaced
by a new philosophy: Try not to lose at all costs, and take
your chances on penalty kicks. As a result, a meager 2.21 goals
per game were scored -- the lowest-scoring Cup ever.
Defending champion Argentina got the first dose of what the
brutal defensive play was all about when it was shocked by Cameroon
1-0 in the opening match in Milan. Cameroon turned out to be
the Cinderella story of the tournament, winning its group and
advancing to the quarterfinals before losing to England. Roger
Milla, who was coaxed out of retirement before the tournament
began, became the oldest player to score in the World Cup at
age 38.
You want action? There wasn't much -- both semifinals were
tied at 1 and had to be decided on penalty kicks. Argentina
got past Italy, and West Germany -- in its last Cup before unifying
with East Germany -- beat England.
The championship game put the rest of the tournament in a nice
nutshell. There were two ejections -- the first time a red card
had been given in a final -- Argentina had exactly one shot,
and West Germany won 1-0 on a penalty kick in the 84th minute.
Despite the less-than-spectacular win, the World Cup victory
put Germany in an elite group, joining Italy and Brazil as the
only countries to win three World Cup titles.
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