The
Uruguay World Cup Finals Party Pre-England June 1954 |
Player |
Birthdate |
Age |
Pos |
Club |
App |
G |
7. Abbadíe Gismero,
Julio
César |
7 September 1930 |
23 |
OR |
CA Peñarol |
11 |
8 |
19. Ambrois, Javier |
9 May 1932 |
22 |
IR |
Club Nacional de Football |
9 |
3 |
11. Borges, Carlos Ariel |
14 January 1932 |
22 |
OL |
CA Peñarol |
4 |
4 |
16. Carbello,
Néstor
E. |
3 February 1929 |
24 |
CHB |
Club Nacional de Football |
10 |
0 |
22. Castro Sánchez, Luis Ernesto |
31 July 1921 |
32 |
F |
Club Nacional de Football |
19 |
4 |
17. Cruz, Luis Alberto |
28 April 1925 |
29 |
LHB |
Club Nacional de Football |
10 |
0 |
13.
Davoine Genta,
Mirto Lenín |
13 February 1933 |
21 |
D |
CA Peñarol |
1 |
0 |
8. Hohberg, Juan Eduardo |
19 June 1926 in
Córdoba, Argentina |
28 |
F |
CA Peñarol |
3 |
0 |
6. Leopardi Laporta, Roberto
Rafael |
19 July 1933 |
20 |
M |
Club Nacional de Football |
3 |
0 |
12.
Fauque,
Julio Maceiras |
22 April 1926 |
28 |
G |
Danubio FC |
1 |
3ᵍᵃ |
3.
Martínez
Carreras, Wílliam Ruben |
13 January 1928 |
26 |
LB |
Rampla Juniors FC |
13 |
0 |
1.
Máspoli Arbelvide, Roque
Gastón |
12 October 1917 |
36 |
Gk |
CA Peñarol |
32 |
0 |
20. Méndez, Omar Pedro |
7 August 1934 |
19 |
F |
Club Nacional de Football |
4 |
1 |
9. Míguez Antón, Omar Óscar |
5 December 1927 |
25 |
CF |
CA Peñarol |
19 |
18 |
21. Pérez
Gutiérrez, Julio Gervasio |
19 June 1926 |
28 |
IL |
Club Nacional de Football |
17 |
7 |
15. Rivera, Urbano |
1 April 1926 |
28 |
M |
Danubio FC |
7 |
0 |
4.
Rodríguez Andrade,
Víctor
Pablo |
2 May 1927 |
27 |
RHB |
CA Peñarol |
24 |
0 |
2. Santamaría Iglesias, José
Emilio |
31 July 1929 |
24 |
RB |
Club Nacional de Football |
6 |
0 |
10. Schiaffino, Juan Alberto |
28 July 1925 |
28 |
IL |
CA Peñarol |
18 |
7 |
18. Souto Castro, Rafael Ángel
|
24 October 1930 |
23 |
F |
Club Nacional de Football |
6 |
0 |
14. Tejera Kirkerup, Eusebio
Ramón |
6 January 1922 |
32 |
D |
Club Nacional de Football |
31 |
0 |
5. Muiños Varela, Obdulio Jacinto |
20 September 1917 |
36 |
CHB |
CA Peñarol |
44 |
8 |
Party details correct up to
and including Uruguay's match against Scotland on 17 June 1954.
Diary
FIFA retained the
mini-league system but couldn't resist a little tinkering. Instead
of each team playing all the others in the groups, two were seeded
and would play only the two non-seeds - and any matches drawn
after ninety minutes would go to extra-time. Arbitrary and
confusing. |
Cris Freddi's
Complete Book of the World Cup |
GROUP 3 |
16 June 1954 -
Wankdorf, Berne - 20,000 - Arthur Ellis (ENG)
URUGUAY (0) 2
Míguez 71, Schiaffino 84
CZECHOSLOVAKIA (0) 0
URUGUAY Roque Máspoli, José
Santamaría, William Martínez, Víctor Rodríguez Andrade, Obdulío
Varela (c), Luis Cruz, Julio César Abbadíe, Javier Ambrois, Omar
Míguez, Juan Schiaffino, Carlos Borges. Juan López. CZECHOSLOVAKIA
Theodor Reimann, Frantisek Safránek, Jirí Hledík, Ladislav Novák (c),
Jirí Trnka, Jan Hertl, Ladislav Hlaváćek, Ota Hemele, Ladislav Kačáni,
Emil Pažický, Jirí Pešek.
Karel Borhy, Jaroslav Cejp et al.
If anything, the holders had an even
stronger team than in 1950, Ghiggia had gone to Italy, but Abbadíe
and Borges were explosive replacements. Santamaria, later a
defensive pillar at Real Madrid, played for Spain in the 1962
finals. Nevertheless Uruguay had trouble with the
heavy pitch and a Czech defence in which Hledík and Reimann had
excellent games. Eventually Míguez scored from Varela's pass and Schiaffino curled in a free-kick. Santamaría had to make a saving
tackle from the stocky Hlaváćek, but Uruguay were generally in
charge, against a rather anonymous team. |
Cris Freddi's
Complete Book of the World Cup |
19 June 1954 - Sankt
Jakob, Basle - 34,000 - Vincenzo Orlandi (ITA)
URUGUAY (2) 7
Borges 17, 48, 58, Míguez 31, 82, Abbadíe 55, 87
SCOTLAND (0) 0
URUGUAY Roque Máspoli, José
Santamaría, William Martínez, Víctor Rodríguez Andrade, Obdulío
Varela (c), Luis Cruz, Julio César Abbadíe, Javier Ambrois, Omar
Míguez, Juan Schiaffino, Carlos Borges. Juan López.
SCOTLAND Fred Martin, Willie Cunningham (c), Jock Aird, Tommy
Docherty, Jimmy Davidson, Doug Cowie, John Mackenzie, Willie
Fernie, Neil Mochan, Allan Brown, Willie Ormond.
Andy Beattie.
Any chance Scotland had of living up
to their captain's bravado ('What's to stop us beating Uruguay?')
probably disappeared when Andy Beattie resigned as manager after
the Austria match - but it wouldn't have made much difference if
he'd stayed: Scotland couldn't cope with the Uruguayan wingers,
especially on such a hot day. Abbadíe beat Aird
and rolled the ball across the face of the goal for Borges to hold
off a man and beat another before shooting high and fiercely past
Martin. Schiaffino, rather overshadowed by Ghiggia and the defence
four years earlier, was now the complete inside-forward: speed,
vision, a fierce shot for someone so emaciated. According to
Docherty, poor Cunningham developed 'a sunburned tongue'
trying to contain him. He drew two defenders to set Míguez free in
front of Martin, who seemed to get a touch to the shot.
In the second half, Máspoli alomost fumbled a low shot into his
own net, but Borges ran in to score before a tackle could come in,
then beat a man before shooting from close range on the left.
Abbadíe, stocky and elusive, twice ran clear on Martin from the right,
scoring first with a cross-shot then by going round the keeper.
Scottish embarrassment was completed in the last minute when
Mackenzie shot feebly into Máspoli's hands from only a few
yards out. The scale of this record defeat should have taught a
few lessons in preparation and team selection, but four years
later they still hadn't been learned. |
Cris Freddi's
Complete Book of the World Cup |
Tuesday, 22 June 1954 - It is
reported that the Uruguay players are on £65 a man to beat England.
They already in receipt of £3 a day allowance.
Not content with the
complications they'd arranged for the group matches, FIFA had
decided on a free draw for the knockout stage, leaving the
possibility of the group winners playing each other in the
quarter-finals instead of being rewarded with matches against the
runners-up. And the two strongest teams could well meet in the
semi-finals. |
Cris Freddi's
Complete Book of the World Cup |
Saturday, 26 June 1954 -
Better go through
the Uruguayan goals first, because Merrick was at fault with the
last three and has generally been blamed for England's defeat
(actually the Uruguayan manager said 'Gil Merrick estuvo
magnifico,' which is stretching it a bit). He couldn't do
anything about the first. Borges' cut-back from the left-hand goal
line was mishit by one team mate and missed by another's attempted
backheel flick - so Borges came off the goal line to smash the
ball in. Uruguay went ahead for the second time
when Dickinson headed away a free kick and Varela returned it with
a high curling shot from twenty yards which Merrick might have
reached. Schiaffino 'rolled a slowish simple-looking shot . . .
Merrick seemed to turn his back and fall down facing his own
goal.' Then, perhaps unsighted, he didn't get down to cover
Ambrois' optimistic cross-shot. But pointing the
finger at goalkeepers is an old excuse. England played their best
World Cup match so far - and it wasn't good enough to beat a team
which ended the match with eight fit men after injuries to Andrade
(bandaged thigh), Abbadíe and Varela. There had also been
pre-match worries over Borges, Schiaffino and Miguez! And if
Matthews hit a stanchion in the side netting, then Ambrois hit the
bar. Uruguay were a great team and England didn't do badly to lose
4-2. They equalised when Wilshaw's reverse pass
was put away by Lofthouse's left-footed cross-shot. Then Máspoli
saved 'miraculously' from Lofthouse at close range. England's
second goal was poked in by Finney after Máspoli had saved
from Lofthouse, his follow-up going between Varela's legs and past
another defender on the line. But the second and third Uruguayan
goals came from free kicks conceded by Byrne, who couldn't cope
with Abbadíe; Finney, discouraged by Andrade's strong tackling,
was a big-occasion flop yet again; and England fell into
individualistic play in the second half, which played into the
Uruguayans' hands. And the average age of the team was over 30. As Schiaffino
said, if they could find some younger players.
|
Cris Freddi's
Complete Book of the World Cup |
SEMI-FINAL |
30 June 1954 - Sankt
Jakob, Basle - 57,000 - Vincenzo Orlandi (ITA)
HUNGARY (1) (2) 4
Czibor 12, Hidegkuti 47, Kocsis 109,
116 URUGUAY (0) 2
Hohberg 76, 87
HUNGARY Gyula Grosics, Jenõ Buzánszky, Mihály Lantos, József Bozsik
(c), Gyula Lóránt, József Zakariás, László Budai, Sándor Kocsis, Péter Palotas, Nándor Hidegkuti,
Zoltán, Czibor. Gusztáv Sebes (coach Gyula Mándi) URUGUAY Roque Máspoli, José
Santamaría, William Martínez (c), Víctor Rodríguez Andrade,
Néstor Carballo, Luis Cruz, Rafael Souto, Javier Ambrois,
Juan Schiaffino, Juan Eduardo Hohberg, Carlos Borges. Juan López.
An outstanding candidate for greatest
international match of all time, it might have been really quite
good if both teams had been full strength. Hungary had shown there
was life after Puskás, but Uruguay were without Varela
(whose great international career was over), Abbadíe and Miguez.
The Hungarians tried to take advantage with all-out attack, Palotás
forcing a save from Máspoli, Hidegkuti and Bozsik shooting
just wide. They were gifted the lead by Máspoli, who should have saved Czibor's
mishit cross-shot rather than just getting his hand to it.
Uruguay's first real chance didn't come till the 39th minute, when
Schiaffino went round Grosics but couldn't keep his balance. Then
Budai beat Cruz and crossed for Hidegkuti to score with a
marvellous diving header right under the keeper's nose. Máspoli,
a hero of 1950 but now 36 and looking rather heavy, was slow to
get across. It looked all over, especially as
Uruguay were hampered by the wet conditions (they beat Scotland
and England in sunshine) - but true to history they'd made for
themselves, they came back into it. Hohberg, their naturalised
Argentinian, scored with a low cross-shot after being put clear by
a short ball from Schiaffino. With time running out, the latter
beat two men and put Hohberg through again, to bundle in the
rebound after Grosics saved his first shot. It's
doubtful if anyone headed a ball like Sándor Kocsis, certainly
no-one else who stood only 5' 9. Quite slim with it, he had a neck
so thick it looked deformed - and TV footage confirms the power of
those headers, some from around the penalty spot - so it wasn't
just the stuff of legend. Almost as good on the ground, he scored
75 goals in only 68 matches before the 1956 revolution cut short
his international career. He scored in ten consecutive games for
Hungary (1951-52) but not in the Olympic Final. Now he'd scored 13
in the last five with only the Final to come.
Souto is sometimes referred to by his first name Ángel, but
usually as Rafael. |
Cris Freddi's
Complete Book of the World Cup |
Uruguay
Form: last six
games |
L D
D W
W W f 21:a 9
success: 67% |
241 |
10 April 1954 -
Uruguay 1 Paraguay 4 [1-?]
Estadio Centenario, Montevideo |
Míguez
Martínez (2), Vázquez, Romero |
Fr |
HL |
242 |
18 April 1954 -
Paraguay 1 Uruguay 1 [1-1]
Estadio del Club Libertad, Asunción |
Romero
Abbadíe |
AD |
243 |
23 May 1954 - Switzerland 3 Uruguay 3
[1-1] Stade Olympique de La Pontaise, Lausanne |
Casali (pen),
Antenen, Ballaman
Borges, Schiaffino, Martínez
|
AD |
244 |
5 June 1954 - Saar 1 Uruguay 7
[1-3] Stadion Ludwigspark, Saarbrücken |
Niederkirchner
Varela, Schiaffino (2),
Pérez, Ambrois (3) |
AW |
245 |
16 June 1954 -
Uruguay 2 Czechoslovakia 0 [0-0]
Wankdorf Stadion, Berne |
Míguez, Schiaffino |
WCF |
NW |
246 |
19 June 1954 -
Uruguay 7 Scotland 0 [2-0] Sankt Jakob Stadium, Basel |
Borges (3),
Míguez
(2),
Abbadíe
(2) |
NW |
____________________
CG
|