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The Top 10 World Cup finals ever

Ahead of Qatar 2022's grand finale, Sports Mole selects the top 10 World Cup finals since the first took place back in 1930.

When South American champions Argentina and global title holders France convene at Lusail Stadium on Sunday, the 22nd World Cup final will play out before an audience of millions worldwide.

Football's showpiece occasion takes centre stage once again, and despite fears that pragmatism will prevail, fans' fingers remain crossed that Qatar 2022's grand finale will provide a treat for the purists.

Not always, though, does the final match its status as the beautiful game's ultimate stage - such are the stakes - and some have even been downright forgettable.

Trawling through the archives, then, Sports Mole now assesses all 21 previous deciders and selects the best 10 since the first trophy was raised almost a century ago.


10. 2006 - Italy 1-1 France (after extra time, Italy win 5-3 on penalties)

Referee Horacio Elizondo (C) of Argentina shows France's Zinedine Zidane (L) a red card next to Italy's Gennaro Gattuso during their World Cup 2006 final soccer match in Berlin July 9, 2006© Reuters

For all the drama of a penalty shootout to decide who would be crowned world champions, two main protagonists hogged centre stage in Berlin.

After France's 1998 hero Zinedine Zidane audaciously gave his nation the lead with a 'Panenka' penalty at the Olympiastadion, the man who had conceded that spot-kick later headed Italy level.

Outspoken centre-back Marco Materazzi was not finished there, though, as in extra time his antagonistic sledging of Zidane came to a jaw-dropping climax when the fiery Frenchman headbutted him squarely in the chest.

That was to be Zizou's last act in international football, and he could only watch on as Les Bleus slipped to defeat in a nailbiting shootout.


9. 1934 - Italy 2-1 Czechoslovakia

Another Azzurri triumph arrived in rather different style some seven decades earlier, as under the long shadow of Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini's fascist regime, the hosts reached their first final.

They faced Czechoslovakia at the since-closed Stadio Nazionale del PNF, and nearing the end of a close-fought contest the Czechs closed in on victory by taking a 71st minute lead.

Italy's Argentina-born winger Raimundo Orsi then hauled his adopted nation level with less than 10 minutes remaining, before Bologna legend Angelo Schiavio set off jubilant celebrations in Rome and beyond when his extra-time strike saw the World Cup's first European winners crowned.


8. 1978 - Argentina 3-1 Netherlands

Sport and politics are two separate matters? Like in Italy 44 years beforehand, Argentine authoritarianism - in the shape of military leadership - shaped the 1978 World Cup finals, in which the tournament hosts again won the game's greatest prize.

Four years after their 'Total Football' revolution took them to the final, the Netherlands reached the competition's showpiece again, but in an ill-tempered match which foreshadowed the extraordinary events of the two nations' clash in Qatar this year, they were ultimately overwhelmed by Argentina.

Having omitted a young Diego Maradona from their squad, the South American side made the most of partisan backing at Estadio Monumental, with Mario Kempes striking twice to effectively decide the outcome.

After his 38th-minute opener was cancelled out by Dick Nanninga's second-half header, Kempes scrambled the ball home in extra time, before Daniel Bertoni secured the trophy; leaving the dazzling Dutch once more empty-handed.


7. 1958 - Brazil 5-2 Sweden

Eight years on from their disastrous failure in the final on home soil - also known as 'the Maracanazo', which was essentially repeated in the semi-finals of 2014 - Brazil faced Sweden to decide the World Cup's destiny.

An early setback saw 35-year-old Milan star Nils Liedholm put the hosts in front at Solna's Rasunda Stadium, but a similarly legendary figure, Vava, then scored twice before the break to steer the Selecao back on track.

Following the interval, a certain 17-year-old prodigy named Pele took centre stage, and the Santos starlet scored twice to guide Brazil to the trophy.


6. 1974 - Netherlands 1-2 West Germany

Having thrilled the watching world with their intuitive artistry on the way to the final, the Netherlands seized the initiative by taking a second-minute lead in Munich, against hosts West Germany.

Stylish playmaker Johan Cruyff earned a penalty, which was in fact the first ever awarded in a World Cup final, and Johan Neeskens raised hopes of an Oranje victory from the spot.

However, when Paul Breitner later converted his own penalty to level the scores, the Dutch side caved to the seemingly inevitable: legendary marksman Gerd Muller pounced to put Germany in front.

Led by inspirational captain Franz Beckenbauer, the Germans' defence remained resolute, and they ultimately added global supremacy to their already-held European crown.


5. 1930 - Uruguay 4-2 Argentina

Estadio Centenario in Montevideo was the scene of the first-ever World Cup final, in which hosts Uruguay tackled regional rivals Argentina.

A rematch of the gold-medal decider at the 1928 Olympics, won by the Uruguayans, saw numerous Argentine supporters apparently cross into the neighbouring nation bellowing "Victoria o muerte!" (victory or death).

Pablo Dorado scored the first World Cup final goal in the 12th minute, but the inaugural tournament's top scorer Guillermo Stabile had subsequently put Argentina 2-1 ahead shortly before half time before Uruguay stormed back after the break.

With just a minute left on the clock, Hector Castro netted the Celeste's fourth and ensured FIFA president Jules Rimet would present a trophy later named after the Frenchman to the victorious home side.


4. 1970 - Brazil 4-1 Italy

Pele wheels away in celebration after scoring in the 1970 World Cup final against Italy© Reuters

The 1970 final in Mexico was certainly not the most closely contested - though the scores actually remained level heading into its final half-hour - but featured perhaps the most iconic performance by any World Cup-winning team throughout the ages.

At the Azteca, a teak-tough Italy side were ultimately swept aside by Brazil's 'Jogo Bonito', though Pele - making what was to be his last World Cup appearance - saw his headed opener equalised by Roberto Boninsegna just before the break.

It was deep into the second half, though, that the Selecao turned up the heat in sweltering Mexico City, and their final goal of a 4-1 win - a fluid passing move of great majesty and precision, finished with aplomb by captain Carlos Alberto - has since seared itself into the collective memory of fans around the globe.

Pele became the only player in history to win three World Cups, while a supporting cast of Clodoaldo, Gerson, Jairzinho - who had scored in every game - Rivellino and Tostao also sealed their place in football history.


3. 1986 - Argentina 3-2 West Germany

Argentina's Diego Maradona lifts the World Cup trophy after helping his team to the 1986 title© Reuters

Eight years after missing out on a place in the Argentina squad that triumphed so controversially on home soil, Diego Maradona's 'Hand of God' antics had helped the Albiceleste reach the 1986 World Cup final.

In another grand occasion at Mexico's imposing Azteca, the playmaking maestro took a back seat as Jose Luis Brown and Jorge Valdano put the Argentinians two goals up, and that is how it stayed until the 74th minute, when Karl-Heinz Rummenigge struck back. Soon after, Rudi Voller dramatically hauled West Germany level.

It was, perhaps inevitably, a moment of magic from Maradona which then avoided potential triumph turning into disaster, and his assist for Jorge Burruchaga's winner five minutes from full time proved the difference between two well-matched sides. At the final whistle, Argentina celebrated a second World Cup triumph in three attempts.


2. 1966 - England 4-2 West Germany

Sir Geoff Hurst scores England's fourth goal in the 1966 World Cup final© Reuters

Though subsequently followed by several decades of hurt, England's only global crown was won in the most thrilling style, as they overcame West Germany in a goalfest beneath the twin towers at Wembley Stadium.

Played in front of a crowd of more than 90,000 enthralled fans, the 1966 final got off to a fast start, with Helmut Haller and Geoff Hurst scoring for either side in the opening 20 minutes. Martin Peters later seemed to have grabbed the winner, but Wolfgang Weber's late equaliser took an absorbing encounter to extra time.

During the next 30 minutes, the Three Lions wrote football history as Hurst's 101st-minute shot struck the crossbar, bounced down and then came out: the referee consulted his linesman, Azeri official Tofiq Bahramov, who indicated the ball had crossed the line and England were ahead again.

As the crowd began to spill on to Wembley's hallowed turf, Hurst belted home an iconic fourth, and England's red-shirted heroes became legends.


1. 1954 - West Germany 3-2 Hungary

For all their reputation as arch-pragmatists, German teams have been involved in some memorable finals down the years - and none more so than in their incredible upset of an all-time great Hungary team in 1954's 'Miracle of Bern'.

Unbeaten in four years before a World Cup held in Switzerland, early goals from Ferenc Puskas and Zoltan Czibor put 'The Magical Magyars' firmly in the driving seat. That was to be expected, as they had already defeated West Germany 8-3 en route to the final, in a game which saw superstar Puskas suffer a hairline ankle fracture following a crunching challenge from German defender Werner Liebrich.

The Real Madrid forward therefore missed the quarter and semi-finals, and was still a shadow of his former self in Bern, where rank outsiders Germany recovered to pull themselves level by the 18th minute. They then survived Hungary hitting the woodwork several times; also clearing a number of shots off the line.

If that were not enough, Helmut Rahn netted what proved to be the winning goal six minutes from time, before a hotly-disputed offside ruling denied Puskas an 87th-minute equaliser.

So, it was the semi-professional Germans that pulled off one of their nation's most significant sporting feats, while Hungary's golden generation went unrewarded for both re-writing the record books and redefining tactical play, and they were never to come as close to global glory again.


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