Riva return inspires Italy triumph in 1968
viernes, 8 de abril de 2011
Resumen del artículo
The Azzurri were nine minutes from defeat in the first attempt to decide Europe's 1968 champions but, with Luigi Riva back, they returned to the fray 48 hours later as a different team.
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Cuerpo del artículo
Italy 2-0 Yugoslavia
(Riva 12, Anastasi 31)
Final replay
Rome, 10 June 1968
The Azzurri came within nine minutes of defeat in the first attempt to decide the 1968 UEFA European Football Championship winners but they returned to Rome's Stadio Olimpico 48 hours later as a different proposition, dominating Yugoslavia from the off.
Coach Ferruccio Valcareggi made five changes to his side, reflecting a desire to match Yugoslavia for power and pace – just when the Yugoslavians had none left. Two hard games, including a semi-final against England and then extra time versus Italy, had sapped them – and they did not have Italy's strength in depth. Any country that could call up Sandro Mazzola and Luigi Riva as replacements deserved to be regarded as the best in Europe.
Riva's recall made the difference. Returning from a broken leg (not for the first time), he exemplified the whole team: sometimes raw, sometimes clever, always in your face. He should have had a hat-trick, putting one header just wide, forcing a save with another when he ought to have scored, and volleying over an open goal after goalkeeper Ilija Pantelić let a high ball slip through his fingers.
When Riva did score, it was with his famous left foot, after Angelo Domenghini's poorly hit shot turned into a through ball. Marginally but definitely onside, Riva turned and hit it low across Pantelić.
Meanwhile, Pietro Anastasi was having a better game this time, all speed and sharpness: taking the ball down on his chest after Riva won it in the air, he volleyed just wide as he fell. Riva gave him some grief for the miss – it was 0-0 at the time – but joined the celebrations when Anastasi flipped up Giancarlo De Sisti's angled pass and volleyed in splendidly from the edge of the box after the half-hour.
That was game, set and match, because there was nothing coming through from the opposition. Dragan Džajić was a major disappointment; Tarcisio Burgnich, one of the great right-backs, had no problems here. Mirsad Fazlagić overlapped well as usual, yet Jovan Aćimović did little and the balding Idriz Hošić, Yugoslavia's one replacement, was never capped again.
In the second half, Riva wasted his opportunities and Dino Zoff had to make one scrambling save, but it was all academic. Having booked their place in the final with a coin toss against the Soviet Union, and come through a taxing first encounter in the 1-1 draw with Yugoslavia two days before, the hosts were possibly due an easier ride.
What happened next?
Italy were among the favourites for the FIFA World Cup in Mexico two years later and advanced to their first final in 32 years by beating West Germany 4-3 in the 'Game of the Century'. There they found Brazil in imperious form, going down 4-1. The Azzurri did win the World Cup in 1982 and 2006 but continental glory has since evaded them. The 1968 final was as good as it got for Yugoslavia, though they twice reached the World Cup quarter-finals and finished fourth at the 1976 UEFA European Championship. Yugoslavia was dissolved in 2003.