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1950 Italy - The Tragedy Of Il Grande Torino
The
most poignant and tragic inclusion on the list is that of the 1950
Italy team. The Azzurri performed well below their World Cup pedigree
in Brazil, being eliminated at the first group stage, but circumstances
beyond their control dictated that the side was to be weakened. Il
Grande Torino had won four Serie A titles on the trot in the years
preceding 1949 and were in the clear to do so again, and also provided
as many as 10 national squad members. However, Torino perished in May
1949 in the Superga Air Disaster on their return home from a match in
Portugal. As a result it was a depleted Nazionale that travelled to
Brazil.
1954 Hungary - Military Service
Hungary's
Golden Squad of 1954 was based almost exclusively around Honved, a
small club from the village of Kispest, now a suburb of the capital.
The coach, Gusztav Sebes, was allegedly able to persuade the
authorities that players should be allowed to play there instead of
performing active military service. It proved to be the breeding ground
for Sebes' idea to have a deep-lying forward - a tactical innovation
that was a key contributor in their demolishing of the English.
Goalkeeper Grosics, Jozsef Boszik, Sandor Kocsis, Ferenc Puskas and
Zoltan Czibor all played at Honved. The Magic Magyars were ousted in
the final against West Germany.
1966 England - West Ham 4-2 West Germany
Any
old school Hammers fan will tell you that West Ham, and not just
England, won the 1966 World Cup. The east London side provided the
captain and the goalscorers in the final against West Germany. Bobby
Moore, Martin Peters and the hat-trick hero, Geoff Hurst, were all
graduates of the world renowned Academy of Football between 1958 and
1959. They were key components in Sir Alf Ramsey's team, even though
the latter duo were very much newcomers to the international scene,
with less than 10 caps between them heading into the finals.
1974 West Germany - Bayern Munich; The Joy Of Six
Bayern
provided the backbone for West Germany's 1974 success with no fewer
than six players from the club appearing in the final. Sepp Meier, Paul
Breitner, Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck, Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Mueller and
Uli Hoeness all started for the Germans in their home city as they beat
off the Dutch challenge. It was a golden era for that set of players,
who won the European Cup and Bundesliga earlier that same season.
Having six players from a single club in a final is still a World Cup
record.
 Beckenbauer busy looking for a non-Bayern player
1982 Italy - ItaloJuve I
There
is a saying in Italy that "a successful Juventus team makes a
successful Italy team" and that was certainly true in 1982. The
Bianconeri had just won yet another Scudetto to continue their
dominance under Giovanni Trapattoni and provided six of the first
choice starting XI of Italy's World Cup winners in Spain. Dino Zoff
captained the Azzurri, hardman Claudio Gentile famously man marked Zico
and Diego Maradona, libero Gaetano Scirea oozed class, midfielder Marco
Tardelli performed the most famous World Cup celebration by scoring the
second goal in the final, left back Antonio Cabrini had the looks, the
brilliance to erase his penalty miss at 0-0 in the final, and of course
striker Paolo Rossi was the ultimate hero after finishing the Mundial
as top scorer with six goals in his final three games including an
unforgettable hat-trick against Brazil and the opener in the final win
over West Germany.
 "That"celebration
1986 Soviet Union - The Appliance Of Science Fails Lobanovsky
Valeri
Lobanovsky was in charge of both USSR and Dynamo Kyiv at the time of
the Mexico tournament and brought along no fewer than 12 of his club
charges. The tactician received a lot of criticism for choosing his
favourites from club level and as it transpired, the Soviet Union fared
pretty poorly. Lobanovsky was renowned for his complex, methodical
approach and stated that the non-Dynamo members of the squad were
unable to produce his desired results. Igor Belanov's competiton was
notable in that he scored a hat-trick in the second round defeat to
Belgium and still ended up on the losing side. His club? Yes, you
guessed it.
1990 West Germany v Netherlands - The Milan Derby
One
of the most fascinating club v club, country v country clashes in World
Cup history occurred in San Siro in 1990. West Germany met Holland in
the second round with a fascinating subplot. Inter's Andreas Brehme,
Lothar Matthaeus and Juergen Klinsmann lined up for the Germans against
Milan's Frank Rijkaard, Marco van Basten and Ruud Gullit. Goals from
Brehme and Klinsmann helped decide a bad tempered tie between two of
international football's greatest rivals. Rijkaard and Rudi Voeller saw
red for fighting after only 20 minutes, with Rijkaard disgracing
himself by aiming two wads of spit on his opponent's perm.
2002 Germany - The Curse Of Neverkusen
The
Werkself may not have supplied many German representatives in the squad
as a whole but members of the Bayer side played a vital role for the
Nationalmannschaft in the far east. With a former Leverkusen striker as
coach, Voeller, the Germans lined up with Carsten Ramelow, Michael
Ballack, Bernd Schneider and Oliver Neuville in key positions. That
quartet, along with their club-mates had just come off a hugely
bittersweet season after losing out on the Bundesliga title, the DFB
Pokal and the Champions League at the final hurdle. There was more
anguish in store as the Nationalelf lost in the final to Brazil.
2006 Italy - ItaloJuve II
The
lead-up to the 2006 World Cup provided Italian football with some of
its blackest days. Calciopoli engulfed the peninsula with Juventus
among those clubs hardest hit with punishments. The Old Lady was sent
down to Serie B for her part in the scandal but the Turin club still
played a huge role in helping the Azzurri claim the world title.
Gianluigi Buffon, Gianluca Zambrotta, Fabio Cannavaro, Mauro
Camoranesi, Vincenzo Iaquinta and Alessandro Del Piero all appeared in
the final against France and another Juventino, David Trezeguet, missed
the vital penalty kick for Les Bleus.
 A great triumph for Serie B Juventus
2010 Spain - Barcelona's Tiki-Tactics
This
edition of the Spain squad sees a large chunk of the current Barcelona
side transplanted into the red of the national team. Carles Puyol,
Gerard Pique, Sergio Busquets, Xavi Hernandez, Andres Iniesta, Pedro
Rodriguez and David Villa have all played an integral part in getting
la Furia Roja to the final. Indeed, a non-Barcelona player has yet to
score for Spain in these championships. This is all the more remarkable
considering that Spain do not play with a Barca blueprint; Vincente Del
Bosque has his own way of doing things with the players at his
disposal. That is a testament to the adaptability of the Blaugrana
representatives in his panel.
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