Austria v West Germany (1978 FIFA World Cup)
Event | 1978 FIFA World Cup | ||||||
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Date | 21 June 1978 | ||||||
Venue | Chateau Carreras, Córdoba | ||||||
Referee | Abraham Klein (Israel) | ||||||
Attendance | 38,318 |
Córdoba 1978 (known in Austria as Das Wunder von Córdoba (The Miracle of Córdoba) and in Germany as Die Schmach von Córdoba or Die Schande von Córdoba (The Disgrace of Córdoba)[1]), describes the game of football between defending World Champions West Germany and Austria that occurred on 21 June 1978 at the conclusion of the second round of the 1978 FIFA World Cup, in Córdoba, Argentina.[1]
The game is fondly remembered by fans of the Austrian national team for being the first time in 47 years that Austria had defeated Germany (during partition, called West Germany). In between, in early 1938, following the Anschluss, Austrian players were eligible for the (Greater) German team,[2][3] which was eliminated in the first round at the 1938 FIFA World Cup, Germany's worst result in a World Cup.[4]
The build-up
In the first round, Austria had surprisingly won their group, ahead of Brazil even though they had lost to them. A rather lacklustre West Germany had only finished second in their group, following two scoreless draws. While the West German team still contained a number of players who had contributed to winning the 1974 World Cup, others had retired from the national team, being dissatisfied with the old-fashioned attitude of German Football Association (DFB) leaders and coach Helmut Schön, who at age 62 was about to retire after the tournament.
In the second round, the Austrians lost their first two games, against the Netherlands (1–5) and Italy (0–1), which meant that they were already eliminated from contention before the last game. The West Germans had managed another two draws against the Dutch (opponents in the 1974 final) and the Italians (opponents in the 1970 semi-final, the Game of the Century).
The final group games of the second round gave West Germany and Italy the opportunity to determine head to head who would advance to the Final. If their simultaneous games (both at 13:45 local time) ended in a draw (no extra-time or penalty shootout, as it was a group stage game), then the Netherlands would progress to the final and Italy would qualify for the third-place match. A draw between the Dutch and the Italians combined with a decisive five goal victory by West Germany over Austria would give the West Germans the advantage over the Dutch, and a berth in the Final. If the Netherlands–Italy game had a winner, West Germany could still qualify for the third place match by beating Austria, or in case of an Italian loss, even with a draw.
Second round, Group A
Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Netherlands | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 7 | 3 | +4 | 3 |
Italy | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | +1 | 3 |
West Germany | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Austria | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 6 | −5 | 0 |
Final fixtures for Group A
Austria | v | West Germany |
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Italy | v | Netherlands |
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Match summary
In both games, the first goal was scored in the 19th minute, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge scoring for West Germany and Ernie Brandts scoring for Italy with an own goal. When the Dutch equalised in the 49th minute, the West Germans were still four goals shy of advancing to the final. Then Berti Vogts scored in the 59th minute, but in his own net. Hans Krankl then scored to put Austria ahead, but Bernd Hölzenbein equalised for West Germany a few minutes later. When the Dutch scored what transpired to be their winning goal in the 76th minute, the West Germans were placed second in the group, ahead of the Italians, having a goal tally of 4–4, compared to the lesser 2–2 of Italy. West German fans could look forward to the third place match, until Krankl scored in the 87th minute to put Austria 3–2 ahead. The Germans were not able to score in the remaining minutes, and, having also now been eliminated, joined the Austrians on their already pre-arranged flight home.
The commentary provided during the last few minutes of the game by Edi Finger, and in particular his exclamation following Krankl's goal "Tor! Tor! Tor! Tor! Tor! Tor! I wer' narrisch!" are familiar to most Austrians and Germans from being repeated many times on radio and television. Although the Cordoba game was not a World Cup final, in Austrian popular culture Finger's commentary is comparable with Herbert Zimmermann's famous commentary at the end of the 1954 World Cup Final,[1] between West Germany and Hungary, the game often called The Miracle of Bern.
A translation of Finger's commentary follows:
"[Krankl] is in the box. He shoots! Goal! Goal! Goal! Goal! Goal! Goal! I am going bonkers! Krankl has scored. It is 3–2 for Austria! Ladies and gentlemen, we are hugging each other here, Rippel, my colleague, graduate engineer Posch, we're kissing each other ... 3–2 for Austria, by our Krankl's magnificent goal. He beat all of them. And just wait a minute, wait a minute and perhaps we can pour ourselves a small glass of wine. That's something you have to have seen. I'm standing up now, the South American [crowd]. I think we have beat them! However, the Germans attack again, watch out, headed away again. The ball goes to the left, to Pezzey, Pezzey, but lads, don't break down back there, stay upright! Still two minutes to go, the ball's with the Austrians, but we don't want to jinx it. There is a cross into the box, but Kreuz has saved again!
Germany sends everyone to the front. A chance for the Germans! Well? It is wide! Oh, Abramczik, I'd like to kiss Abramczik for it. He really helped us -- alone in front of the goal. Brave Abramczik has shot wide. The poor guy will fret. 30 seconds to go. 3–2 for Austria. After 47 years, ladies and gentlemen, an Austrian national team, but what a team, a world class team that's performing today, is in the lead 3–2 against the Federal Republic. And I don't dare to watch anymore. The ball's kicked out of the match. Referee Klein from Israel, a truly outstanding referee, it was not easy for him today, but he performed magnificently up to now. 45th minute, once again the ball's with Germany and Prohaska kicks it away. And now it is over! It's over, it's finished it's done, it's over! Germany has been beaten, ladies and gentlemen, for the first time in 47 years, Austria has defeated Germany."[5]
Aftermath
West German fans were dissatisfied with the performance and attitude of their 1978 team, contrasted with the Austrians, who fought fiercely with their neighbours in a game that had no significance to Austria in terms of further progression in the tournament. Finger's phrase "I wer' narrisch!" ("I'm going crazy!") becoming the slogan of several marketing and advertising campaigns.[6]
With a new coach, Jupp Derwall, the West Germans went on to win the 1980 European championship.[7] Then in 1982, at the next World Cup in Spain, West Germany and Austria met again, in a final group-stage game in Gijón. This time, the West Germans had to win to avoid elimination from the tournament, but doing so by one or two goals would send both teams through to the next round at the expense of Algeria, who had beaten West Germany 2-1 in the first game of the group. Hence, after West Germany scored early, the two teams kicked the ball around aimlessly for the rest of the match, in stark contrast to 1978, and to worldwide howls of derision. The game was subsequently dubbed the "Nichtangriffspakt von Gijón" (Non-aggression Pact of Gijón).[8]
Since that match in 1982, Germany has played in five World Cup finals, whilst Austria has only qualified for two World Cups (1990 and 1998), going out in the group stage both times. Austria also played the by now re-unified Germany at Euro 2008, a tournament co-hosted between Austria and Switzerland. On this occasion, Germany defeated Austria 1-0 to qualify for the next round and send the co-hosts out of the tournament.[9]
On 16 May 2008, exactly one month before the Euro 2008 group match between Austria and Germany, the Swiss performance artist Massimo Furlan staged a one-man re-enactment of the 1978 World Cup match between the sides in front of 2,500 spectators at Rapid Vienna's stadium. Furlan imitated Hans Krankl's match performance and goal celebrations, with Edi Finger jnr reproducing his father's famous radio commentary of the match.[10]
Match details
Austria | 3–2 | West Germany |
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Berti Vogts 59' (o.g.) Hans Krankl 66' 87' |
Report | Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 19' Bernd Hölzenbein 68' |
Austria
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West Germany
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References
- ^ a b c http://bundesligafanatic.com/germany-v-austria-1978-unravelling-the-shame-of-cordoba/
- ^ Fischer, Gerhard (1999). Stürmer für Hitler. Die Werkstatt. p. 107.
- ^ Konstantinou, Socratis. "The German national football team during the era of Nazis and the story of Austrian player Matthias Sindelar". socratisk (wordpress.com). Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "Germany in the World Cups: General Stats". The Soccer World Cups. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ Joshua, Rick (9 September 2015). "Unravelling the "Shame of Cordoba"". Bundesliga Fanatic. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
- ^ Hochwarter, Thomas (10 April 2009). "Edi ´I wer´ narrisch!´ Finger died 20 years ago". Austrian Times. Archived from the original on 8 December 2014. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
{{cite news}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "1980 UEFA European Championship". UEFA.com. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "World Cup Tales: The Shame Of Gijon, 1982". 200%. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "Austria 0 Germany 1". UEFA.com. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ Woebking, Angela (1 June 2008). "The Cordoba Miracle; actor Massimo Furlan reenacted Hans Krankl's heroic 1978 winning goal for Austria to live commentary By Eddy Finger Jr". The Vienna Review. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "APA - Austria Presse Agentur / 55-85 apa historisch ť zeitgeschichte online". Historisch.apa.at. 2004-12-20. Retrieved 2011-08-19.