URUGUAY
1950
URUGUAY 1950 WORLD CHAMPIONStanding: Varela, López (Manager), Tejera, Juan Carlos González, Vázquez (Trainer), Matías González, Máspoli, Rodríguez Andrade and Abate (Trainer).
Bended: Álvarez (Trainer), Fígoli (Trainer), Ghiggia, Pérez, Míguez, Schiaffino, Vidal and Kirshberg (Masseur). MANAGER: Juan LÓPEZ
GOALKEEPERS:
1 Roque MÁSPOLI
Aníbal PAZ
DEFENDERS:
2 Matías GONZÁLEZ
3 Eusebio TEJERA
Héctor VILCHES
William MARTÍNEZ
MIDFIELDERS:
4 Schubert GAMBETTA
5 Obdulio VARELA
6 Víctor Rodríguez ANDRADE
Rodolfo PINI
Wáshington ORTUÑO
Juan Carlos GONZÁLEZ
FORWARDS:
7 Alcides GHIGGIA
8 Julio PÉREZ
9 Óscar MÍGUEZ
10 Juan Alberto SCHIAFFINO
11 Rubén MORÁN
Luis RIJO
Ernesto VIDAL
Carlos ROMERO
Júan BURGUEÑO
Julio César BRITOS2-3-5/2-5-3 FORMATIONS:Uruguay Vs Bolivia - World Cup First Round Game (02/07/1950)
Numbers: 1 Máspoli - 2 Matías González - 3 Tejera - 4 Juan Carlos González - 5 Varela - 6 Rodríguez Andrade - 7 Ghiggia - 8 Pérez - 9 Míguez - 10 Schiaffino - 11 VidalGK MÁSPOLI
CB M. GONZÁLEZ
CB TEJERA
DMF J.C. GONZÁLEZ
DMF VARELA
DMF RODRÍGUEZ ANDRADE
SS/AMF PÉREZ
SS/AMF SCHIAFFINO
RWF GHIGGIA
LWF VIDAL
CF MÍGUEZSubstitution: NoneCaptain: Obdulio Varela
Short Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Long Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino/Obdulio Varela
Free Kick 2: Obdulio Varela
Left Corner: Ernesto Vidal
Right Corner: Alcides Ghiggia
Penalty: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Players to go up on free kicks and corners: None
Uruguay Vs Spain - World Cup Final Round Game (09/07/1950)
Numbers: 1 Máspoli - 2 Matías González - 3 Tejera - 4 Juan Carlos González - 5 Varela - 6 Rodríguez Andrade - 7 Ghiggia - 8 Pérez - 9 Míguez - 10 Schiaffino - 11 VidalGK MÁSPOLI
CB M. GONZÁLEZ
CB TEJERA
DMF J.C. GONZÁLEZ
DMF VARELA
DMF RODRÍGUEZ ANDRADE
SS/AMF PÉREZ
SS/AMF SCHIAFFINO
RWF GHIGGIA
LWF VIDAL
CF MÍGUEZSubstitution: NoneCaptain: Obdulio Varela
Short Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Long Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino/Obdulio Varela
Free Kick 2: Obdulio Varela
Left Corner: Ernesto Vidal
Right Corner: Alcides Ghiggia
Penalty: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Players to go up on free kicks and corners: None
Uruguay Vs Sweden - World Cup Final Round Game (13/07/1950)
Numbers: 1 Paz - 2 Matías González - 3 Tejera - 4 Gambetta - 5 Varela - 6 Rodríguez Andrade - 7 Ghiggia - 8 Pérez - 9 Míguez - 10 Schiaffino - 11 VidalGK PAZ
CB M. GONZÁLEZ
CB TEJERA
DMF GAMBETTA
DMF VARELA
DMF RODRÍGUEZ ANDRADE
SS/AMF PÉREZ
SS/AMF SCHIAFFINO
RWF GHIGGIA
LWF VIDAL
CF MÍGUEZSubstitution: NoneCaptain: Obdulio Varela
Short Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Long Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino/Obdulio Varela
Free Kick 2: Obdulio Varela
Left Corner: Ernesto Vidal
Right Corner: Alcides Ghiggia
Penalty: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Players to go up on free kicks and corners: None
Brazil Vs Uruguay - World Cup Final Round Game - "The Final" (16/07/1950)
Numbers: 1 Máspoli - 2 Matías González - 3 Tejera - 4 Gambetta - 5 Varela - 6 Rodríguez Andrade - 7 Ghiggia - 8 Pérez - 9 Míguez - 10 Schiaffino - 11 MoránGK MÁSPOLI
CB M. GONZÁLEZ
CB TEJERA
DMF GAMBETTA
DMF VARELA
DMF RODRÍGUEZ ANDRADE
SS/AMF PÉREZ
SS/AMF SCHIAFFINO
RWF GHIGGIA
LWF MORÁN
CF MÍGUEZSubstitution: None
Note: Rubén Morán, the substitute left wing, played the final since Ernesto Vidal was injuredCaptain: Obdulio Varela
Short Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Long Free Kick: Juan Alberto Schiaffino/Obdulio Varela
Free Kick 2: Obdulio Varela
Left Corner: Rubén Morán
Right Corner: Alcides Ghiggia
Penalty: Juan Alberto Schiaffino
Players to go up on free kicks and corners: None
Team Strategy★Centre Attack
★Right Side Attack
★Counter Attack
INFOS:This was still a skilful Uruguay side, but it also had a toughness, physical and mental.
A draw against Spain and a win over Sweden meant Uruguay had to win its last match to be champions. Its opponents, Brazil, had won both its first two games in the final pool and required only a tie in front of an estimated crowd of over 200,000 in the Maracana. Most thought it was a foregone conclusion. The early editions of O Mundo on the day of the final even carried a team photograph of the Brazil side under the headline "These are the world champions." Obdulio Varela, Uruguay's captain, saw the newspaper on display at the newsstand in his hotel on the morning of the final, and was so enraged that he bought every copy they had, took them back to his room, laid them out on his bathroom floor and encouraged his teammates to urinate on them. That was garra.
Before the game, as the players waited to take the field, Angelo Mendes de Moraes, the state governor of Rio de Janeiro, gave an address in which he hailed, "You Brazilians, whom I consider victors of the tournament ... You players who in less than a few hours will be acclaimed champions by millions of your compatriots ... You who have no equals in the terrestrial hemisphere ... You who are so superior to every other competitor.... You whom I already salute as conquerors." Julio Perez, Uruguay's inside-right, was so overwhelmed by nerves that he wet himself during the anthems. That wasn't garra, but playing superbly afterwards was.
Uruguay's coach, Juan Lopez, had seen how Switzerland had unsettled Brazil in the first group stage with their verrou (bolt) system, dropping deep behind the ball when out of possession with a libero sweeping behind the back line. The war had cut Uruguay off from tactical developments in Europe, but Lopez liked what he saw, realized the formation's effectiveness and instructed the fullback Matias Gonzalez to stay deep, almost as a sweeper, which meant that Eusebio Tejera, the other fullback, became effectively a center back. The two wing-halves, Schubert Gambetta and Victor Andrade, were set to man-mark the Brazilian wingers, Chico and Albino Friaca, while Varela and the two inside-forwards played deeper than usual in what was essentially a forerunner of a modern 4-3-3.
Brazil, subdued rather than neutralized, started well, but they couldn't find an opener. Jair hit the post while Roque Maspoli, in the journalist Brian Glanville's words, "performed acrobatic prodigies in goal" and, after 28 minutes, Varela punched Bigode, Brazil's left back. Both players agree it was barely more than a tap, but in the mythology of the game it was at that moment that the fear enveloped Bigode, at that moment that he became "a coward," the taunt that would pursue him for the rest of his life.
Friaca put Brazil ahead two minutes after halftime, but Uruguay knew by then it could live with Brazil. With 24 minutes remaining, it equalized, Alcides Ghiggia accelerating on the right and crossing low for Juan Schiaffino to sweep the ball in at the near post. "Silence in the Maracana," said Brazil's coach Flavio Costa, "which terrified our players." A draw would still have been enough for Brazil, but the momentum was against them. Ghiggia exchanged passes with Perez, ran on, and with Moacyr Barbosa, the Brazilian goalkeeper, anticipating a cross, struck a bobbling shot in at the near post. The unthinkable had happened, and Uruguay, not Brazil, was world champion.
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