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{{Short description|1950s Hungary national football team}}
{{other uses}}
{{other uses}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{multiple issues|POV = August 2012|peacock = August 2012|refimprove = August 2012}}
{{More citations needed|date=July 2020}}
[[File:Aranycsapat1.jpg|right|upright|thumb|420px|A permanent exhibition that houses historic items of the team in [[Budapest]], [[Hungary]]]]
{{Update|date=August 2021}}
}}
[[File:Golden Team 1953.jpg|thumb|500px|right|{{center|'''The Golden Team in 1953'''<br />''front row:'' [[Mihály Lantos]], [[Ferenc Puskás]], [[Gyula Grosics]]<br />''back row:'' [[Gyula Lóránt]], [[Jenő Buzánszky]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti]], [[Sándor Kocsis]], [[József Zakariás]], [[Zoltán Czibor]], [[József Bozsik]], [[László Budai]]}}]]
The '''Golden Team''' ({{langx|hu|Aranycsapat}}, {{IPA-hu|ˈɒrɒɲˈt͡ʃɒpɒt|pron}}) refers to the [[Hungary national football team]] of the 1950s. It is associated with several notable matches, including the quarter-final ("[[Battle of Berne (1954 FIFA World Cup)|Battle of Berne]]") against Brazil, semi-final (against [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]]) and final of the [[1954 FIFA World Cup]] ("[[1954 FIFA World Cup final|The Miracle of Bern]]"). The team inflicted notable defeats on then-footballing world powers [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]], [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]], [[England national football team|England]], [[Germany national football team|Germany]], [[Brazil national football team|Brazil]] and [[Italy national football team|Italy]] before the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1956|1956 Hungarian Revolution]] caused the breakup of the side. The Golden Team was also known by different nicknames, such as the ''Mighty Magyars'', the ''Magical Magyars'', and the ''Magnificent Magyars''.


{{MedalTableTop | name = no | medals =
The '''Golden Team''', also known as the ''Magical Magyars'', the ''Marvelous Magyars'', the ''Magnificent Magyars'', or the ''Mighty Magyars'' refers to renowned and record-breaking varsity [[Hungary national football team]] of the 1950s. In 1952 it gained the Olympic gold medal, in 1953 became Central European champion, in 1954 it was the finalist in the [[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]] being nominated by [[FIFA]] as the "''Best Team of the Tournament''". It is praised, among other accomplishments, for being the team that re-invented football in the [[post-war|post-WWII era]] that influenced and irrigated soccer's tactical dialogue in the 1950s. It is associated with a number of historically significant games of the 20th century, including the “''[[England v Hungary (1953)|Match of the Century]]''”, the “''[[Battle of Berne]]''”, a 1954 World Cup semi-final with Uruguay and the “''[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|Miracle of Berne]]''”. Inflicting maiden defeats on perennial world powers [[England national football team|England]] and [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]], one of the side's last unified actions consigned an obdurate [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]] team to their maiden defeat at home mere weeks before a spontaneous national uprising against the Soviets precipitated the breakup of the side.
{{Medal|Competition|[[Football at the Summer Olympics|Olympic Games]]}}
{{Medal|Gold|[[1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Helsinki]]|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|Team]]}}
{{Medal|Competition|[[FIFA World Cup|World Cup]]}}
{{MedalSilver|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 Switzerland]]|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|Team]]}}
{{Medal|Competition|[[Central European International Cup]]}}
{{MedalGold|[[1948–53 Central European International Cup|1948–53 Central Europe]]|[[1948–53 Central European International Cup|Team]]}}
}}
Between 1950 and 1956, the team played 69 games, recorded 58 victories, 10 draws and is generally considered to have suffered only [[1954 FIFA World Cup final|one defeat]], in the 1954 World Cup final against West Germany.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.fifa.com/fifaplus/en/articles/mighty-magyars-and-hungarys-four-year-unbeaten-streak|title=Mighty Magyars and Hungary’s four-year unbeaten streak|work=FIFA}}</ref> During this process they scored 436 goals.


Under the [[World Football Elo Ratings|Elo rating system]] they achieved the highest rating recorded by a national side (2231 points, achieved on 30 June 1954). In 2016 the [[BBC]] listed the team as the best international football team ever in football history.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/36387046|title=The greatest international team ever?|work=BBC Sport}}</ref>
The team's brilliance from the spring of 1950 lasted for six years until its partial meltdown after the ill-fated [[1956 Hungarian Revolution]] — a [[Flashpoint (politics)|flashpoint]] in the [[Cold War]] and a strikingly heroic and consequential event viewed as having rent the first major blow against the panoply of the [[Second World|monolithic communist order]]. It is credited with directly leading to a future tense football that marked a new chapter in the game's tactical scope for positional fluidity, thus rendering contemporary form and styles of the game outmoded. It introduced a powerful revolutionary ground game with its polyvalent [[Formation (association football)|quasi-4-2-4 offense]] and an early approximation towards the famous 360-degree cosmopolitan ‘[[Total Football]]' strategy that later the [[Netherlands national football team|Dutch football scene]] operated. The heirs to Hungary's 4-2-4 tactical shape were eventual world champions [[Brazil national football team|Brazilian teams]] who adopted, emulated and enriched their legacy for the 1958, 1962 and 1970 FIFA World Cups.


The team is generally credited for successfully implementing an early form of "[[Total Football]]", later used effectively by the [[Netherlands national football team|Dutch]] in the 1970s. The team is also generally recognized for introducing new, scientific coaching and tactical innovations, which were subsequently adopted throughout the game. The team's success became a subject of national pride in a [[Hungarian People's Republic|period of oppression by the communist regime]] imposed on Hungary by the Soviet Union. In this period any "nationalistic" or even patriotic expression was strongly disapproved of, since these were considered being against the internationalist ideal of the communist government. In this atmosphere, international sport events were the only tolerated fields of expression of national pride.
The ensemble was built around a core talent syndicate of a half-a-dozen world-class players, led by its talismanic captain [[Ferenc Puskás]], prodigal goalscorer [[Sándor Kocsis]], deep-lying centre-forward [[Nándor Hidegkuti]], swift and sprightly winger [[Zoltán Czibor]], midfield choreographer [[József Bozsik]], who set the tenor for the tactical nous going forward, and a first rate goalkeeper in [[Gyula Grosics]]. The incomparable attacking nexus of Puskás—Kocsis—Hidegkuti produced through their careers a windfall of 198 goals, and critically considered by many to be the greatest forward line in history. The singular un-repeatable case of Puskás and Kocsis working indivisibly supplied history the first and only occasion where the No. 1 and No. 2 world record setters for most international goals were involved on the same side. [[Mihály Lantos]], [[Gyula Lóránt]], [[József Zakariás]] and [[Jenő Buzánszky]] modeled a praiseworthy and oft-outperforming defense.


==Key people==
The Golden Teams' sojourn as the giants of world football has since been unmatched and merits a closer visit of performances. Apart from the very controversial [[1954 World Cup Final]] match, the team would suffer no defeats for 6 years, compiling 42 victories and 7 draws — a record that lifts the side into the sphere of legend. Under the [[World Football Elo Ratings]] system that ranks all national teams across the many given eras, they achieved the highest rating recorded in history by a national side (2166 points, June 1954). The constant and their essential hard currency was cogent offensive bandwidth within a 50 game period that leavened the sport with an astonishing 215 goals — averaging an output of 4.3 goals per game. It was around these games that their golden age and supremacy was framed.
[[File:Aranycsapat.png|thumb|right|The famous 2-3-3-2 formation employed by the side]]
The team was built around a core of six key players: [[Ferenc Puskás]], [[Sándor Kocsis]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti]], [[Zoltán Czibor]], [[József Bozsik]] and [[Gyula Grosics]].


The manager of the team was [[Gusztáv Sebes]], who had been a [[trade union]] organizer in [[Budapest]] and pre-war [[Paris]] at [[Renault]] car factories, and was therefore accorded a political clean bill of health to run affairs by the Deputy Sports Minister.
One of the most technically superb teams in history, by its striking number of victories, tactical renovation in company with its acclaimed matches, the side ranks as one of [[association football|association sports]]’ most dominant forces of the 20th century. As the definitive sporting force from the Socialist Bloc of the era, it was also a tool used by communist authorities in the propaganda war with the [[Western world|Cold War West]], being held up as emblematic of [[socialist]] ideals by virtue of liberating the genius that lay dormant in the [[proletariat]]. Its sporting prominence has not gone unremarked upon by postwar historians who noted its causal effect on [[Wirtschaftswunder|West German]] and [[Hungary|Hungarian]] political and socio-economic trends, and nationalistic streams of consciousness following one of the most famous of World Cup competitions in 1954.
Sebes can be credited with three key innovations. Firstly, he implemented fitness regimes for his players, as well as a club-like policy at international level to give impetus to regular practice sessions.


Secondly, he was responsible for the tactical concept of a deep-lying centre forward. At the time, the majority of footballing sides adopted the [[WM formation]], where the centre forward spearheaded an attack line of 3 forwards and 2 [[Winger (sports)|wingers]]. Sebes's tactic was to withdraw the centre forward back to the midfield, as well as dropping the wingers back to the midfield when necessary. This effectively created an extremely flexible 3–2–3–2 formation, allowing the team to quickly switch between attack and defense. The tactic also drew defenders out of position, as centre halves used to man-marking a centre forward would follow the deep-lying centre forward back to the midfield.
Current evidence is mounting and surfacing in the 21st century in a widening scope from within Germany both on the scholarly (University of Leipzig, Oct. 2010) and historical eye witness levels (Switzerland, 2004) giving widely held suspicions credence that the Hungarians' defeat in the 1954 World Cup Final match was referable to West Germany's use of [[performance-enhancing drugs]] and harsh uneven refereeing due to the eco-political zeitgeist of the times.


Thirdly, Sebes encouraged his players to be versatile – the ideal would be for any of his players to be able to play in any position. This was a revolutionary idea – most players were used to playing in one specific position. This was an early form of [[Total Football]]. Ferenc Puskas commented, "When we attacked, everyone attacked, and in defence it was the same. We were the prototype for Total Football."<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20110115075922/http://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/news/newsid=510979.html FIFA.com]</ref>
== All-Time International Football Teams Rankings ==
[[File:GTlineup.jpg|right|thumb|440px|The lineup of the Golden Team, that earned 43 victories, 6 draws, and 1 defeat over the course of 6 years.]]


Finally, the influence of [[Jimmy Hogan]] on Sebes and the team cannot be underestimated. The then president of the Hungarian Football Association, Sandor Barcs, said: "Jimmy Hogan taught us everything we know about football".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2003/nov/22/sport.comment2|title=How total football inventor was lost to Hungary|website=[[TheGuardian.com]]|date=22 November 2003}}</ref> and Sebes himself said of Hogan, "We played football as Jimmy Hogan taught us. When our football history is told, his name should be written in gold letters".<ref name=Anatomy>Jonathan Wilson, ''The Anatomy of England: a History in Ten Matches'' (Orion Publishing Group, London 2010)</ref>
The following is a list of national football teams ranked by their highest [[World Football Elo Ratings|Elo score]] ever reached (August 2012):


==Notable matches==
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"

|-
===1952 Olympic Games (Yugoslavia vs. Hungary)===
! Rank !!Nation !! Points !! Date
{{See also|Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics}}
|-
The Hungarians arrived at the [[1952 Summer Olympics]] unbeaten for two years. The team easily defeated opponents in the preliminary rounds, before meeting the 1948 defending Olympic champions, [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]], in the semi-finals. Hungary demolished Sweden 6–0 to set up a final against [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavia]]. Goals from Ferenc Puskás and Zoltán Czibor ensured a 2–0 victory and the Olympic gold for Hungary.
| 1 || {{fb|HUN}} || 2166 || 30 June 1954

|-
===1953 Central European Championship (Italy vs. Hungary)===
| 2 || {{fb|BRA}} || 2153 || 17 June 1962
{{main|1948-53 Central European International Cup}}
|-

| 3 || {{fb|ESP}} || 2140 || 11 July 2010
Hungary took part in the [[1948-53 Central European International Cup]], a nations cup for teams from [[Central Europe]] and the forerunner of the [[UEFA European Football Championship|European championship]]. The competing teams included [[Austria national football team|Austria]], [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]], [[Italy national football team|Italy]] and [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]. Hungary eased their way to a final against Italy on 17 May 1953, which they won 3–0 with a goal from [[Nándor Hidegkuti]] and two from Puskás.
|-

| 4 || {{fb|ARG}} || 2117 || 3 April 1957
=== 1953 "Match of the Century" (England vs. Hungary) ===
|-
{{main|Match of the Century (1953 England v Hungary football match)}}
| 5 || {{fb|FRA}} || 2105 || 15 August 2001

|-
A friendly match was arranged for 25 November 1953 against [[England national football team|England]]. England had never been defeated on home soil by a team from outside the British Isles (they lost to the [[Republic of Ireland national football team|Republic of Ireland]] in 1949), and the [[English Football Association|FA]] were complacent – as the inventors of the game, they were assured that their players were technically and tactically superior to any other countries. At the time, England were ranked as the 3rd best team in the world and Hungary were ranked as the best team in the world. The game was eagerly anticipated; the British Press reported it as "the Match of the Century".<ref name="glanville1">{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2009/may/17/seven-deadly-sins-football-hungary-england|title=The Hungarian disasters – England v Hungary, 1953-4|last=Glanville|first=Brian|date=17 May 2009|work=The Observer|publisher=Guardian News and Media Limited|access-date=23 March 2011}}</ref><ref name="sportsillustrated">{{cite news|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2003/soccer/11/25/bc.soc.hungary.gameofce.ap/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104031645/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2003/soccer/11/25/bc.soc.hungary.gameofce.ap/|url-status=dead|archive-date=November 4, 2012|title=Hungary marks 50th year since England win|date=25 November 2003|work=Sports Illustrated|publisher=CNN/[[Sports Illustrated]]|access-date=23 March 2011}}</ref>
| 6 || {{fb|NED}} || 2100 || 6 July 2010
|-
| 7 || {{fb|GER}} || 2099 || 4 September 1974 (as ''West Germany'')
|-
| 8 || {{fb|ITA}} || 2079 || 20 July 1939
|-
| 9|| {{fb|POL}} || 2046 || 1 September 1974
|-
| 10 || {{fb|ENG}} || 2041 || 22 October 1966
|}


The game was played in front of 105,000 in [[Wembley Stadium (1923)|Wembley Stadium]]. Hungary scored in the first minute, and after 27 minutes they were 4–1 up. The final score was 6–3, with a hat-trick from Hidegkuti, two goals from Puskás and one from Bozsik. It was a footballing lesson that sent shockwaves through [[English football]], and which ultimately caused English clubs to adapt more modern coaching and tactics.<ref name="glanville1" />
=='Socialist Football' and the advent of the ‘Playmaker'==

=== 1954 Hungary 7 England 1 ===
[[File:1954 Hungary 7–1 England, (association football friendly) Golden Team.jpg|thumb|280px|The Hungarian crowd cheers following the conclusion of [[England national football team|England]]'s heaviest ever defeat (1–7)]]
{{Main|Hungary 7–1 England (1954 association football friendly)}}
England were anxious for revenge after the defeat at Wembley, and a return match was scheduled in Budapest for 23 May 1954, three weeks before the start of the [[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]. Any hopes that the Wembley game had been an aberration were immediately dispelled as Hungary won 7–1, inflicting England's heaviest ever defeat that still stands to this day.<ref name="glanville1" />

===1954 World Cup First Round Games===
{{main|1954 FIFA World Cup Group 2}}
Hungary went to the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland as firm favourites; they were unbeaten since 1950, and had issued served notice of their ability with 6–3 and 7–1 thrashings of England.
The source of the intellectual firepower of the team at the managerial level began with [[Gusztáv Sebes]], who had been a trade union organizer in [[Budapest]] and pre-war Paris at Renault car factories and thus was accorded a political clean bill of health to run affairs as the Deputy Sports Minister. Coming on with good political connections, he knead his socialist credentials to a new formulaic style that caused world football to witness ‘socialist football’ in its prime. His was a team game that would brush aside an assortment of individuals for six years to set milestones not set before or since.


The 16 finalists were assigned to four groups, with each group having four teams in it. Each group contained two seeded teams and two unseeded teams. Only four matches were scheduled for each group, each pitting a seeded team against an unseeded team (this contrasts with a conventional round-robin in which every team plays every other team, which would have resulted in six matches in each group). In a further oddity, extra time would be played if the teams were level after ninety minutes in the group games, with the result being a draw if the scores were still level after 120 minutes.
Sebes was keen to reference a new movement in football governed by the idea that a harmonious communal solution with players equally sharing in the ball's propagation then dovetailing players into defense when needed better proclaimed the future game. The contrarian way that shifting players could overlap into other positions and meander incomprehensibly in view of the organized mode of football did seemed revolutionary and imparted a new a fluid mannerism to the sport that proved to be a main feature in the success of the team. This sketched the foreword, in a sense, to ‘Total Football’ 20 years before the [[Netherlands national football team|Dutch]], where individual roles in zonal positions should not be strictly defined.


The top two teams from each group would qualify for the quarter-finals. Hungary shared Group B with [[Turkey national football team|Turkey]], [[Germany national football team|West Germany]] and [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]]; Hungary and Turkey were the two seeded sides in the group.
In particular, a lasting contribution of the Golden Team crucially involved the prototype advent of a player that would put the game on a tactical furthering;— the playmaking [[Secondary Striker (SS)|deep lying centre-forward]]. Into this total sum solution, Sebes laid plans that his most influential centerpiece, a high value player unveiled for a ground-breaking role would cause a reformation. [[Nándor Hidegkuti]] was set as a deep-lying free trading player behind the twin inside pairing of Puskás and Kocsis, known in football parlance as being ‘in the hole’. This something subtle and profound nuance of moving Hidegkuti off the main line put the game on a new course and into football's lexicon entered the fluid station called "''playmaker''". Opposing lines were un-steadied and pulled apart by this dual-purpose player by drawing a natural tendency from defenses to leave him unmarked and operate freely in space un-buffeted by not being truly an advanced player. With event-driven spontaneity, Hidegkuti provided crashing sorties as ball movement dictated to crumble the center goal area; and unlocked in the No. 9 position a new autonomous menacing robust character in football operating on the event horizon between midfield and the opposing rearguards and between creator and goalscorer. Hidegkuti has been called the ‘father of total football’ and was an astute navigator with 39 goals in 69 appearances. Thus this triune partnership of Puskás and Kocsis up front with a force-multiplier leveraged in Hidegkuti that opened many doors of attack across inflexible defenses to obviate and subordinate most traditional systems.


Hungary won their opening game against South Korea 9–0, with Kocsis scoring a hat-trick. In the second game, Hungary thrashed West Germany 8–3, with Kocsis scoring another 4 goals; however, fouling on Puskás left him with a hairline fracture of the ankle which left him unavailable for selection for the quarter-final and semi final stages.
==Goalscorers: Puskás and Kocsis==


=== 1954 World Cup Quarter-final: "Battle of Berne" (Brazil vs. Hungary 1954) ===
[[Ferenc Puskás]] often enters the conversation of where the greatest footballers ought to be lodged in the pantheon of the last 100 years. If debate for being the greatest player of the 20th Century is plainly laid to figures for most goals at the highest levels both in the club and the international game, Ferenc Puskás would firmly occupy a top place in the game’s hallowed iconography. The ever engaging and personable Ferenc Puskás was the most thriving striker Europe ever saw at 1st division football—certified to have scored a world record 514 goals. He was also the greatest goalscoring international of the century who ever lived, scoring 84 goals in 85 matches. Undoubtedly, the most renowned and greatest of Hungarian sportsmen, he is likely in company with [[Harry Houdini]], [[Tony Curtis]], and [[Ernő Rubik]] who lent his name to the iconic [[Rubik's Cube]], for being the most [[List of Hungarians|famous Hungarian]] citizen of the 20th Century.
{{main|Battle of Berne (1954 FIFA World Cup)}}


Hungary met [[Brazil national football team|Brazil]] in an eagerly anticipated quarter final; both sides had a reputation for open, attacking football. The Brazilians had lost the [[Uruguay v Brazil (1950 FIFA World Cup)|last and deciding match]] of the [[1950 World Cup]] to [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]], and were anxious to reach the final again.
In a difficult rebuilding world of the [[post-war]] era, in the arc light and formative glow of nascent [[mass media]] with a global reach and enhanced [[telecommunications]], increasingly networked [[news agency|newswires]] at the dawn of live [[television]] that meet audiences as never before, Puskás was football's first [[sportsperson|superstar]] both at [[List of top-division football clubs in UEFA countries|club level]] and in the [[international football|world game]] predating the likes of [[Alfredo Di Stéfano]], [[Pelé]], [[Johan Cruijff]], [[Diego Maradona]], and [[Zinedine Zidane]].
[[File:Puskas Top scorer of 20th century.JPG|right|340px|thumb|[[Ferenc Puskás]]-the 20th century's top goalscorer at 1st division football and in the international game.]]


Unfortunately, the game was notable for the number of cynical fouls performed by both sides rather than as an exhibition of footballing technique; Hungary took a 2–0 lead after 7 minutes, and after that the game descended into a series of fouls, free kicks and fights on the pitch resulting in three dismissals. The game ended 4–2 to Hungary. Fighting continued off the pitch in the tunnels and in the players' dressing rooms.
Of no great height, he was of modest proportions, rotund with muscular billiard ball table legs and average in-line speed but with deceptive acceleration capable of real pace on occasions. Puskás never did acclimate to using his non dominant right foot for much except to dribble and scored few goals with his head. But he more than made up with an on-field generalship and a deep cerebral reading of the game. He had a keen footballing brain to match his otherworldly accuracy. He had intuition with extra sensory awareness to grasp other sides' nuances with novel thinking and an encompassing eye in less than 15 minutes of play by issuing a stream instructions to orient his team, often yelling at players many years his senior as a ‘''playing coach''’ solving ever-changing game vistas on the run. He came with a precocious talent at an early age making the [[Hungary national football team|national team]] all of 18 as a supreme possessor with a heroic scoring indulgence on the ball. He possessed an extremely rare skill, equipped with the most powerful drive ever cast from a left foot — detonating a snapshot that deftly tore through defenses with stunning accuracy inside 30 meters. Much of the reason for Hungary's goalscoring largess as seen by many came by way of Puskás' on-field influence. Keepers in goal from where ever they originated yielded an amazing 1176 total goals in front of Puskás in his 24-year career.


The game's English referee [[Arthur Edward Ellis|Arthur Ellis]] commented: "I thought it was going to be the greatest game I'd ever see. I was on top of the world. Whether politics and religion had something to do with it I don't know, but they behaved like animals. It was a disgrace. It was a horrible match. In today's climate so many players would have been sent off the game would have been abandoned. My only thought was that I was determined to finish it."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-ellis-a-knockout-during-the-battle-of-berne-1163887.html |title=Football: Ellis a knockout during the Battle of Berne – Sport |work=The Independent |date=1998-06-09 |access-date=2011-03-14}}</ref>
As the oft-loquacious captain of Hungary, a great deal of their success located Puskás to be the center of most things involving the team as a sharp operator both on the field and off with a fine grasp of public relations inside one of the most repressive Stalinist regimes in Europe. Mentally striding in to take the lead, the indisputably star player was the uplifter of an already great Hungarian side who drove his teams with a demanding love for winning to heights unrivaled. Indeed, with Puskás at the helm, Hungary became the most powerful footballing force in the world that lost 1 game in 6 years with likeness made to the 1970 Pelé-lead Brazilian squad for being the century’s foremost.


===1954 World Cup Semi-final (Uruguay vs. Hungary)===
Puskás was honored for being named the top 1st division goalscorer in the 20th century by the prestigious [[International Federation of Football History & Statistics]] (IFFHS) in 1995. Pelé was voted the most outstanding player of the century by the IFFHS with Puskás not far behind, ranking just behind Diego Maradona in the balloting. The IFFHS put Puskás after Pelé as the second greatest offensive player as an advanced forward of the 20th Century.
Uruguay were the defending champions, and had never lost a World Cup match in their history, winning both tournaments they had previously entered.


Hungary were without Puskás, but still managed to take the lead via Zoltán Czibor. Uruguay rallied but were unable to even the scores before half-time. Almost immediately after the restart, Nándor Hidegkuti scored a second goal for Hungary. Uruguay's unbeaten World Cup record seemed to be over, but they still had most of the second half to recover.
Very few players had careers or stories to tell quite like Ferenc Puskás for a number of occasions. In all that reporting on his career, a common thread in playing days that made him unique: a glinting [[Midas]] touch, everything he touched on the field turned to gold, and he only played on 3 teams. [[Budapest Honvéd FC]], Hungary, and [[Real Madrid C.F.]] were three teams amid their greatest flowering in golden periods of their own. Every team to which he was attached as a captain and player were eminently the best in the world that seemed to prosper immensely from his dazzling seniority. They profited from an elegant yet fiery competitor with outgoing rough-diamond manners and a very memorable style who could annex obdurate lines with expositions that sparkled nigh on goal. He was captain of mighty Budapest Honvéd (for whom the majority of Hungary’s national team players played at club level), and they were most feared team in the land before the emergence of Real Madrid C.F.. While there and in the national team, he was paired with the formidably talented and his near equal [[Sándor Kocsis]] that blossomed into an almost symbiotic partnership and rivalry. Theirs was a story like no other of two invincible heroes in their prime playing to huge crowds always seeming to move inexorably towards goal to drive in balls from all possible angles and distances. Puskás & Kocsis were the greatest redoubtable scoring tandem who ever graced world football with 159 goals among them, putting mileage for all those who came before or since with records that would prove everlasting.


The champions were not going to give up without a fight, and spent much of the remainder of the match launching attack after attack at the Hungarian defence. With a quarter of an hour to play [[Juan Hohberg]] scored for Uruguay; Hungary defended desperately until the 86th minute, when Hohberg scored his second to force extra time.
Later estranged from his homeland due to the reprisals that were the fallout of the failed [[Hungarian Revolution of 1956|1956 Hungarian Revolution]] and what might have awaited him for his refusal to return from abroad, the unusually apolitical Puskás was adrift and languishing in exile. On the wrong side of 30 and serving a one-year ban from [[FIFA]], the man joyous appetites and heart spent on generous goodwill, was now mostly thought out of shape and in the twilight of his playing days. Soon he found himself in the employ of the greatest club and one the richest sports institutions in the world, [[Real Madrid C.F.]], at the height of its powers to begin a second consecutive and stunning double career. There’s much agreement by most who take the game seriously that Puskás, [[Alfredo Di Stéfano]] and [[Johan Cruijff]] where the three finest European players ever to play last century—Puskás would now meet Di Stéfano on the same side in a storied centering of two iconic careers.


Appearing to have much more energy than their opponents, Hungary retook the lead midway through the second period of extra-time when Sándor Kocsis headed home from close range; Kocsis scored again four minutes from injury time. Uruguay were beaten 4–2, their first ever World Cup loss, while Hungary went on to their second World Cup final.
At a time when players think of retirement, Puskás faced a daunting challenge of learning a new language and culture in the distinct new world of [[Francisco Franco]]'s [[Spain]]. But with the gift of confidence and the right mental attitude too, Puskás soon endeared himself to everyone around him. Most importantly, he gelled with on-field boss and great Argentine star Alfredo Di Stéfano, who was never the easiest man to know and who could be distancing to those he failed to get on with. With temperamental cheek being part of the charm, Alfredo Di Stéfano was the most determined and best footballer in Europe this side of Puskás and who dominated life at Read Madrid that won the [[UEFA Champions League|European Cup]] the first five times after the competition opened. Soon Puskás reached the right physical condition and again became a sunshot relevation, with that peerless left foot soon scoring a greater number of goals than Di Stéfano himself to earn a high and prominent place in a talented constellation of [[Galácticos]]. Puskas’ nicknames in Hungary of “''Galloping Major''", “''Little Kid Brother''” and “''The Swabian''” turned into the Spanish “''Pancho''" after he became a naturalized Spanish citizen.


The game was in direct contrast to the quarter-final between Hungary and Brazil; both Hungary and Uruguay had played attractive, attacking football in what was arguably one of the finest displays of football in a World Cup.
Winning [[La Liga|5 Spanish championships]] along with way, Puskás became a four-time [[Pichichi Trophy]] (top league goalscorer) incandescent forward in legendary communion with Di Stéfano to form the basis for the greatest double act world club football has ever seen. The Puskás & Di Stéfano tandem at Real Madrid, like the earlier common cause of Puskás-Kocsis at Budapest Honvéd and Hungary, between two iconic players stood at the heart of history’s finest and most successful professional club enterprise. Puskás was considered the indispensable man of campaigns that saw Real Madrid amazingly enter 5 [[UEFA European Cup]] Championships Final matches, three of which were won by his team. Puskás scored 35 goals in 37 European Cup tournament matches that Real Madrid entered, and scored 7 goals in two UEFA European Championship Finals. Puskás could count legendary Real Madrid owner [[Santiago Bernabéu Yeste|Santiago Bernabéu]] and Di Stéfano among firm friends, and retired a much fondly remembered legend after nine years as the second greatest-ever player to wear the all-white strip.


===1954 World Cup Final: "The Miracle of Bern" (West Germany vs. Hungary)===
As a player who was never bought or sold in his life, Puskás spent his entire career at the very top of his profession that seemed to raise his game to a sublime level. He would never lose his central place in the heart of football history, being involved in three of the most seminal, written about and grandiose matches of all: ""''[[England v Hungary (1953)|Match of the Century]]''"" (where he scored twice), the [[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|1954 World Cup Final]] (where he scored once and had a poignant 87th minute equalizer unpardonably called offside), and Eintracht Frankfurt vs. Real Madrid (the [[1960 European Cup Final]] where he scored 4 goals in what has been described as the finest and most famous European club match in history).
{{Main|1954 FIFA World Cup final}}
[[File:Stade de Suisse, Wankdorf with 1954 World Cup memorial.jpg|thumb|300px|right|A well-known photograph of the 1954 final is installed in front of the Wankdorf's successor stadium, the [[Stade de Suisse]].]]


The final was between Hungary and West Germany. Hungary were in their second World Cup Final (their 1938 team had lost to Italy 4–2 in [[Paris]]); in addition, they had a record of 34 wins, 6 draws, and 1 defeat since August 1949, and were unbeaten in their last 32 matches. Hungary had beaten West Germany 8–3 in a first-round game. The only issue the Hungarians faced was the ankle injury sustained to Puskás in the same game, from which he had not fully recovered – Sebes still took the decision to play him.
After the 1956 Uprising there were pockets of Hungarian [[expatriates]] in every major city in the West. While traveling with Real Madrid and beyond, he became a veritable consulate for members of these communities, ready to lend his support financial or otherwise, to those who were most in need that enlarged his character. Puskas’ story illustrates a remarkable [[Horatio Alger]] tale of a generous to a fault player rising to the pinnacle of the game from humble origins from those bare-feet youth games in the late 1930s. Puskás was Olympic champion when the Olympics meant considerably, Central European Champion, World Cup finalist, in addition to being the top goalscorer in the 20th century at 1st division top-flight football and the century’s top goalscorer in the world game who is united to three UEFA Champions League (1959, 1960, 1966) titles, 10 national championship crowns (5 Hungarian [[Nemzeti Bajnokság]] & 5 Spanish [[Primera División]]) and 8 top individual scoring honors.


Hungary took an early lead in the 6th minute, with a goal from Puskás. Two minutes later, Czibor made it 2–0 to Hungary. However, the Germans rallied, and swiftly pulled the score back to 2–1 through [[Max Morlock]]. In the 18th minute, the Germans drew level from a corner kick; the goal was scored by [[Helmut Rahn]].
FIFA President [[Sepp Blatter]] had seen Puskás play in the 1954 FIFA World Cup Final in Berne. As a 18 year old Swiss journalist, Blatter was involved throughout the match as a supporting spectator of the Magyars. In homage to Puskás for what he represented on the field and for enduring personal virtues off of it, Blatter founded in 2009 an international recognition award ([[FIFA Puskás Award]]) meant to ensure Puskás' memory would remain powerful as ever for future generations.


In the second half, Hungary poured forward looking to retake the lead, but their attempts were repeatedly foiled by the German defence, with goalkeeper [[Toni Turek]] pulling off several fine saves.<ref>Werner Raupp: Toni Turek – „Fußballgott“. Eine Biographie. Arete Verlag, Hildesheim 2019 (ISBN 978-3-96423-008-9), p. 107-114.</ref>
Kocsis was an exceptionally good footballer whose playing career at home and abroad ran almost in parallel with Puskás'. Kocsis was an authority in size, pace and note must be taken that his aerial prowess the world would come to see had no peer. Aside Puskás, the only 20th century player to outrank Kocsis's 75 goals and world record 7 hat tricks was the Brazilian Pelé — whose name advertised his renown. Kocsis' pervasive quality at point and aura was unavoidable. He mastered a role that outpaced even that of Puskás in strike-rate, scoring 75 goals in 68 internationals. As Hungary’s number two striver, he mystified backfields with defenders put on notice every time he touched the ball.


With six minutes left and the score still 2–2, Helmut Rahn scored West Germany's third goal. Two minutes before the end, Puskás appeared to equalise, but he was ruled off-side. The match ended Hungary's unbeaten run in one of the biggest upsets in the history of football; West Germany won 3–2 in the "Miracle of Bern".
== Top International Goalscorers of the 20th Century ==


There were three controversial incidents in the final, each favouring the Germans; Hungarian goalkeeper Grosics was allegedly obstructed for the second German goal, Puskás apparently equalised in the 89th minute but was deemed to be offside, and there was an alleged foul on Kocsis in the penalty area in the final minute of the game.
Three of the six top international goalscorers of the 20th century were Hungarian, two of them from the Golden Team of the 1950s.


===1955 Scotland 2 Hungary 4===
{| class="wikitable"
On 8 December 1954, [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]] hosted Hungary at [[Hampden Park]] in a friendly match, before a crowd of 113,000.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rsssf.org/tabless/scot-intres1955.html |title=Scotland International Matches 1951–1955 |access-date=2012-10-12}}</ref> Scotland were determined not to be humiliated as [[England national football team|England]] had been a year earlier, and attempted to take the game to the Hungarians in a display of counterattacking football. This made for an open, attractive game with plenty of goals; Hungary scored on 20 minutes through Bozsik, and Hidegkuti made it 2–0 six minutes later. Scotland rallied and pulled one back on 36 minutes through [[Tommy Ring]], but Sandor made it 3–1 to Hungary just before halftime.
|-
! #
! Player
! Nation
! Goals Scored
! Games Played
! Years Active
|-
| 1.
| [[Ferenc Puskás]]
| {{fb|HUN|1949}}
| 84 goals
| 85 internationals
| 1945–1956
|-
| 2.
| [[Pelé]]
| {{fb|BRA|1889}}
| 77 goals
| 92 internationals
| 1957–1971
|-
| 3.
| [[Sándor Kocsis]]
| {{fb|HUN|1949}}
| 75 goals
| 68 internationals
| 1948–1956
|-
| 4.
| [[Gerd Müller]]
| {{flag|West Germany}}
| 68 goals
| 62 internationals
| 1966–1974
|-
| 5.
| [[Hussein Saeed]]
| {{flag|Iraq}}
| 63 goals
| 126 internationals
| 1976–1990
|-
| 6.
| [[Imre Schlosser]]
| {{fb|HUN|1920}}
| 59 goals
| 68 internationals
| 1906–1927
|}


The second half continued in the same vein, with [[Partick Thistle]] winger [[John Mackenzie (footballer)|John Mackenzie]] constantly beating Hungary full back [[Mihály Lantos]]. [[Bobby Johnstone]] scored a second goal for Scotland on 46 minutes, and only poor finishing prevented Scotland from equalising. The home side continued to press forward, but were caught on a counter break right at the end of the match when Kocsis scored to make the final score 2–4 to Hungary. It was the closest any team had come to beating Hungary in a friendly competition since 1950. Afterwards, Puskas complimented the excellent work of Mackenzie, stating that he had "never seen wing play of such a high standard".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.scotland.org/features/item/comments/the-firhill-flyer/ |title=The firhill flyer &#124; Comments &#124; The Official Gateway to Scotland |publisher=Scotland.org |access-date=2011-03-14 |archive-date=2011-07-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721002015/http://www.scotland.org/features/item/comments/the-firhill-flyer/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>
== 1952 Summer Olympic Games (Hungary vs. Yugoslavia)==
{{See also|Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics}}


===1956 Soviet Union 0 Hungary 1===
On a course a little over 2 years unbeaten, Hungary’s last 15 opponents were straitened by 5.27 goals-per-game as most sides were overwhelmed by the players [[Budapest|astride the Danube]] as a testament to the native talent carefully conducted by Sebes, ever tactically minded that tended to new unfashionable ideas. High scorelines of 5-0 and 6-0 were commonly managed by an emergent power, and only a single team had defeated them in their 19 prior matches while they had won 15. News traveled along the footballing grapevine that a vibrant, skillful and determined team from [[Central Europe]] was rising and able to test the resilience of the much bigger teams.
On 23 September 1956, the [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]] played Hungary in a friendly game at the [[Lenin Central Stadium]] in Moscow, before a crowd of 102,000.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://eu-football.info/_match.php?id=14727 |title=International football MATCH report: 23.09.1956 Soviet Union vs Hungary |access-date=2012-09-19}}</ref> The Soviet Union were unbeaten at home, and were generally regarded as the natural successors to the Hungarians as the world's premier footballing side. In addition, the Soviet team and players were regarded as ideals of socialist principles by senior communist authorities, who expected the Soviet Union to win comfortably, as befitting the senior member of the [[Eastern Bloc]]. However, a single goal from Zoltán Czibor ended the Soviet Union's unbeaten home record; the result did little to encourage good relations between the two countries, and was a minor contributing factor to a wave of patriotic fervour that resulted in the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1956]].


==Demise==
The Hungarians came to the [[1952 Summer Olympics]] to audition their command of the game in a grade that posed plenty already. The spirit of the Hungarian footballers traveling to [[Finland]], one of only two countries in Europe with a [[Uralic languages|language]] related to Hungarian, was high and there solid reputations and a famousness were first achieved. Good press given by sports commentators offered better visibility outside the [[Socialist Bloc]] and a style was projected the larger world had not yet witnessed. The highly entertaining men's football tournament proved to be a display of coming attractions.
Hungary continued to dominate international football; between July 1954 and February 1956, Hungary played a further 19 games, winning 16, drawing 3 and losing none. From 1950 until their demise in 1956 the team played a total of 69 games, winning 58, drawing 10 and losing just once and scored 436 goals.


Despite this, manager Sebes was sacked in June 1956, and was replaced by [[Márton Bukovi]]; however, Sebes remained President of the Hungarian Olympic Committee from 1948 to 1960, and was also Vice President of UEFA from 1954 to 1960.
With a mercurial corps that was adventurous in attack featuring Puskás, Kocsis, and 'super-sub' [[Péter Palotás]] the team worked through a five-game exposition, first defeating [[Romania national football team|Romania]] 2-1, then [[Italy national football team|Italy]] 3-0, before demolishing [[Turkey national football team|Turkey]] 7-1 in the quarterfinals. Facing them squarely in the Semi-Final were the 1948 defending Olympic champions, a much-fancied [[Sweden national football team|Swedish team]] thought to pose a strenuous challenge for the Hungarians. In a performance highly rated as one of their finest, a [[Ferenc Puskás]] first minute goal was the primer to a thoroughly emphatic game that served positive notice to the most influential circles in the European football community.


The majority of the team played for [[Budapest Honvéd]], who entered the [[1956–57 European Cup]] and were drawn against [[Athletic Bilbao]] in the first round. Honvéd lost the away leg 3–2, but before the home leg could be played, the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1956|Hungarian Revolution]] erupted in Budapest. The players decided against going back to Hungary and arranged for the return with Athletic to be played at [[Heysel Stadium]] in Brussels, Belgium. Honvéd were eliminated 6–5 on aggregate, and the Hungarian players were left in limbo. They summoned their families from Budapest, and despite opposition from FIFA and the Hungarian football authorities, they organised a fundraising tour of Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Brazil. After returning to Europe, the players parted ways.
Their 6-0 outgoing quality win over Sweden marked them out in the public's mind and unmistakably first brought Hungary to the world’s attention, and it resonated with one especially. Tracking developments and viewing events on the field was [[Stanley Rous]], secretary general of the [[English Football Association]] and future [[FIFA President]], who put in praise and turned to his Hungarian counterpart to later oblige the Hungarians: “''Look, you’ll have to come to London and play England soon. Let’s shake hands on it.''”


Kocsis and Czibor moved to Spain to play for [[FC Barcelona|Barcelona]]. Puskás emigrated to Spain to play for [[Real Madrid C.F.|Real Madrid]]. Hidegkuti returned to Hungary as a player and later became manager of [[MTK Budapest FC]] before emigrating to successfully manage clubs in Italy, Poland, and Egypt. Bozsik also returned in Hungary, becoming the manager of several Hungarian teams. Sebes also managed several Hungarian clubs in the 1960s ([[Ujpesti Dozsa]], [[Budapest Honvéd FC]] and [[Diosgyori VTK]]) with moderate success.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/coaches/coach=61688/bio.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070709064600/http://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/coaches/coach%3D61688/bio.html |archive-date=2007-07-09 |title=Classic Coach: Gusztav Sebes |publisher=FIFA.com |date=1953-11-25 |access-date=2011-03-14 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Placed before them in the championship Final in [[Helsinki Olympic Stadium]] were the world's No. 7 team — their neighbors to the south, with whom the [[Hungarian Communist Party|Hungarian communist dictatorship]] during that time on ideological grounds had strained relations. [[Yugoslavia]] under the centrist Marshal [[Josip Tito]] had taken a more moderate course and had maneuvered into a traditional position that was largely unrelated to the [[Politics of the Soviet Union|politics of Moscow]], and Tito as politician was not very committed as a fledged partisan of the old Soviet dictator [[Joseph Stalin]]. The 1948 and 1952 Olympic finalist [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavian squad]] wore the makings of an emerging tier-one European power, the meaning of the game all the more inspired and informed by the intersection of politics and sport. It was the day of the match that manager [[Gusztáv Sebes]] was beforehand politically instructed not to lose by top dictator [[Mátyás Rákosi]] himself. Of the many foreign correspondents writing of the tournament was a young Spanish reporter who wrote about the success of the Hungarian footballers at the 1952 Olympics. He was no less than [[Juan Antonio Samaranch]], who was then a correspondent for the Spanish newspaper ''La Prensa''. Samaranch was later to become one of the century's most recognizable public spirits who cut a grandiose figure in the [[Olympic Movement|Olympic movement]] as the future [[President of the International Olympic Committee]] (1980–2001).


==Historic significance==
The Olympic gold medal game against the Yugoslavs was a hard and rough affair and spiritedly played, the outcome balanced on palpable tension for much of the game with 60,000 Finnish fans supporting the Hungarian athletes to the finish. Puskás missed from the penalty spot but Yugoslav players as others were seen to tred lightly on Hungary’s blunting and gapless defense. Parity was broken in the 70th minute when the Yugoslav backline was penetrated by Puskás, who nonchalantly put a short grounder past two onsetting defenders in front of an empty goal and [[Zoltán Czibor]] broke off from a tangent and direct action at flank with a supportive goal at the 88th minute. In the podium ceremonies on the field, the gold medaling footballers were congenially greeted and given flowers by the lovely Finnish [[Armi Kuusela]], who was the world’s first to hold the title of [[Miss Universe]]. Hungary’s 2-0 victory signaled a rise from a continental to that of a world power and its reveille had been sounded. The sobriquet ‘The Golden Team’ first became a popular term of endearment back in Hungary as the well dressed varsity Hungarians in sartorial elegance paraded down Budapest’s grand boulevards at the head of the victorious homecoming Olympic squad in front of hundreds of thousands.
[[File:Puskás statue in Óbuda-1.jpg|thumb|Statue of [[Ferenc Puskás]] in [[Óbuda]].]]
The historical significance of the team lay in three areas; the introduction of new tactics, the concept of using a core set of well trained players used to playing as a team, and the idea that each player could play in any position if necessary.


The importance of Gusztáv Sebes and the influence of [[Jimmy Hogan]] cannot be underestimated. The tactics of Sebes – especially the concept of a deep lying centre forward – revolutionised a game where the majority of club and international sides had played the WM formation for the previous 20 years. The introduction and success of the Hungarian 3–2–3–2 formation led other managers and countries to experiment, with the 3–2–3–2 eventually evolving into the 4–2–4 formation.
Watched under the critical gaze of the Western press, Hungary’s gold-medal win was received with a mixture of solid praise and sincere comments alluding to the absence of important and expensive Western professional players over disagreements over the definition of [[amateurism]].


Sebes's idea of using a core set of players, drawn from just a handful of clubs, was a new idea that was critical to the success of the team. Most national teams were selected on the concept of picking the best players, not the best team; England famously had a selection committee that selected the team for each game, with little or no sense of continuity. By using players who were familiar with each other's strengths at a club level, Sebes introduced a sense of continuity at a national level – something no other nation had at the time. The [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]] adopted this approach throughout the 1960s, with success at a European level; England won the World Cup in 1966 with a core of players from one club, [[West Ham United]]. Sebes also demanded rigorous training and standards of physical fitness from his players, as well as good tactic awareness – again, these were areas that many national sides of the time neglected. As a consequence, the Hungarian side were able to outrun, outpass and outplay their opposition.
The triumph of the Golden Team on a patch of green grass, where joyous life and great freedom flourished to imitate art, unfettered from sobering realities that affected the unconsidered common masses, was but a subset of a remarkable larger than life journey that pushed the limits of human possibilities. Coincidentally, the 1952 Summer Olympics provided a brief and reliable uplifting interlude of joy and pride for a small resilient nation of just over 9 and a half million seven years apart from the devastation and displacement of [[World War II]] before passing into the maws and orbit of a communist [[police state]] and into a highly restrictive society. Biding defiance to very long odds, it was during these games that Hungary compiled an amazing Olympic record to manage finishing 3rd in the medals table behind the vastly more prodigious [[United States at the Olympics|United States]] and the [[Soviet Union at the Olympics|Soviet Union]], earning 16 gold medals along with way with a total count of 42 of all colors. It underscored how much special importance the Hungarian regime was willing to attach to a full commitment of sporting excellence and the [[political capital]] that it would confer.
[[Image:Ervin Zador.jpg|thumb|300px|right|[[Water polo]] star [[Ervin Zádor]] after the most [[Blood in the Water match|famous water polo match]] in history at the 1956 Summer Olympics.]]


Finally, Sebes's successful implementation of [[Jimmy Hogan]]'s theory that every player should be able to play in all positions was critical to the success of the team; previously, each player in a team was assigned a specific position or role, usually marking a specific opposition player. The Hungarian tactic of players constantly changing roles and positions could only be introduced by using a core set of talented players who were used to playing together at both a club and national level for a period of time. It would be nearly 20 years before the [[Netherlands national football team|Netherlands national team of the 1970s]] utilised the same approach with their concept of [[Total Football]].
Running parallel to the achievements of the Golden Team on the soccer field another dominating sporting team from Hungary again made its presence felt. The [[Hungary men's national water polo team|Hungarian men’s water polo team]], the touchstone and the world’s top power in the history of water polo, won their 3rd gold Olympic medal in the last four Olympics. Members of the Olympic water polo team during the [[1956 Melbourne Olympics]] shortly after the Hungarian Revolution of October–November and mere months after the defections of Puskás, Czibor, Kocsis abroad to Spain and the consequent meltdown of the squad’s nucleus, [[Blood in the Water match|would gain worldwide fame]] as the most celebrated water polo team in history. Hungary would go onto to famously win gold in Melbourne in 1956 with their team earning 4 golds and 1 silver medal in the last 5 Olympics.


== Medal count ==
==All-time team highs and lows==
The following is a list of national football teams ranked by the highest Elo rating they ever reached.<ref name=highestrating>[https://www.eloratings.net World Football Elo Ratings]; under the columns tab choose "Highest Rank / Rating" as well as "Lowest Rank / Rating"</ref> The table also includes the highest ranking as well as the lowest rating and ranking reached by each nation. The team that has achieved the highest rank in each confederation is shown in color.
{{Main|1952 Summer Olympics medal table}}
{{col-begin}}
These are the top ten nations that won medals at these Games.<ref>{{cite news|author=Byron, Lee|coauthor=Cox, Amanda; Ericson, Matthew|title=A Map of Olympic Medals|url=http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2008/08/04/sports/olympics/20080804_MEDALCOUNT_MAP.html|accessdate=February 26, 2012|newspaper=The New York Times|date=August 4, 2008}}</ref>
{{col-break}}
{| {{RankedMedalTable}}
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 98%;"
|-
! Rank !!Nation !! High rating<br>{{small|(rank)}}{{efn|The ranking in parentheses is that at the time the highest rating was reached.}}!! High rating<br>date{{efn|name= ratarankdate|The date given is when the highest or lowest rating was first reached.}}!!High rank<br>{{small|(first,last year)}} !! Low rating<br>/ low rank{{efn|The team's indicated lowest ratings and rank may not have coincided in time.}}!!Low rating<br>date{{efn|name=ratarankdate}}
|-style="background:#d9edf4;"
|align=center| 1 || {{flagdeco|HUN|1949}} '''Golden Team''' ||align=center| 2230 {{small|(1st)}} || 30 Jun 1954|| 1st {{small|(1952,1960)}} ||align=center| 1527 / 75th || 19 Nov 2003
|-
|align=center| 2 || {{fb|GER}} ||align=center| 2223 {{small|(1st)}} || 13 Jul 2014|| 1st {{small|(1966,2017)}} ||align=center| 1639 / 24th || 26 Sep 1920
|-
|align=center| 3 || {{fb|ENG}} ||align=center| 2216 {{small|(1st)}} || 9 Sep 1912|| 1st {{small|(1872,1988)}} ||align=center| 1790 / 17th || 31 Mar 1928
|-
|align=center| 4 || {{fb|BRA}} ||align=center| 2195 {{small|(1st)}} ||28 Nov 2022|| 1st {{small|(1958,2022)}} ||align=center| 1813 / 20th || 24 Sep 1922
|-
|align=center| 5 || {{fb|ESP}} ||align=center| 2165 {{small|(1st)}} || 11 Jul 2010|| 1st {{small|(1920,2013)}} ||align=center| 1800 / 19th || 25 Jun 1969
|-
|align=center| 6 || {{fb|ARG}} ||align=center| 2159 {{small|(1st)}} || 3 Apr 1957|| 1st {{small|(1929,2022)}} ||align=center| 1751 / 26th || 8 Jun 1990
|-
|align=center| 7 || {{fb|NED}} ||align=center| 2154 {{small|(2nd)}} || 12 Jul 2014|| 1st {{small|(1978,2014)}} ||align=center| 1550 / 53rd || 24 Oct 1954
|-
|align=center| 8 || {{fb|FRA}} ||align=center| 2137 {{small|(1st)}} || 30 May 2001|| 1st {{small|(1984,2018)}} ||align=center| 1506 / 40th || 18 May 1930
|-
|align=center| 9 || {{fb|ITA}} ||align=center| 2132 {{small|(1st)}} || 11 Jun 1939|| 1st {{small|(1952,2006)}} ||align=center| 1604 / 22nd || 29 Aug 1920
|-
|-
|align=center| 10 || {{fb|URU}} ||align=center| 2108 {{small|(1st)}} || 13 Jun 1928|| 1st {{small|(1920,1929)}} ||align=center| 1635 / 44th || 5 Sep 1979
|1||align=left| {{flagIOC|USA|1952 Summer}} ||40||19||17||76
|-
|-
|align=center| 11 || {{fb|SCO}} ||align=center| 2104 {{small|(1st)}} || 10 Mar 1888|| 1st {{small|(1876,1926)}} ||align=center| 1600 / 64th || 26 Mar 2005
|2||align=left| {{flagIOC|URS|1952 Summer}} ||22||30||19||71
|-style="background:#ccccff"
|3||align=left| {{flagIOC|HUN|1952 Summer}} ||16||10||16||42
|-
|-
|align=center| 12|| {{fb|RUS}}{{efn|Russia reached its lowest rating as the Russian Empire (after 7 matches) and its highest rating and ranking as the Soviet Union.}} || align=center|2088 {{small|(1st)}} || 23 Jul 1966 || 1st {{small|(1963,1988)}} || align=center|1449 / 48th || 14 Sep 1913
|4||align=left| {{flagIOC|SWE|1952 Summer}} ||12||13||10||35
|-
|-
|align=center| 13 || {{fb|BEL}} || align=center|2084 {{small|(3rd)}} || 12 Oct 2018 || 3rd {{small|(2018,2019)}} ||align=center| 1498 / 70th || 29 Mar 1936
|5||align=left| {{flagIOC|ITA|1952 Summer}} ||8||9||4||21
|-
|-
|align=center| 14 || {{fb|POL}} || align=center|2083 {{small|(2nd)}} || 1 Sep 1974 || 2nd {{small|(1974,1975)}} ||align=center| 1526 / 61st || 26 Aug 1956
|6||align=left| {{flagIOC|TCH|1952 Summer}} ||7||3||3||13
|-
|-
|align=center| 15 || {{fb|DEN}} ||align=center| 2077 {{small|(1st)}} || 25 Jun 1916 || 1st {{small|(1914,1916)}} ||align=center| 1536 / 61st || 24 May 1967
|7||align=left| {{flagIOC|FRA|1952 Summer}} ||6||6||6||18
|-
|-
|align=center| 16 || {{fb|AUT}} ||align=center| 2068 {{small|(1st)}} || 31 May 1934 || 1st {{small|(1934)}} ||align=center| 1550 / 74th || 2 Sep 2011
|8||align=left| {{flagIOC|FIN|1952 Summer}} ||6||3||13||22
|-
|-
|align=center| 17 || {{fb|CHI}} ||align=center| 2041 {{small|(3rd)}} || 26 Jun 2016 || 2nd {{small|(2016)}} ||align=center| 1384 / 60th || 6 Jul 1916
|9||align=left| {{flagIOC|AUS|1952 Summer}} ||6||2||3||11
|-
|-
|align=center| 18 || {{fb|CZE}} ||align=center| 2037 {{small|(1st)}} || 27 Jun 2004 || 1st {{small|(2004,2005)}} ||align=center| 1670 / 46th || 4 Sep 2017
|10||align=left| {{flagIOC|NOR|1952 Summer}} ||3||2||0||5
|-
|align=center| 19 || {{fb|COL}} ||align=center| 2035 {{small|(5th)}} || 28 Jun 2014 || 3rd {{small|(2016)}} ||align=center| 1304 / 100th ||align=center| 13 Mar 1957
|-
|align=center| 20 || {{fb|POR}} ||align=center| 2022 {{small|(3rd)}} || 28 Jul 1966 || 2nd {{small|(2006)}} ||align=center| 1619 / 42nd || 7 Nov 1962
|}
|}
{{col-end}}
{{notelist|40em}}
<!-- This may be too trivial to mention
;The biggest point gap:
The biggest point gap between 1st and 2nd national team was between 14 March and 21 March 1885, when [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]] (at 2094) led by 205 points over 2nd ranked [[England national football team|England]] (at 1889).<ref>[https://www.eloratings.net/1901_graph Elorating evolution up to the year 1902] at eloratings.net</ref>
-->


==International football's highest rated matches==
==Central European Championship (Italy vs. Hungary 1953)==
The Mighty Magyars feature in three of the top 10 highest rated matches all-time. A list of the 10 matches between teams with the highest combined Elo ratings (the nation's points before the matches are given) as of July 16, 2010.
{{main|Central European International Cup}}


During this era, Hungary also partook in the [[Central European International Cup]], a nations cup for teams from Central Europe and forerunner of the pan-European UEFA European championship. The competing field included [[Austria national football team|Austria]], [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]], [[Italy national football team|Italy]] and [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]. After 5 years developing the 5th tournament would culminate in a highly prized match between Hungary and an strong Italian team.

Italy was, in many ways, the frontier for European continental footballing ideas in the early arrangement of the game. By the 1920s rapid developments were made to be at center of much success in Europe when the Italian game increasingly came under the influence of the right-wing nationalist regime of [[Benito Mussolini]]. The Italians were used to thinking devotionally and seriously about bringing about thoroughgoing teams, and many decades earlier established a tradition that fostered and prized vital defensive elements. Italian football was virtually the anti-pole to the offense-based polarity of the Hungarian temperament that viewed themselves as natural attackers. Indeed, one of their key contributions to the game had been in modeling a complicated backline that was intended to prevent goals. It was with such teams that Italy reached commanding heights in achieving two World Cup honors in 1934 and 1938 (where Italy defeated Hungary 4-2 in the title game in Paris). Europe's two-time titleholders bestrode the Continent with one of the planet's hectoring untrodden defenses one could meet playing to very high standards at home.

Italy's chosen style for stopping the wherewithal of opposing teams of foreign players, no matter how talented, from drawing definition on their goal was fancied by many critics subscribing to the game. Apart a single notable defeat to [[England national football team]] England in 1948 in Turin, the ''Azzurri'' had not competitively suffered a home loss since days of Benito Mussolini in 1934—never allowing more than 2 goals into their net in 36 home internationals and wore an undefeated record levying an onus and load visitors with care. Behind their only defeat to the English, the Italians furthered their senior squad that only 1 or less goals were allowed against their backline in any home match that impress one the most. Hungary voyaged towards the Italian capital and toward a welcoming foreign ambiance to play in the inaugural of Italy's newly re-designed famous [[Stadio Olimpico]] that presented itself as a new magnificent basilica of football. Such a marvelous attacking presence posed by Hungary in the eyes of expensive Italian players demanded conquering.

On a sun-drenched day in [[Rome]] after opening ceremonies of the new stadium, a partisan audience of 90,000 were given perspective between contrasting visions: between Italy's expression presumed to be the world's top defensive unit that stood against the world's best line and the Hungarians’ fluid and rhythmic carriage belying artfully crafted guile—a irresistible Olympian force about to march against the immovable object.

The men of Italian football arrived in earnest with their reputed defensive superiority as had been known and the outcome was defined on a hard compound of defensive ardor. By the later edge of the first half, the ''élan'' of the Hungarian front gainfully accosting the Azzurri defense began to stylistically unlimber it by a dialogue of passing from midfield to coax and unriddle the main Italian line exposing their rear to the rewardingly cast deep ball. A [[Nándor Hidegkuti]] goal at the 41st minute, and later two strong scores by Puskás in the second half, one a particularly telling straight line drive from the top of the penalty box past the unbelief of keeper [[Lucidio Sentimenti]] sealed memorable proceedings 3-0 in what was no ordinary achievement.

So irrepressible was Puskás not only to win, that while leading 2-0 late in the game, he exhorted his teammates for continued attacks and keeper [[Gyula Grosics]] to give him the ball at every opportunity. His attitude delighted Italian fans who though much of the wonderful football efforts they witnessed. Respectful ovation descended on the Hungarian heroes, who were cheered off the field as victors of the 5 year long tournament. The Italian press was full of praise the day following and described the Hungarian team as the best in the world. Nominated a few months after this game, the very consistent and successful Hungarian coach, [[Lajos Czeizler]] was put in charge of leading Italy at the 1954 World Cup.

=="Match of the Century" (England vs. Hungary 1953)==
{{main|England v Hungary (1953)}}

===Background===

A match was arranged later that November in 1953 that would have game-changing implications to prevail upon old insular normative and complacent beliefs to inspire football theory onward. It would precipitate a re-shaping of new core footballing ideas and displace minimally for half a generation football's center of gravity. To occur was an immensely fancied collision between the era's contemporary masters — the Golden Team and the unconquerable venerable aristocrats of the game.

Ten days before their appointment in the [[Wembley Stadium (1923)|ancestral mecca of football]] in [[London]], they played a good Swedish team in Budapest in a game that did not give rise to much confidence heading into the most grandiose match of their lives. Puskás missed from the penalty spot and hit the post, and the Swedes drew level in the 87th minute to earn a 2-2 draw. The unsatisfying result caused some panic in the Hungarian press and with the longing public, the team stood to take some pillorying. English observers who watched the game to appraise tactics and strengths Hungary would invoke using, came away claiming Hungary was hardly improved over the Hungary team that England demolished 6-2 in Wembley Stadium in 1936.

The English had invented the modern game in last half of the 19th Century. Its first laws and rules patented by a solicitor by trade [[Ebenezer Cobb Morley]], and soon grew immensely popular across all spectrum of society due to its simple rules and minimal equipment requirements; being globalized as the world's most popular association sport in the last decades of the 19th century and early 20th centuries.

Since the [[Laws of the Game (association football)|codification of football]] in 1863 in [[Victorian era|Victorian England]], the English national team had never suffered defeat on its home shores from foreign opposition from outside the [[British Isles]], and their successful tradition had been penultimate and globally decisive. The old producers of football had turned aside every effort in 90 years to overcome the mightiest team of them all. This proud long reign of invincibility knit to semi-mythology was legendary, embedded into socio-national consciousness and ethos as a redoubt and post to which Englishmen could view with surety and confidence in spite of all forecasts, vicissitudes and the ever-changing times. Gorgeous, wonderful, and victorious English football possessed a feel of unbeatable quality and romantic [[New Imperialism|neo-imperial]] Victorian inheritance with a direct unbroken connection to the palmiest days of the [[British Empire]].

The overall mood in the [[United Kingdom]] in late November in the [[1953 in the United Kingdom|bellwether year of 1953]] was winding down positively, the outcome of the highly publicized match with Hungary would burnish a very memorable year. Post-war rationing of many food staples finally comes to an end. In a revelation earlier in the year, Cambridge scientists announce to the world the [[History of molecular biology|landmark discovery of the structure of DNA]] that would herald in a new era in perhaps the greatest scientific discovery of the 20th Century. The most important happening of the year was also the world’s first major international event ever to be broadcast live to millions around the globe. A new young monarch, [[Queen Elizabeth II]] [[Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II|comes to the throne in June amid acclamation]] that occasions the real advent of global television as a real societal force on the world stage. In the process, the [[television]] age would come of age in Britain and largely shape a British cultural [[Zeitgeist]] in the years to follow. The radiance and youth of the Queen supported by the senior wisdom of the level of Prime Minister [[Winston Churchill]] was sought by many sentiments to give rise to a new age of poise, serenity and progress in an increasingly technological yet [[Cold War|bipolar world]] that would invoke rank to Britain. In late May, hale British adventurers with their porters set out for a [[Mount Everest|mountainous physique in Nepal]] that had daunted the imagination that had claimed the lives of many brave earlier explorers who have gone before. The [[Edmund Hillary|conquest of Mount Everest]] on 29 May 1953, the outpost of a last frontier, reverberated around the world and made headlines to mark one the greatest human feats of the 20th Century. News of the expedition’s success reached [[London]] on the morning of the young Queen’s coronation on June 2, 1953—and Britain was on top of the world. Around this time English football, never humbled, renowned in a kind of proud anachronistic insularity, remained the best in the world that was ripe with all-filling awe.

The [[British press]], in building out the game that lay ahead, galvanized worldwide radio and newsprint audiences naming it the “''Match of the Century''". A visit towards both teams' power rating, the media's remark of the match taking on such significance as ‘''The World Championship Decider''' — was a becoming view that was more attractive considering the acme strength of both nations. England was ranked No. 3 in the world with a rating of 1943 points or the No. 2 best team in the Old World, (the team from [[Argentina national football team|Argentina]] being ranked No. 2 with 2048 points), Hungary was ranked No. 1 with a rating of 2050 points. The anxiously promising match was ever England's sternest challenge to stem a gathering juggernaut from across [[the Channel]] from behind the [[Iron Curtain]] that had remained unbeaten for over three and a half years — and in deference to a remarkable tradition, untrampled power in Europe and “undefeated since 1066“, England would have its place in the sun again as the highly approved side.

The genteel English public generally felt good about the prospects of facing the Hungarians in Wembley. Many observers felt English premier experience, [[Professional sports|high professionalism]] with the game to be played in the country of football’s birth, would bring success with ease against a team from a small austere country from the [[Socialist Bloc]] where no commercial interests were allowed in football, whose players were technically amateurs from plainer backgrounds, most of whom were nominally pressed into soldiery in the [[Hungarian army]]. The game would assume political hues and dimensions for many both inside and outside the game, colored by a portraiture of [[capitalist]], Western, [[imperialism|imperial grandeur]] and privilege standing to scale against a frozen collectivist communist working-class system from the East—it to be metaphorically played by top athletes.

England fielded a squad of prestige formed of considerable and legendary power within a time-tested and patently English tactical package (the [[Formation (association football)|3-2-2-3 WM formation]] catalyzed at the [[Arsenal Football Club]] by gifted publicist and maverick manager [[Herbert Chapman]] in reaction to the [[Offside (association football)|Offside Law of 1925]]. It was composed of all the stars of [[Football League First Division}]], some of whom were of world renown and whose reputations were second to none. Two of whom would be later knighted for exceptional services rendered toward national British sport. These included a world-class football maestro, the ageless wonder [[Stanley Matthews]] considered one of the great athletes of the century who supplied much aerial and crossing prowess to set up goals where ever he traveled, a much feared powerful centre-forward in [[Stan Mortensen]] who had scored 22 goals in 24 appearances, [[Alf Ramsey]], a superb defender with special spatial awareness and technique, and their very capable centre-half captain [[Billy Wright (footballer born 1924)|Billy Wright]]. Wright was a thoroughgoing Englishman and described as a real talent before the war who would go on to be first player in history to reach 100 appearances for a national side; for whom there’s current involvement and a modern ongoing push to have [[Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom|knighthood]] conferred posthumously. At England's order was a very powerful and salient [[midfield]], a quadrangle of four players with an untiring work rate of fetching and carrying the ball up and down the field whom the Hungarians referred to as “''the piano-carriers''”.

This highly successful system mated to a hardy, open, spontaneous and industrial style with its usually high quality personnel, united by a wondrous unmistakable English competitive spirit saw England take on all comers outside the British Isles since 1901 and never have the world's best teams left England victorious.

Meanwhile the relayed radio broadcast by sports commentator [[György Szepesi]] back in Hungary almost brought the entire country to a standstill for a few hours. There had been endless pre-match discussion about the English weather, the English ball, the texture and dimensions of the Wembley pitch, Puskás and Wright, goalkeepers [[Gil Merrick]] and Grosics, midfielders Bozsik and Jackie Sewell. Virtually all the nation was engrossed in anticipation. Electrical retailers did good business in loudspeakers and radio amplifiers as big stores, restaurants and shops provided coverage for their staff and customers, informed by notices outside their premises that proudly advertised: ''We are broadcasting the Match of the Century.''

At kick-off, bustling city life in Budapest ground to a halt, the streets were deserted, apart from a few places where people congregated in public around a loudspeaker. Cinemas showed films to empty auditoriums, buses and trams stopped with no passengers aboard. In factories shift times were prearranged to finish early. In mines, the scoreline was chalked on the sides of cages that descended into the shafts to relay game developments to coal-faced workers.

===The Match===

On a foggy Wednesday afternoon on November 25, 1953, in front of 105,000 in [[Wembley Stadium (1923)|Empire Wembley Stadium]] in London and to millions of worldwide listeners and television viewers ''The Magical Magyars'' mesmerized. The tactical mileage and individual skill sets between the two teams were seen and revealed immediately. Within the first minute, the whole English defense experienced variable passing geometric pressure invented out from midfield as the Magyars' startling attack proved insolvable with a new ground game that made lanes into England's stout stereotypical WM formation and exploited a flaw in their rigid marking system that opened yawning gaps by cleverly drawing defenders out of position. [[Nándor Hidegkuti]] could not be subdued. 45 seconds into the match, Hidegkuti ran down a center seam, sold a feint thereby freezing Harry Johnson, diagonally angled inside and sent a rising 17-yard vector into the upper right corner of the net beyond the lunging mitt of goalkeeper [[Gil Merrick]]. Very quickly it was 1–0. Throughout the game Hidegkuti was un-markable in a starring role as he haunted the English line mixed with befuddling actions of Puskás and the Hungarian line that posed tactical riddles by running interference for one another in interchanging their positions almost clairvoyantly on queue. These events left England in a nonplussed state, most especially [[centre-half]] [[Harry Johnston (footballer)|Harry Johnston]]. Johnson was never assignment true in his dealings with Hungary's No. 9 Hidegkuti, unsure whether to accommodate him man-to-man or play zonally that caused him to be subtly adrift in a kind of no man's land that undid a large part of the English defensive posture.

A well-timed English counter-attack ensued that began in the penalty area. Down field Stan Mortensen released [[Jackie Sewell]] who put it past [[Gyula Grosics]] to restore order 1–1 at 13 minutes. But Hidegkuti fatefully scored again off a clearance that was treated poorly; and Puskás became the world leader for most international goals (getting past Hungary's [[Imre Schlosser]]'s 59 goals) via a seven-pass commute of the English defense, culminating in what many Hungarians call the “''Goal of the Century''”. Puskás' famous ‘drag-back’ goal imparted on him football immorality captured on film by executing a stunning piece of off-hand ball control from impromptu impulse that is a mainstay on classic highlight footage. It involved Puskás taking up position on the right-hand side of the six-yard box after receiving a less than perfect flat pass from right as [[Billy Wright (footballer born 1924)|Billy Wright]] barrels down to dispossess the escaping ball that drifts toward the dead-ball line. Puskás reflexively drags back the loose ball with the sole of his boot an instant before the arriving tackle, leaving the English captain finding empty space where the ball had been de-cleated and nearly reposed and sprawled on his back. Puskás then pivots to find a ray of daylight between the near post and keeper Gill Merrick. The resultant Puskás cannonball between Merrick and the near post was shoehorned in to propel a 3–1 scoreline. Soon following was another Ferenc Puskás score, a deflected [[József Bozsik]] free-kick that burrowed into the net. Within 30 minutes the lead had swelled to 4–1, ten minutes of the restart the match's competitive phase was resolved.

In the second half, midfielder [[József Bozsik]] encroached a few feet outside the English penalty box on the right a side and put the ball airborne with a purposeful kick from 20 meters. The heavy ball slowly rose skyward on a wire long distance on a left-to-right incline as it hurtled towards the left corner past the desperately diving Merrick who could not reach it and an English defender on he line who leapt to deflect it with his head as it sailed just under the crossbar into the left corner in a spectacular effort—5-2. Hidegkuti — indelibly writing his signature as author of England's maiden defeat — appeared earnestly once again by one-timing a volley into goal off a wondrous Puskas lob before the ball came in contact with the ground, accomplished his famous hat-trick and crushed the paleo-tactics in worldwide application since 1925 at the whistle 6–3.

Of the many in attendance who would figure prominently in the English games's future, one initially had taught mainland Europeans and the Hungarians a great deal about football. He was the oft-slighted and under appreciated coach genius, 71-year old [[Jimmy Hogan]]. Hogan was an outsider in English circles who arrived with the youth team of Aston Villa to watch his colleague and friend [[Gusztáv Sebes]] play a game that mapped out a new archetype that was foremost in their minds. Hogan had been a pioneering journeyman coach, even a football missionary before the [[First World War]] who imparted an elegant, almost esoteric knowledge of the game on the Continent and successfully coached Hungary's [[MTK Hungária]] into a league leader in the 1920s. Hogan's competing views on how the game should be played was a minority one along with other radical managers like Sebes and [[Hugo Meisl]] of Austria. They devoted themselves to organizing a kind of free flowing soccer where possession and therefore skillful passing sequences were keys to the game united to varying flexibility. The Hungarians dedicated their great triumph to the old man who had given them much. At game's finish, Hogan commented that a new order in football had been shaped by the visiting team - “...''that was the football I've always dreamed of the Hungarians can one day play.''"

The Magical Magyars' performance was revelatory that seemed to presage a tactical revision of the game from static models to be the flexibility basis for much if not all that followed in the game. It focused a compelling case of modernist football up against the dated pre-war operating system, as it peered toward a versatile new age that allowed players maximum freedom of movement. It also more than ordinary as a major vindication of Continental football's progress. The match's value for the Magical Magyars' was inestimable as their magnum opus. For football itself, the panoramic prevision of how the future game would be played stimulated new ideas both within and outside [[the Continent]], and minds started to change about the fluidity of the game. The famous Wembley game of 1953 reverberated around the globe as a historical strategic and tactical watershed that made front-cover news in many countries, subject to acres of newsprint, books, informative scholarship and introspective self-analysis that has taken on a near mythical station in football lore — arguably being the 20th century's most influential match.

==England 1 : Hungary 7 (1954)==
{{Main|Hungary vs England (1954)}}

No other home game before or since has attracted so much enthusiasm in Hungary as the special return fixture with England that served as a build-up to the [[1954 World Cup]] in three weeks' time. As a gesture to win back the old ways in football's hierarchy and lift the chagrin of the Wembley match, England arrived in Budapest with a unbowed attitude being unaware of new developments in training and tactics happening on the Continent. Inside Hungary, expectations were almost reaching a fever pitch, with most every ordinary Hungarian very much involved. Over 3 million people (one third of the population) petitioned for tickets in the stately new [[Ferenc Puskás Stadium|Nation's Stadium]] (later to be renamed Ferenc Puskás Stadium in 2001) that was built to ensure the continuing national drive for sporting excellence. Many people gaining entry used carrier pigeons to send their tickets to friends and family awaiting at home. The whole nation seemed completely absorbed in the prospective game listening on radio.

English coach [[Walter Winterbottom]] debuted a remade squad to stand fast and guard against the Hungarians by putting in seven new starters and expected more and better football from his charges. Only keeper Gil Merrick, [[Jackie Sewell]], and Billy Wright, Dickinson came from the original Wembley game, but would avail of the services of [[Tom Finney]] whose name would be legend in postwar England.

To a huge 105,000 crowd on a bright hot summer day in Budapest, the Golden Team’s star-spangled offense opened a dramatic rehearsal and hopeful vista for what was to be visited at the 1954 World Cup. It was against this backdrop of national pride and ecstasy that the Golden Team hit their most sustained and brilliant form in their best ever home performance. Inside of 10 minutes, team found assurance in learning England failed to mend the tactical flaws seen in the first game, it was the English insistence on playing within the system they knew best that they soon discovered to their cost. The English voguish WM formation resumed its traditional role against the shiny new model. The English player who began the game with the ball at his feet had two nervous touches; within seconds the ball was pilfered meters from the center kick-off spot and an attack splendidly moved contracting and pushing the English defense on their heels. Such fast forward moving spectacles where routinely seen throughout the day, and the world’s No. 4 team was destabilized by the Puskás-fronted uncommonly ultramodern platoon that crescendoed at concert pitch.

Eight minutes after the start, Hungary’s [[Mihály Lantos]]'s keen 22-yard free kick that was hammered past Merrick began a outpouring that saw three long racetrack counter-attacks putting goals past keeper Merrick. Keeper Gyula Grocsis heaved a long throw to the left sideline, there a player with one-touch furthered the ball upfield along the sideline. At midfield, [[Zoltán Czibor]] took receipt and was at top speed along the left periphery in a dead sprint with two English defenders vainly giving chase. Caressing the ball, he moved diagonally deep into the England penalty box alongside two defenders, intelligently played to [[Sándor Kocsis]] to the right who feigned twice. Before Merrick could do anything, the score was dancing in the net.

Three sharply driven goals from mid-range with Puskás and Kocsis netting two apiece and one from Hidegkuti set the stage for a collapse of English soccer of historic import. [[Syd Owen]] played at center-half for England and remembered the occasion well, he later commented: “..it was like playing people from outer space.”

The high-scoring 7-1 defeat still reflects the worst loss for England in the world game. Yet one great goal beckoned at the heart of the sport. World champion in all but in name, all Europe saw the Hungarians set on a colliding course with the soccer masters from South America, [[Brazil national football team|Brazil]] or world champion [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]] for the world title.

==The 1954 FIFA World Cup==
{{main|1954 FIFA World Cup}}

Plans were being laid by Gusztáv Sebes as early as December 1953 in preparing the team for a fuller tonality in physical fitness to ensure a high placing in the 1954 World Cup. Expectations of a first-place finish was natural enough back home after begetting so many victories the world’s media certainly thought so highly of. For concentrating minds, both inside and outside the game, only one prize remained for Hungary as it was proceeding without fault in the high summer of 1954 towards the holy grail of football. Football world supremacy would be decided after the contrasts between Hungary and that of football superpowers from South America were seen. Tactically astute, the Hungarians were appraised by general consent as having the most redoubtable team to carry through these of aims with plenty of talent to match.

The kings of Europe journeyed by rail to Switzerland, their carriage coursing through beautiful landscapes with magnificent [[Alps|Alpine mountains]] set as a backdrop and made their lodging at the Krone Hotel in [[Solothurn]] outside the [[canton of Berne]]. The 16 finalists were grouped in fours and only two would see the next round in the quarter-finals. Hungary shared Group B with [[Turkey national football team|Turkey]], [[West Germany national football team|West Germany]] and [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]].

===Hungary 9 : South Korea 0===

On June 17, 1954 in Zurich, the Magyars opened their campaign against a debutant South Korean team, who were making their first journey to the World Cup finals. Despite the [[Korean War]]'s ending the year before, there were no commercial fights out from Korea, and the Korean players endured a tiring six-day odyssey by air, sea, road and rail to arrive to the tournament in Switzerland. On less than a full day's rest, the weakened Korean squad, if committed, were first played by the Hungarians who were keen to start well. With parcels of riotuous energy and attacking cadence, the Golden Team regaled those that watched the game with a breathtaking display as the ball moved briskly causing so much mobility within twenty minutes half of the Korean team went down wilting with cramps. At the 12th minute Puskás, who himself would score two goals, opened the floodgates to a fierce gale of scoring that struck forcibly. Inside forward Sándor Kocsis began his trek towards fame and hit his 4th international hat trick in a 9-0 win that posted to the day the largest goal margin ever set in World Cup history.

===Hungary 8 : West Germany 3===

Three days later, the Golden Team went into action against one of their other group opponents, an unseeded and unfashionable [[West Germany national football team|West Germany]] squad of whom not much was expected in the tournament. German manager [[Sepp Herberger]], imbued with a grander project to schedule his team for the best prospects in the knockout stages, wittingly mainly put out a squad of reserve players to rest many of his regulars and gain inputs to what made Hungary so impeccable. Unfolding a plan to reconnoiter and have insight into Hungary's on-field strength, keep his main team fresh and plans unexplored informed his decision to play this enormous gamble. It caused wide criticism back home in West Germany to the contrary, Herberger's stated idea and contention was that Germany could still qualify for the quarter-finals in spite of a loss. The other team widely seen able to win the 1954 World Cup was Brazil, and Herberger planned on not facing them early.

The interest generated by the match was overwhelming, especially among the German population to see what their team could achieve against the Hungarians. [[St. Jakob Stadium]] in Basel was filled to capacity at 65,000 and a special train was chartered that traveled to a position on a high ridge immediately overlooking the stadium, from the coaches hundreds of spectators who could not get venue tickets caught the action.

With fine fettled precision, deft dribbling and colorful passing that would later define Brazilian football's joyous magic for decades, Hungary precipitated themselves against the opposing line and soon glided past bulwarks. Consequently, it was hardly surprising to find a heavy programme of soccer assault ensue — the German half was the scene of most activity, their goal heavily leaned upon by a rolling fire and tactical rigor that attacked without interlude. [[Sándor Kocsis]] was like a cavalier man possessed, cycling through defensive mazes to dynamically wreck the ''Mannschaft'' scheme into shambles with goals at the 2nd, 21nd, 68nd, 77th minutes to score his 5th hat trick. Hidegkuti also issued from his deep ensconced position and poured in two goals of his own along the ground.

This match echoes with controversy for the roughness beyond the pale given the Hungarian captain. Being the world's finest player, Puskás was now receiving some very special attention and ungentle marking from all comers he faced. Englishman [[William Ling (referee)|William Ling]] did the officiating, and the [[Hungarian Football Federation|Hungarian FA]] would later allege three critical fouls the match's refereeing had not accounted for undermined the game's integrity in part for the rough tactics adopted by the Germans to stop Puskás. Throughout the game, German defender [[Werner Liebrich]] was deputed to mark the indefatigable and high spirited Puskás. Spontaneity and braggadocio were not unique events in big games for Puskás. Puskás informed Hungarian-speaking German defender [[Josef Posipal]], whose family initialy originated from [[Transylvania]], of his intention to make Liebrich look hopelessly unskillful, slow and ponderous and that he could play the ball through his legs anytime he wanted. Posipal thought that unwise. Hungary's second goal in the 17th minute is a mesmeric work of Puskás cutting through a bloc of three German defenders before sliding a short ball under the diving keeper [[Toni Turek]].

At the height of the game with Hungary in the lead 6-1, Werner Liebrich's had no shame in his third and most damaging challenge of concern as Puskás was on the end of a roguish tackle from behind that caught his ankle and who needed treatment on the field. This put him for the time only out of the tournament with a sorely bruised ankle, later revealed to be a hairline fracture. At the finish, the West German goal could not keep pace—Hungary put 8 goals past Germany with ten men remaining with 3 in reply.

Sebes had principally built the team from earlier days around the inestimable talents of Puskás, the jeopardy to his star left many wondering if the team could stand as before. Hungary's other on-field star Sándor Kocsis was a great player of the first order whose very talents were completely developed both on the ground and in the air. Now the suddenly important Kocsis would gain his own renown in turn to be the leading content provider up front to marshal the side onward.

Sepp Herberger bore the brunt of criticism to not play with a full team as a contentious issue with many, and calls were nonetheless made for his resignation back in West Germany. Herberger's intuition worked as he had planned however. Germany defeated Turkey 7–3 three days later with a mostly rested squad in a requisite playoff to ensure passage into the final group of eight.

=="Battle of Berne" (Brazil vs. Hungary 1954)==
{{main|Battle of Berne}}

===Background===

Football had come early to [[Brazil]] transmitted by the son of a British expatriate, [[Charles William Miller]], who had attended the English public school at Southampton and brought the aristocratic collegian game with him in 1894 to [[São Paulo]]. Football was a cliquish pastime of British communities in urban areas of Latin America and after the First World War found a place in the national life of most South American nations across all sections of society. Football was developing fast in Brazil whose trim were living at every World Cup. The progress made by the Brazilians at the [[1938 FIFA World Cup|1938 World Cup]] where they earned third place honors managed to attract serious attention as it continued to evolve and improve. By the [[1950 FIFA World Cup|1950 World Cup]], as hosts of the tournament, Brazil was primed on the cusp of destiny, receiving copious publicity as the highly advertised side ready to win over the world with a strong team of moment. Presented to a still-record audience of 199,850 in the world's largest and most modern [[Estádio do Maracanã]], Brazil met in an unofficial “''final''” a somewhat weaker Uruguayian team in a game that would haunt Brazilian regards on a national scale. In a game that mattered most, Uruguay initially braved Brazil's withering attacking play and was down early 0-1. Late in the late, Uruguayan steely determination and arguably history's most famous counter-attack by [[Juan Schiaffino]] again put Uruguay 2-1 on the game's pinnacle.

Brazil came with a confidence that was made plain — to lift the chagrin and unhappy occasion of fortune in the "''[[Maracanazo]]''" that lingered with a team re-organized in a spirit to improve after the 1950 fiasco. South America's top team again was at the door of greatness, dispensing a balanced game that knew the trade on every level. The ''Seleção'''s rating of 2010 points reflected their status as the planet's No. 3 team and were archetypal in speed, physicality, soulful passing and dribbling of superb Latin American football. Their backfield was led by defender [[Djalma Santos]], thought by many to be perhaps the greatest right back in the game's annals and his colleague [[Nilton Santos]] worked in unison to underpin the strongest attacking fullback tandem in football history. Both of their virtues of a cool jockeying style was held in high esteem for the high rate of their dispossessions, tackles and stopping the perilous runs and passes of others. Both would have impressively thorough careers together in 70 internationals, gain two World Cup honors and earn enormous credit in shoring up defence around goal. At the heart of Brazil's play stood one of midfield's great figures, [[Didi (footballer)|Didi]] (Valdir Pereira), a player to whom the ball was often channeled. After winning the [[1950 FIFA World Cup|1958 World Cup]], he would wear the title ‘''world's greatest player''’, around him were attached players of real talent.

The 1954 quarter-final between Brazil and Hungary was enthusiastically written about by the press covering the game as the ‘unofficial final'. For fans, organizers, and journalists alike the match's ascent and build-out had finally arrived. Captaincy for the game with Puskás out injured was conferred on [[József Bozsik]], the day's most gifted midfielder and the game's elite winger Zoltán Czibor spelled Puskás at inside-left. Brazil brought in three new attackers with an aim of breaking the stranglehold the Hungarian defense exerted on most everyone.

===The Match===

On June 27, 1954, with Puskás watching in the stands, the Golden Team summoned capital effort early on. After three minutes, Nándor Hidegkuti took receipt of the ball from the left side of the penalty box. In a scramble for it, half the Brazilian team funneled to the area with the fastest speed to seal off the goal line where confusion reigned before Hidegkuti mightily plowed into the ball with tremendous backlift at a wall of three Brazilian defenders standing in goal. Hidegkuti’s powerful rising shot inside the near post past three full-backs evoked high emotion in the 60,000 who had gathered. Mere minutes later, Hidegkuti momentarily dwelt on the ball before wonderfully lofting from midfield. There Kocsis out-leapt tight two-man marking to steer a long diagonal header inside the far post. 2–0 Hungary after 7 minutes. The proud ''Seleção'' was ill at ease by the jarring pace of the immediate scores visited upon them. Afterwards, both teams strove in an attrition battle royal to stem the other's advance and curb developing plays through a policy that courted injury, unrelenting pernicious hard fouling that saw players clashing fiercely in contention for the ball amid palpable tension, and the “''Battle of Berne''" was in full swing. The game became erratic and suspect with continual interruptions after each free kick was awarded. A unheard sum of 42 free kicks saw many challenges shorn of respect, some often violent as ringing symbols of the tenacious struggle between the two great teams. Of these, tripping that felled forward Indio in the penalty area was converted from the penalty spot by [[Djalma Santos]], 2–1. Hungarian winger [[József Tóth (footballer born 1929)|József Tóth]] was brought down, in the process he tore a leg muscle and went off injured.

By the 60th minute, the game was 3-1 in Hungary’s favor and seemingly out of reach for Brazil, who left nothing undone to keep within the match. Soon after, [[Julinho]] slalomed in to stroke a curling drive, the ball driving into the top right corner of the net from the opposing side of the penalty box in one finest speculative efforts seen at the tournament, 3–2. [[Bauer]] brought down József Bozsik who went off for treatment. On returning, Bozsik, a deputy member in the Hungarian Parliament, taking umbrage and feeling that he was tackled unfairly, retaliated by punching Nilton Santos and soon both in a serious brush in fisticuffs and expelled. Brazil energetically surged forward with their remaining stores, but [[Didi (footballer)|Didi]] hit the crossbar in what would be their last chance to draw level. But there was trouble elsewhere on the pitch. Djalma Santos’ virtue was to provide certainty by defending the best opposing wideout, and found it hard coping with the fast Czibor, and soon put aside ideas of playing and flew into a passion to pursue Czibor about the field. Nothing daunted in the dying minutes of the game, the unmarkable Czibor was seen streaking down the field's periphery and shuttled a well-flighted ball to the center goal area to a lone Sándor Kocsis, the latter ended the game 4-2 with a powerful header.

The last moments of the game was a cauldron of pulsing visceral emotion and was little more than a running sparing match between the two great teams. Brazil forward [[Humberto Tozzi]] kicked Hungary's [[Gyula Lóránt]] prior to the whistle and was genuflect on bended knees not to be sent off by referee, [[Arthur Edward Ellis|Arthur Ellis]], who gave the game's third red card.

As the game concluded, the excesses and tensions on the field continued unabated off of it ending in emotional vitriol. Sudden rumors spread that a spectating Puskás allegedly struck [[Pinheiro]] with a bottle causing a three-inch cut, while most reports hold a spectator culprit not the Hungarian captain. Hamstrung throughout the game by the Golden Team and with dreams deferred until the arrival of the precocious footballing-talent in [[Pelé]] four years later, an exasperated and overwrought Brazil camp lashed into a frenzy by having their fans, photographers, trainers, reserve players and coaches invade the pitch with the Swiss police powerless to impose rule on the tumult and check the altercations that developed. In the tunnel of the stadium, Brazilian players smashed the light bulbs leading to the Hungarians' dressing room and ambushed members of the Golden Team in their quarters where a melee in virtual darkness occurred. There broken bottles, fists and shoes were used as weapons. At least one Hungarian player was rendered unconscious and manager Gusztáv Sebes ended up requiring four stitches after being struck by a broken bottle.

The game's English referee Arthur Ellis commented: “''I thought it was going to be the greatest game I'd ever see. I was on top of the world. Whether politics and religion had something to do with it I don't know, but they behaved like animals. It was a disgrace. It was a horrible match. In today's climate so many players would have been sent off the game would have been abandoned. My only thought was that I was determined to finish it.''"

“''Never in my life have I seen such cruel tackling.''"- observed [[The Times]] correspondent.

The chief blame for the mean-spirited and violent imbroglio were laid on Brazil after their quarter-final and became infamously known as the “''Battle of Berne''”. The high standing of the two teams was such that FIFA produced no official resolution on the matter except to state that punishments be sanctioned by the respective countries’ federations, of this nothing came about. Beating Brazil ranks among the very strong triumphs the Golden Team achieved, with many in Hungary expressing the opinion that this was the first ‘Final' of the three that Hungary were to play at the 1954 World Cup. Some believed Hungary had staved off and prevented Brazil from beginning their procession of World Cup titles in 1954, added to those of 1958, 1962, and 1970.

=="Greatest Game Ever Played" 1954 World Cup SemiFinal (Uruguay vs. Hungary)==

===Background===

In earlier footballing times and through the 1950s, [[Uruguay]] were inextricably intertwined to the growth of the game and dominated international football in [[South America]] in the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. As the 1954 World Cup opened, this proud nation of merely 3 million defended its renown as the most successful footballing nation in the world with an appropriate track record of performing amazing feats at all competitions to which no one could take exception. After pockets of British cultural life first gave origins of the old collegiate game in the land, developments went further ahead in Uruguay than elsewhere in Latin America, and more than anybody largely helped establish South America as a near coequal center of the game with the sports's attraction reaching into facets of society. It just showed the extent how deep the enthusiastic devotion ran and was accorded football in burgeoning scenes in the capital [[Montevideo]] and more smaller cities.

In the formative experience of the international game and some years before the [[FIFA World Cup|World Cup]] had arrived, Uruguay had put together important double titles at the [[Olympic Games|Olympics]] in [[Football at the 1924 Summer Olympics|1924]] and [[Football at the 1928 Summer Olympics|1928]]. Across those games, it was especially their use of a short-passing control offense in place of where fierce robust individualism featured so prominently that caused real trouble for every team and made everyone appreciate the right directions the Latin American game was heading. It owed Uruguay much for raising the standard of the world game to high prominence and also bringing home the recognition that a major world tournament for the extremely widespread popularity of the game was now needed. Given the honors of hosting the first [[1930 FIFA World Cup|World Cup in 1930]], Uruguay won the inaugural title on home soil then boycotted the next two tournaments in 1934 and 1938 amid political snafus and bickerings before entering the [[1950 FIFA World Cup|1950 World Cup]] staged in Brazil, there again heading its first-team to the championship match. In the Final, [[Juan Alberto Schiaffino|Schiaffino]], [[Alcides Ghiggia|Ghiggia]], and [[Obdulio Varela|Varela]] were responsible for a coupe and unforgettable defeat of an old adversary and highly-fancied Brazil that sent shockwaves round the world in formerly the [[Uruguay v Brazil (1950 FIFA World Cup)|most famous game]] before Hungary's hallmark defeat of England in 1953 virtually lead to a revolution of ideas.

Even more remrkable were the enduring records and all-time history that counted in Uruguay's favor. In a stunning 20 appearances against all countries originating outside their continent since 1902, Uruguay had a continuing series of 18 wins, 2 draws with no defeats: putting 78 goals pass all world opposition and conceeding only 19. This meant only a small number of nations inside South America had ever defeated them that the Europeans or hardly anybody in the world quite managed to accomplish. Enormously respected, Uruguay came to Switzerland with little disturbance in their routine with the two-time world champions having never lost a World Cup match or ever having been taken to defeat by a European national side in their history. The matching star power and winning vein of form in their campaign in 1954 should not be underestimated, quite rather the opposite.

Uruguay's fabulous inheritance linked to many years of success of one veritably unbeatable in any major tournament came to be taken very seriously by everyone again. At group stage, [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]] was first beaten 2-0, before [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]] was trashed 7-0, in the quarterfinal they faced England in a tremendous showing and won 4-2 as a further three more European teams gave way to the inexhorable Uruguayian reigning quest. It was mostly their hard victory over patrician England that rekindled the old magic and good press fed positive speculation for prospects of reaching yet another title. In 1954, Uruguay's first team was judged to be far better than the one that achieved in 1950, and were rated overall as the No. 4 best team in the world. Practicing the game skillfully, scoring in earnest, and hardly leaking any goals in the back with a defense that was a genuine article, the two-time champions would now match full-scale against Hungary's tactical uniqueness with its new bequeathment of players meandering and re-positioning onto freer vistas working at an elevated rate with so much dedicated to attack; the Hungarian team colleagues lodged to an enduring fellowship that came by way at club-level and unnumbered match practice.
In the same year Uruguay defeated Brazil in 1950, overseas and in Hungary, who probably did not enter that tournament out of financial plight, Puskas, Kocsis, Hidegkuti et al were looking and becoming a fancied talent bureau on [[the Continent]]. By that occasion, Hungary was swelling with numerous young talent with offensive prerogatives being the main focus whilst playing most of their games in Europe. Many of the teams Hungary played since 1949 in matches came to be seen as mere distortions and signposts amongst uneven talent, as various countries met were consequently crushed in football spectacles that quite no one had seen before. On the eve of the 1954 Semifinal, Hungary were hailed to be Uruguay's heir apparent for their first title -- the inevitable appearance between the two great national sides would come shortly.

===The Match===

Without injured Ferenc Puskás to amplify the game with his goalscoring ''élan'', Uruguayian captain [[Obdulio Varela]] was also out having picked up an injury in their 4-2 quarterfinal win over England. Provisional captains József Bozsik and [[Juan Alberto Schiaffino|Juan Schiaffiano]], one of the heros of the [[Uruguay v Brazil (1950 FIFA World Cup)|1950 World Cup Final]] who helped re-establish Uruguay onto the summit, swapped [[Pennant (sports)|pennants]] at the center meridian before a match heavily featured in [[World Soccer (magazine)|World Soccer Magazine]]'s 1960 inaugural issue as the "''Greatest Game Ever Played.''"

On June 29, sports writers pictured the mutually approaching "''unofficial final''" between world champions Uruguay and the Hungarian ''Über''-team as a prized game of reckoning in the 1954 World Cup Semifinal often described by those who watched the game as one of the World Cup history's all-time outstanding matches. The high standard of play certainly impressed all in attendance that was there for everyone to see immediately. Most all noticed the difference between this more civilized affair and the worst off violent bellicose behavior in the [[Battle of Berne|Brazil-Hungary quarterfinal]]. Both the defending champions and the Golden Team ripened the game in a frenzied pace of well-played symmetry as both teams ploughed on with ''esprit'' and fine sportsmen's gravitas brought to bear between two of the world's undoubtedly great sides. Each team reciprocated movement backwards and forwards in shared sense to shape up up an impeccably spirited and heavy attacking game.

Central to the success of the Golden Team was their reputation achieved many years before of getting off to a good start if not in all their games. At the 13th minute, an elevated ball sailed from midfield directed toward the Uruguay area. Sándor Kocsis linked the aerial ball with his head to a more inclided forward player inside the Uruguayian [[penalty area]]. The descending ball trimly dipped in front of Zoltán Czibor feet center-left midway inside the box. A Uruguayian defender was desperately dashing in from the right in close down lanes exposed to Czibor who was now ''vis-a-vis'' with the keeper [[Roque Máspoli]]. Proximately from 11 yards with his nondominant left foot Czibor drove a long bouncing diagonal grounder against the grain that moved with medium speed. Keeper Máspoli was soon flat prostrate along the ground but could not extend to it. Czibor stood his ground then raised both arms as he watched his work roll in slow motion inches inside the far post. For the remainder of the half, the gifted Uruguayians faced difficulties in dealing with the busy Hungarian defense that attempted to disrupt every move and restrict passing as both sides headed into the intermission with the only goal. '''Hungary 1 : Uruguay 0'''(13' minute).

Another reflowing by Hungary's great line occurred a minute inside the second half to broaden their entryway to the Final. In a routinized play, Hidegkuti was plying his trade deep inside the opposing area and saw an arching cross from deep wide right come his way. Hidegkuti was at full tilt towards the left side of the Uruguayian goal to where the ball was falling on the left edge in front of the goalpost. Hidegkuti pushed himself to be horizontal with a swan dive with the ball gracing the crown of his head as it shot inside the near left post. '''Hungary 2 : Uruguay 0''' (46' minute).

There was rising excitement in most households in Budapest and elsewhere in Hungary after the Hidegkuti score as immediate coverage of events were relayed on [[Magyar Rádió|Hungarian radio]] by legendary commentator [[György Szepesi]], who was almost becoming as well known as the players themselves. Being 2-0 up, considerable defensive resistance was maintained by Hungary on the world champions until very late in the game suddenly running Uruguay into trouble with the match seemingly out of reach. Rather than conceding on the precarious brink, Uruguay deigned the result and crucially gave it everything that enshrined and preserved the game as one of football's ''tour de force'' matches of the 20th Century.

''La Celeste'' spent much time in the second half largely mobile painstakingly patterning their plays aimed at getting past the ever blunting Hungarian defense as most perilous balls were divested by keeper Gyula Grosics himself almost single-handedly as defense-splitting throughballs, fast breakaways, crosses and solid Uruguayian shots did not abate. Inside the last 15 minutes, what Hungary supporters wanted most of all was a third goal to effectively finish the game, but this most difficult of conquests was not forthcoming. For Uruguay, pressure was starting to mount for their growing failure to score. Held at bay until the last quarter, naturalized Argentine [[Juan Hohberg]] found a crease between the defense and played it past Grosics to give heart to the world champions. '''Hungary 2 : Uruguay 1''' (75' minute)

Despite best efforts to quell a Uruguayian oncoming and desperate to hold onto the one goal advantage in the dying minutes, the irresistable fighting spirit and laboring heart of the world champions came about in a revealing experience. It was a defining moment for one that checked the great Hungarians from continuing their majestic course into the Final in near mandate form.

[[Juan Hohberg]] was drawing near the Hungarian goal with the ball and loosed a shot, an advancing Grosics blocked it but could not clutch it securely as it went ungathered. Two Hungarian defenders were rapidly withdrawing between the goalposts as Grosics was far off the line and on the ground; Hohberg regained possession and laced the ball between the two men who stood inside goal. The vision of Hohberg's late goal sparked an immediate emotional reaction in those present having counted themselves luckly to be in front of such wonderous and determined world-class heroics. The stultifying endgame goal by Hohberg brought confusion to the whole Hungarian squad having been vulnerable in surrendering a 2-0 lead. '''Hungary 2 : Uruguay 2''' (86' minute)

Hohberg was instantly crowded by teammates but was knocked unconscious and fell to the field excitedly overcome by the magnitude of his late score that proved to be so vitally important for him personally and Uruguay. The half-conscious Hohberg was still being revived and rehabilitated by a host of [[Physical therapy|physios]] on the field as time drew to a close four minutes later.

===Extra-Time===

It was in the first period of extra-time that a yet unflagging Uruguay was nearabout in putting winning distance to close out the game. From midfield [[Juan Alberto Schiaffino|Juan Schiaffiano]] released Juan Hohberg to the left side of the Hungarian penalty area with a pass. Assistant trainer [[Gyula Mándi]], Gusztáv Sebes' chief troubleshooter who majored in building the team's nucleus years before, went pale as Hohberg's low blazing shot soared precisely toward the left side of the Hungarian goal. The powerful volley struck the left goalpost and violently rebounded onto the field of play where it was cleared.

The considerable stamina required for the second period of extra-time also now shifted the game to a hard test of character and labor. The better physical conditioning of the Hungarians carefully honed by Sebes started to lean on instrinsic physical energies of the South Americans that was appearing wearing thin and overdrawn. Hungary surged forward in the arduous bout with more surplus stamina as a aerial ball came horizontal from the right to Sándor Kocsis about 10 yards outside goal. With the semifinal hinging and trembling in the balance at a most critical time, Kocsis rose to the occasion to leap as high as he could and steer a header into the right side of the net.

<center>'''Hungary 3 : Uruguay 2''' (111' minute)</center>

Shortly after, Hungary was again producing actionable runs inside the Uruguayian penalty area, and attacking conquistador Sándor Kocsis took a place nearer to the goalmouth as another well-flighted pass came his way. Kocsis became a enrapturing spectacle on film and on live [[Black-and-white|monochrome]] 1950s television coverage as he leapt into the air and drove the ball with his head just inside the left post past the desperately diving [[Roque Maspoli]].

<center>'''Hungary 4 : Uruguay 2''' (116' minute)</center>
At the whistle, Uruguay captain Schiaffiano came up to Jozsef Bozsik and offered warm congratulations to give credit on the wonderful victory. Bozsik was touched by the gesture and described the Uruguaying players as real [[sportsmen]] as opposed to the Brazilian group they faced earlier and stated: "''This was the most beautiful, the most humane game of my life.''" Those who watched the game stood in applause and ovation for the presence of a profoundly wonderful and unforgettable occasion ever witnessed at the World Cup. Members of the Golden Team returned from their dressing rooms to acknowledge the enthusiastic stadium crowd in a fantastic reception from the terraces who paid homage to the victors in an extended curtain call.

Sándor Kocsis's four scores that pulled Hungary away from Uruguay and Brazil put 11 goals in 4 goals to his ledger (2.75 goals-per-game) lavish a lasting renown on the sterling offensive player of the 1954 World Cup. 1954 was a very consequential and dazzling year for Kocsis, who would score 23 goals in 14 national team appearances alongside earning top honors being nominated as ''Best Player at the 1954 Tournament''. [[Sports journalism]]'s main question was adrift whether Kocsis would be complimented in union by the incomparable Ferenc Puskás down the center line in the soon arriving Final; news coming out of training camp was suspect on the changing situation with Puskás' ankle injury.

The two 15-minute periods of extra-time with Uruguay and their lengthened stay on the field to soak up adulation sought by the crowd and press caused Hungary to miss their train back to their hotel in Solothurn. The Hungarians were also in search of a local restaurant for pleasure in a celebratory dinner and arrived back at their lodgings at the Krone Hotel between 3 and 4 o'clock on the Friday morning that did not neccessarily bring resting solace needed by the team before their appointment Sunday afternoon.

Hungary's game, nearly already crowned world champions and playing brilliantly to produce great results over Uruguay and Brazil, were identified by the public and experts as overwhelming. The victory over Uruguay was also symbolic, a "''passing of the baton''" from one enduring powerful team to another, as Uruguay's maiden in the tournament was also its first to a non-South American country. The players soon learnt that they would be facing [[West Germany national football team|West Germany]] again in the Final whom they had demolished 8-3 on June 20 at group stage. Hungarian manager Sebes later sang the praise of the Uruguay squad who he faced in describing them as: ''"...the strongest team we have ever met.''"

The Semifinal between world champion Uruguay and the Mighty Hungarians is described by Cris Freddi's ''History of the World Cup'' as:

"...''an outstanding candidate for the greatest international match of all time.''"

==1954 World Cup Final: "The Miracle of Berne" (West Germany vs. Hungary)==
{{Main|1954 FIFA World Cup Final}}
[[File:Stade de Suisse, Wankdorf with 1954 World Cup memorial.jpg|thumb|370px|right|A well-known photograph of the 1954 Final is installed in front of the Wankdorf's successor stadium, the [[Stade de Suisse]].]]

The [[mass media|media establishment]] wrote about an incontestable team forged in the heat of innumerable sessions of practice set to oppose a collection of pseudo-amateurs from West Germany, where yet no [[Fußball-Bundesliga|genuine professional league]] had formed. German soccer had not always been the giants in Europe they were becoming some decades later when they entered to play in the 1954 World Cup Final.

At the midpoint of the 20th Century and up to 1954, [[West Germany]] was a semi-impoverished country whose sovereignty was [[Allied-occupied Germany|divided into spheres]] administered and looked over carefully by the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] victorious in the war. It was also politically dis-fellowed from the European mainframe, isolated and struggled to rise from the nadir in the war’s immediate fallout nine years earlier. West Germany was not yet connected to the cultural, economic and political mainstream of Europe, and stood as rank outsiders with many non-Germans directing deep felt resentment, derision and anger towards the Germans for the war and the political schism on the Continent in the postwar era that was to follow. Many also chiefly blamed Germany for the onset of a [[Soviet occupations|Soviet power zone that firmly decamped into Eastern and Central Europe]] and controlled from the [[Politics of the Soviet Union|Kremlin]]. German national self-esteem, reflecting many with guilt over the conflict, was gripped amid introspective soul-searching with precious few source to draw inspiration and footing that left aching voids amid austere and difficult years. Older generation of Germans were moved between the old legacies of the [[Third Reich]] and new reformist democratic winds blowing from the capital city [[Bonn]], that sought to bring hope by firmly shutting the door on the past. A new [[Wirtschaftswunder|economic German epoch]] was slowly being catalyzed based on new Western principles under the [[conservative]] leadership of [[Konrad Adenauer]] who was earnest in efforts to add stability to the economy before spurring on an age of re-industrialization. Thousands of German prisoners-of-war were returning home to find new models in a rebuilding nation that was new to their recognition. Outside Germany in 1954 still there was little genuine affection for most things German in a continuing boycott to isolate those who had jump-started [[World war|two of history’s greatest conflicts]], and much anger still persisted. A good majority of Europeans who were old enough to have lived through dark passages supported Hungary in the 1954 World Cup Final in more than just football and refused to receive the notion that a unreliable Germany was ready for a rebeginning, to many it was unimportant that West Germany should do well.

As advertised, Hungary found themselves in their second consecutive World Cup Final (their 1938 team had [[1938 FIFA World Cup Final|lost to Italy 4-2]] in Paris). The Golden Team, naturally enough, seemed unbeatable with an exceptional technique in attack that overthrew everyone on its way to averaging 6.25 goals at the games. Hungary’s megasuccessful platoon carefully honed by Sebes, now stood at center stage. They had brushed aside every serious team that stood between them and the title and in the process, achieved records, and by setting telling precedence its fame was extremely widespread.

The Hungarians had done famously in reaching a remarkable record of 34 wins, 6 draws, and 1 defeat since August 1949, were registers of a undefeated run in 31 matches in a record reign of 49 months. Opposing groups vying in these games paled and proved powerless in the face of the emergent 4-2-4 Hungarian system as most succumbed to a hail of 4.46 goals/game in the prior 41 matches. The world’s foremost sides were overstridden by the new Hungarian style as skillful players producing real pace treated the ball beautifully to find equations with accurate passes that carried weight interspersed with goal-driven salvos from an abundance of high-quality attackers with the ball at their feet.

That is was not to say the Hungarians were not among the first to be able to put up considerable resistance in their half. The old firm around goalkeeper Gyula Grosics earnestly had a star quality about it too. Before [[Gordon Banks]] and [[Lev Yashin]] there was Grosics. He was Europe's most gifted goalkeeper since the Spanish [[Ricardo Zamora]] in the 1930s, and a fine athlete and pioneer in the goalkeeping arts who would go onto start in another two World Cups in [[1958 FIFA World Cup|1958]] and [[1962 FIFA World Cup|1962]]. The formation of defense around him did their best to horizontally engage and deflect onsetting plays made against them (allowing 1.15 goals/game). The team seemed to catalyze some sort of footballing perfection.

Hungary’s 41-game narrative had almost a theatrical style and quality where implications of a brilliant new essential reality of the game was first revealed. They rendered theory into order and form with a reformation that seemed to channel the spirit of the new postwar age with extraordinary richness imbued to cosmopolitan-like airs. Manager [[Gusztáv Sebes]] seriously thought of the game’s future by architecturally foating new ideas to shift the paradigm and create his invincible team and overcome barriers. Behind his plotting to finesse in new tactical coordinates on the game, the team played everyone worth playing and carried all before them by the alliance of skill to imagination with special powers to match. Within a span of two years, the Olympic and European champions had crushed teams playing away with four World Cup titles between them (prior to 1954 there were only four World Cups). The Hungarians had unseated and de-mystified the patriarchal sway the masters of the game, England, had on the world's imagination with two absorbing matches 6-3 abroad and 7-1 at home that brought a universal renown and celebrity in Europe for shattering English football's cherished sense of invoilability. The adventures of both South American finalists of the [[Uruguay v Brazil (1950 FIFA World Cup)|1950 World Cup Final]], mighty Brazil and the reigning two-time world champion Uruguay met a dead end and seen off the stage, solidly beaten and eclipsed 4-2 by a stronger wording.

The Hungarians' 8-3 victory over West Germany at group stage was seen as a dress rehearsal for the Golden Team against a West German side that was starting to really surprise many. The championship match, apparently, were to be a mere fixture in formality Hungary were to visit to assume their rightful place as the greatest football side that ever was. Little wonder that in Hungary, the authorities as a matter of state also came to show their appropriate gratitude to apprehend the immensity of the undeniable triumph. Foundations were laid for 17 large statutes symbolizing the world-beating footballers and two million stamps were designed to be pressed into circulation commemorating the victory, missing for final imprint was the scoreline by which Hungary would go on to win.

Main thoughts were that West Germany were to face the planet's best team framed to their finest hour: by the cavalier outpouring of Sándor Kocsis, who was now the star at large, who scored 13 goals in the last 5 games and who entered the Final with 48 goals in 40 appearances allied to the newly chartered playmaker position and wiles of the seasoned campaigner Hidegkuti, and one of the game's fastest wingers Zoltán Czibor who did brisk trade with his positive buccaneering end runs on the periphery. József Bozsik was their playing conscience and metronome from midfield, and under his baton the Golden Team had flourished.

Veritable media drama surrounded the world's greatest goalscorer, Puskás, whose fitness was the main focus of attention and who had not played since the first German game. The great object of inquiry and dwelt-upon question of the tournament now became whether Puskás was hale and able to naturally play without injury. It was most often queried by the press as he pottered around the training ground and reports vacillated and were suspect on whether the great star's ankle injury had mended. Since Puskás withdrawal, Sándor Kocsis was at the cynosure and the constant target of unending two-man coverage of teams who sought to protect themselves, sending willing trackers to hang off the lionized forward wherever he went. Sebes planned to divide some of that attention and was determined to succeed with his talismanic captain helming the squad. Of all the players, Sebes needed the intelligence of his on-field general Puskás involved to clairvoyantly read the Final’s ever-changing vista and solve the riddle and conundrum of the fast trending Germans.

Sebes held sincere knowledge of Puskás promptly beating the panoply of any defense as illustrated by his 68 goals in 57 matches and down should tumble jeopardies posed by the Germans. Perhaps where hugely popular sentiment overruled pragmatism, it was the day before the match where Puskás was given a fitness exam by team doctors and cleared to play. At every event, a joint decision was reached between Sebes, Puskás, team doctors and assistants that Puskás would play. The team received a copious amount of letters and telegrams from well-wishers from everywhere where Hungary supporters lodged.

[[Sepp Herberger]] was appointed national manager of the German team in 1936 during the high point of [[Nazi Germany]], perhaps himself out of careerism joining the incumbent [[Nazi party]] in 1933. Later rehabilitated after the war for his political sympathies, found himself back at the top post, taking on the process of re-building the West German national side in 1950, a position he would hold until 1964. Always one to dispense pearls of wisdom to his players, with the desired discipline he built his national side around the significant talents of one of his best players, goalscoring midfielder [[Fritz Walter]]. Walter had been in detention in 1945 in [[Transylvania]] and was on the verge of being transferred to a Soviet [[gulag]] with the general German prisoner population when acts of providence liberated both his life and destiny to captain the West German side. A Hungarian spectator with a fondness for football had seen Walter play for Germany during better times, and it was perhaps a unforgotten sight paused in memory. The Hungarian spectator now turned prison guard misdirected the Soviet captors to the notion that Walter's real identity was Austrian and that he was not a German national to enable rescue from a doomed fate where mortality rates where highest after five years of captivity.

Herberger fashioned messages of stamina, strength, diamond-hard determination and preparedness that very much took hold in his players, who would in turn forever sculpt and hew out these exemplar virtues on the soccer field for all German football. German players were beholden to Herberger, their headmaster, ever puritanical, a monumental mason of character and team-building traits his responding players living proof, having now achieved a reputation in Germany akin to that of an eminent war-strategist. The German manager patiently watched and gained inputs, studying the great Hungarian team until he felt he understood them and held insights of his own. Herberger himself had appeared at the Wembley match the previous year match only if to help him weigh his judgement, perhaps rightly inferring Hidegkuti lay at the fulcrum and hub around which much of the wheelworks revolved. The Hungarians' great 6-3 triumph over England had been put to film, and the Germans put in homework in pouring over meticulous footage anxious to do better than the English. Herberger had a full-immersion close viewing Hungarian tactical maneuvers in their own 3-8 defeat at group stage, and came off ever more informed than before.

The party opposite had Gusztáv Sebes, ever the stylist, thinker, innovator, culturally permissive to the end that Puskás practically ran affairs both on an off the field, presiding over a dream squad of the most elevated players and illustrated what it was to play the game properly as a vision of joy and perfection. Sebes carefully managed to co-opt the most skillful players of their generation in a command-and-control system to develop the desired familiarity among players that had bonded one to another in two [[Budapest]] core-club sides that housed his national team. He read widely, was tactically minded, and his serious thinking went into upending most conventional thinking in the status-quo from tactics to methods in preparing for games. The team was enthusiastically adopted by the Hungarian people struggling in the grip of a [[Stalinism|Stalinist period]] as genuinely one of their own that affected and had a deep reach with most everyone in the country. But a gilded resume of remarkable career achievements was yet unfulfilled. Now Sebes arrived to the world championship match as expected, prevailing over all and poised for an inevitable World Cup triumph to which he had graduated naturally—a world title would be a rendering onto a patriarchal sage, driven by causes to have football come of age by injecting a massive dose of future orientation.

The unseeded Germans after their defeat took a route to the Final aroused a team unlike before — intriguingly transacting supremely driven activity to the surprise of most pundits and sports correspondents. The Germans were routed via three teams that could not rival those Hungary faced. The [[Turkey national football team|Turks]] were routed 7-3 in a playoff win, and big games were proceeded over [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavia]] 2-0 and [[Austria national football team|Austria]] 6-1, the last two being upsets. It was their most unusual 6-1 semifinal win over Austria that especially caused a real stir with the media. A hard-working coalition of German questers had won the palm to the Final harnessing an inner source of gripping ''esprit'', vitality and an unfeigned singleness of determined purpose was the outside view. Many of the amateur German players held day jobs, few could properly locate causes for this [[Cinderella (sports)|Cinderella group]]'s marvelous form well into peak condition.

The eve of the all-important Final was hardly serene and restful for the Hungarian team. The Hungarians had a much harder time getting to the Final in facing two rigorous interrogations by two world-class sides in Brazil and Uruguay that had disbursed their energies. The rough bout and treatment with Brazil and the two 15 minute periods of extra-time with Uruguay three days later saw the team not a full picture of wellness. Hidegkuti would later opine that in a span of six days Hungary was to play in its “''third Final''” against West Germany, and what Hungary needed was rest most of all. Outside their hotel were Swiss [[brass band]]s practicing inauspiciously for the Swiss national brass-band competition complete with the uncalming loud din of parades that seem to live on until two o'clock the next morning, denying many players the rest they needed. Arguments did develop among the players after their pre-game meal as to whether Puskás' role and contribution would be limited and be a liability. Some accused him of selfish motives and wanting to play solely to be the first one to receive the [[FIFA World Cup Trophy|trophy]]. Hardly anyone in the media or the public seriously considered the likelihood of Germany posing a challenge, a German defeat was confidently anticipated.

The day of the Final, [[Wankdorf stadium]] was full and charged with an electrified atmosphere under a tight police presence. The Germans' team bus that preceded theirs’ received passage inside, the Hungarians‘ bus was obliged to park outside with the players having to wade through heaving crowds to make their destination. That left manager Sebes explaining to police that they were one of the match's arriving teams, and was met by the heavy end of a policeman's rifle butt for his persuasion.

The much awaited climatic World Cup Final in 1954 between West Germany and Hungary meant for the players an event worth a lifetime’s hard work and found the sports story of the century that would have ramifications of [[macro-historical]] significance for the transformative political and economic climate the verdict would foster in both countries and in postwar Europe.

As the [[United States of America]] was in the midst of holiday-making during its [[Independence Day (United States)|Independence Day]] celebrations, on July 4, 1954 the city of [[Berne]] a half a world away would play host to the highest rated international football match played in the 20th century. Some 30,000 West Germans had crossed the Swiss border to live vicariously through their team, whereas few Hungarians were permitted to travel abroad. Wankdorf stadium was filled beyond capacity, attendance stood at 65,000, what few Hungarians were present were crowded out by the prodigious German presence.

===World Football's Highest Rated Matches in the 20th Century===

A list of the top seven matches between teams with the highest combined [[World Football Elo Ratings]] in the 20th Century (the nation's points before the matches are given).
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"
|-
|-
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|-
|-
|1
|1
|4211
|{{fb|NED}}
|2100
|{{fb|ESP}}
|2111
|align=center|0 : 1
|2010-07-11
|[[2010 FIFA World Cup Final|World Cup F]]
|{{flagicon|SAF}} [[Johannesburg]]
|-
|2
|4161
|4161
|{{fb|HUN}}
|{{fb|FRG|name=}}
|2166
|{{fb|FRG}}
|1995
|1995
|{{fb|HUN|variant=1949}}
|align=center|2 : 3
|2166
|align=center|3 : 2
|1954-07-04
|1954-07-04
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|World Cup F]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|World Cup F]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|-
|-
|2
|3
|4157
|{{fb|NED}}
|2050
|{{fb|BRA}}
|2107
|align=center|2 : 1
|2010-07-02
|[[2010 FIFA World Cup#Quarter-finals|World Cup QF]]
| {{flagicon|SAF}} [[Port Elizabeth]]
|-
|4
|4148
|4148
|{{fb|FRG|name=}}
|2068
|{{fb|BRA}}
|{{fb|BRA}}
|2080
|2080
|align=center|0 : 1
|{{fb|FRG}}
|2068
|align=center|1 : 0
|1973-06-16
|1973-06-16
|Friendly
|Friendly
| {{flagicon|FRG}} [[Berlin]]
| {{flagicon|FRG}} [[Berlin]]
|-
|-
|3
|5
|4129
|{{fb|ESP}}
|2085
|{{fb|GER}}
|2044
|align=center|1 : 0
|2010-07-07
| [[2010 FIFA World Cup#Semi-finals|World Cup SF]]
| {{flagicon|SAF}} [[Durban]]
|-
|6
|4119
|4119
|{{fb|FRG}}
|2069
|{{fb|BRA}}
|{{fb|BRA}}
|2050
|2050
|{{fb|FRG|name=}}
|align=center|0 : 1
|2069
|align=center|1 : 0
|1982-03-21
|1982-03-21
|Friendly
|Friendly
|{{flagicon|BRA}} [[Rio de Janeiro]]
|{{flagicon|BRA}} [[Rio de Janeiro]]
|-
|-
|4
|7
|4118
|4118
|{{fb|HUN}}
|{{fb|HUN|variant=1949}}
|2108
|2108
|{{fb|BRA}}
|{{fb|BRA}}
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|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|-
|-
|5
|8
|4116
|4116
|{{fb|HUN}}
|{{fb|HUN|variant=1949}}
|2141
|2141
|{{fb|URU}}
|{{fb|URU}}
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|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Lausanne]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Lausanne]]
|-
|-
|6
|9
|4113
|4113
|{{fb|FRG}}
|{{fb|FRG|name=}}
|2079
|2079
|{{fb|NED}}
|{{fb|NED}}
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| {{flagicon|FRG}} [[Munich]]
| {{flagicon|FRG}} [[Munich]]
|-
|-
|7
|10
|4108
|4108
|{{fb|BRA}}
|2015
|{{fb|FRG}}
|{{fb|FRG}}
|2093
|2093
|{{fb|BRA}}
|2015
|align=center|1 : 1
|align=center|1 : 1
|1977-06-12
|1977-06-12
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|}
|}


===The Match===
== Results ==

Prior to the match, a downpour seemed to portent and load with foreboding meaning the unpromising nature of the day's proceedings, raining mightily all day prior to kickoff. The playing field was thus a sodden and sluggish quagmire that would radically alter the game's complexion and personality. The weatherworn and drenched playing surface would conspire to soak up the true pace of the Hungarians' superior technical skills, whose beauty in action and playing mannerisms would wane by some shades. The Germans had met Austria under similar conditions in their semi-final match and had excelled, doggedly keeping at the laborious process in spite of the elements and had run out 6-1 winners. Much lore had grown around Fritz Walter back in Germany for his personal drift to thrive at his best when rainy weather were at issue and this aura would be present again — ''Fritz Walter Weather'' had returned. The field was in a parlous state and some debated initially to re-schedule the game when it decided to continue as usual.

Up front, Hungary ranged three excelling legendary midcareer players who shipwrecked, subsumed and carried all of the world's foremost sides to the knell of demise and defeated release since 1949: it would be the old incomparable nexus of Puskás—Kocsis—Hidegkuti down the center forward line who pushed the eminently possible. These three remarkable players, with famous backgrounds to marvelously combine to force 148 goals against varying defenses -- were held in esteem by many historians and sports journalists as one of history's unquestionably greatest-ever forward lines.

On Hungary's slightly receding wings to provide width: [[Mihály Tóth (footballer born 1926)|Mihály Tóth]] on the left and Zoltán Czibor was acquainted with a new station at wide right where he had never played before to stress left-back [[Werner Kohlmeyer]], who apparently suffered from a lack of pace. Many times agendas were set for the team by Puskás in selecting who to play in matches such was his influence with managers who were probably in awe of his talent. Sebes’ selection of Mihály Tóth over talented right-winger [[László Budai]] was not a popular or inspiring choice with Puskás. Budai had been part of most of the Golden Team’s most prominent matches and carried the experience and earned credit in the Uruguay match. According to Sebes he looked exhausted and needed the fresher Tóth who had merely played in 4 international games, while Puskás felt he needed Budai‘s presence as a vital source of supply from out wide.

Herberger aligned his revitalized though less gifted Mannschaft team as the English had done before, their WM formation's steering board queued [[Max Morlock]], [[Helmut Rahn]], [[Hans Schäfer]] and [[Ottmar Walter]], the five of whom had scored 15 goals in their 5 matches. The German team Hungary would face included six new players, all main regulars, and the result most likely would not revisit the earlier rough sketch simulation match that served as a sort of raveling out of Hungarian tactical strengths for the researcher in Herberger. Briton [[William Ling (referee)|William Ling]] did the officiating with linesmen Welshman [[Sandy Griffiths|Benjamin Griffiths]] and Italian [[Vincenzo Orlandini]] on the sidelines.

===1st Half===

As had been often the case in their matches, it was with varsity effort that the Hungarians initiated affairs early. Barely inside of 6 minutes, the ball was propagated and placed to the feet of Sándor Kocsis, who turned upfield and was inside the center Germany penalty area when he jettisoned a hard shot aimed to the left of keeper [[Toni Turek]]. The ball met the legs of [[Horst Eckel]] and sent caroming wide left to a ideally situated forward player. The bouncing ball there met the menacing craft of Ferenc Puskás' left foot. Showing the bold forward way, Puskas, who personified chapters of footballing fortune anyplace his station was, with clinical art stamped in the first score from an angled lane behind Turek, a good sign of his mobility. Puskás raised his arms triumphantly to the adulation of his team's supporters and a jubilant congregation crowded around the great star. Barely two minutes later, the sum of all fears in the judgment game and a returning nightmare for the ''Mannschaft'' and a nation of 60 million listening on [[radio]] came into being.

'''<center>Hungary 1 : 0 West Germany''' (6' minute)</center>

Again it was Sándor Kocsis who appeared to be everywhere on the pitch, this time again in the Germany penalty area doing hard battle for possession and was fast approaching the 6-yard box. It was [[Werner Kohlmeyer]], under duress, who thought it wise to back-pass to keeper Turek to recompose the match in the face of such a foray. A large momentary lapse of coordination by 35-year old Turek caused the slick ball to be mis-handled as it popped loose just inches from his hands. Viewing the uncollected gift was Zoltán Czibor who sprung it free into the open mesa, wheeled around horizontal to the goal to get a square measure of the net and sent a crescendo of angst and joy throughout those in attendance and those many millions listening as the ball rolled into the vacant German goal. Czibor ran to meet this compatriots his right arm raised in buoyant elation. A facsimile of their first 8-3 encounter was beginning to be sculpted and indelible writing on the wall appeared to be in the making.

'''<center>Hungary 2 : 0 West Germany''' (8' minute)</center>

A understandable sense of panic and resignation gripped many German supporters back home, but it was hardly surprising that many were in danger of losing confidence unable to tackle such onslaught. Most Germans were delighted to see their team in the Final and a second-place finish stood in the offing. Predictably and heavily publicized, an eminent Hungary squad was seen organizing the game to indeed become world champions. Puskás would later opine that it was the usual routine of the Golden Team that having gone two goals up on anyone, the team would shift into more relaxed play to save energy, and in those occasions it certainly meant a win. Being up two-nil early with the team capable of scoring many more, note was taken that a developing over-indulgent attitude in the players became something natural as ordinarily all challenges were swept aside, this was later identified by Puskás as perhaps what allowed the Germans back into the game.

German players, ever minding the match's significance, kept soldiering on with unbending determination as was the motive impulse and will impressed into them by Herberger that acted as the spur. A technical innovation had reached the Germans before the match and secret equipment would spark added lease into their game to become a sort of leveler of contrasts. Fledgling German sports apparel company [[Adidas]] had supplied them with revolutionary footwear, a technological breakthrough in [[football boot|shoe]] design that had exchangeable, [[Cleat (shoe)|screw-in studs]] that could interface to any playing surface. The new pioneering shoes thoroughly re-translated the match for the Germans, and offered a revealing look at the manifest advantages of brave traction surety and sprightly team movement that stood up to scrutiny on the field's slippery slope. The Hungarians' confident swiftness and action orientation was not what it used to be. Reverential tones spoken of before for individual and collective speed were now more subdued ones on the moist pitch.

Two minutes after Czibor’s goal, a German player had taken up position on the left flank just above the Hungarian penalty box and drove a keenly struck diagonal forward ball deep into center near the penalty spot. The brilliant incisive ball split a seam between two defenders. The last Hungarian outfielder, [[József Zakariás]], slid at the ball and made slight contact attempting to nudge it back to Gyula Grosics, but the surface water had slowed and de-accelerated its roll. Just seconds before a sortie by Grosics to secure it, into the scene from left raced [[Max Morlock]], the latter with a sliding foot pushed the ungathered ball just inside the left post as both players collided on the wet ground.

'''<center>Hungary 2 : 1 West Germany,''' (10' minute)</center>

In the 18th minute, a corner kick was awarded to the German team from the left quadrant of the field. The high arc of the overhead sailing ball was endeavored to be reached by Grocsis who leaped high with [[Hans Schäfer]] who was in his immediate presence. Both men jumped simultaneously. Grosics to punch the ball away to secure confines, the cause for Schäfer's jump was to take initiatives to head the ball. At the height of both men's leap, Schäfer fully wrapped his right arm around Grocsis' torso effectively obstructing his jumping motion with a flagrant interference foul on the keeper that was in clear view of officials. Grosics was tilted in mid-air by the added weight, his balance off kilter, plummeted straight down on his back while Schäfer landed upright. This offense was mysteriously not ruled by any of the officials in the match who were mere meters of its viewing. Mere seconds later, [[Helmut Rahn]] stroked the ball into an ill-guarded net. Schäfer's tackle of Grosics past the acquiescence of officials who allowed Rahn’s goal to stand was distancing with profound meaning—in perhaps the crucial turning point in the 1954 World Cup Final.

'''<center>Hungary 2 : 2 West Germany''' (18' minute)</center>

The Hungarian attack bivouacked in the Germany penalty box area again. Hidegkuti took a spot just inside the German penalty box, saw a rare chance to draw definition on goal and snapped off a flat drive through a chorus of players. For the Germans, by a stroke of sheer fortune, the ball violently ricocheted off the right post.

In the 24th minute, from midfield a Hungarian player drove a arching aerial pass inside the left part of the German box. In mid-air an airborne player re-directed the ball with his head into deep center. The crossing ball traveled precariously close to the center of the German 6-yard box. Hidegkuti hastened to the area with a German defender marking him on his left side. The descending ball was knee high when a nearly sliding Hidegkuti mightily plowed into it. The wide open goal lay at his mercy. A Hungarian player meters away was beginning to raise his arms in celebration as the ball raced high center into goal. German keeper Toni Turek caught a glimpse of the ball and leapt in the air and extended his fist in the mere chance of reaching it. The ball grazed his forearm, was deflected and sent spinning over the crossbar. The much animated German [[radio commentator]] [[Herbert Zimmermann (football commentator)|Herbert Zimmermann]] called Turek “''...a football God!''”.

===2nd Half===

At half-time the Hungarian players were starting to voice their displeasure of the refereeing quality in managing affairs. In the second half, the Hungarians poured every effort in order the regain the lead. After his promising first score, many observers felt Ferenc Puskás showed signs of the ankle injury that for the remainder of the game made him a pedestrian and passenger amid enveloping plays. Throughout the game, the Hungarian outfielders around Grosics did their best to keep within the match and were assignment true, undergirded by historical causes to find a way through to the inevitable winning goal. The formation of defense played tough, both physically and mentally, and were in good trim to stay the energy-bound West Germans till the very end.

Among the many plays of the second half, Kocsis headed a ball that hit the crossbar and came very close to scoring. Werner Kohlmeyer blocked on the line, and Toni Turek was called to pull off a series of inspired and spectacular saves in the game of his life.

In the 78th minute, Czibor produced a strong perilous run down a center lane, but the ball was a little more advanced than it needed to be and Turek raced to clear it. Czibor collided full flush into Turek and was sent sprawling, the ensuing clash jettisoned the ball into the open field to the left inside the 6-yard box. There Hungary’s supreme free rider Hidegkuti instantly gained control and found the position he was in to his liking. From close quarters approximately 7-yards from a steep 45-degree angle Hidegkuti fired again. To the dismaying unbelief of millions listening to immediate coverage on [[Magyar Rádió|Hungarian radio]] the hard shot impacted the outside of the left post.

With 6 minutes remaining, [[Helmut Rahn]] took receipt of the ball atop the center Hungarian box. He deftly maneuvered laterally inside dodging a defender ''vis-a-vis'' to create space and with his nondominant left foot put the ball into action towards Grosics. The ball traveled on the ground towards the left side of the Hungarian goal, hit a slippery surface where it hydroplaned and picked up speed. The speeding ball was true and keeper Grosics immediately dived to his left to impede it. Viewing the captivating scenario was a 18 year old Swiss journalist who sat in the section behind the Hungarian goal who mentally fathomed the goal being rescued by the savior Grosics. The young man was [[Sepp Blatter]], current FIFA President who admitted in Budapest in 2009 for the foundation of the [[FIFA Puskás Award]] that he desired Rahn’s effort be denied.

Helmut Rahn's mythmaking "''Goal that made the German nation"'' that would help midwife and spiritually re-develop the Federal Republic of Germany during the [[Wirtschaftswunder]] (''Economic Miracle'') rolled outside the outstretched arms of Grosics a shade inside the left post.

'''<center>Hungary 2 : 3 West Germany''' (84' minute)</center>

In the dying minutes of the game, Hungary intensified its attack with even greater ardor desperately trying to level the score. Despite leading 2-0 early, the many attacks the Hungarians created foundered and slowed on the heavy pitch or defused at crucial moments by a determined group of fatigue-resistant Germans who seemed active and hale in the rain who wore well on the ground. There was no letup in the driving rain. With even worse field conditions played to an unforgiving crowd overseen by unbecoming game officials, time and again Hungarian footballers firmly occupied most of the match in the German half, but the goals were not coming as they used to and were unpossessed of usually remarkable precisions that very wet day.

For German supporters it inspired awe and wonder, even bewilderment to see their less celebrated players holding onto a 3-2 lead in a miracle game of the virtuous and heroic on the precipice of the biggest reversal in football history. All of Germany was in rapt attention listening on radio and television to the unbelievable developments in Berne. The large number of German supporters kept the pressure on their team right up to the finish.

Time was running perilously short for Hungary, and anxiety and panic were rising back home in Hungary and in the Sports Ministry. Three minutes from time and the depths of declining hope, the Golden Team put in redoubled effort to close the 3-2 scoreline that would have long-standing resonance in World Cup history.

It was from midfield the ball reached Ferenc Puskás, presumably sent from József Zakariás. Existing game footage that remains of the match demonstrates Puskás in an on-side position at the moment he takes possession. Further afield on the opposite side of the field, a German outfielder was meters inside Puskás' horizontal positional plane on the field. Puskás, toiled in body but not in spirit as a profile in courage amid injury, the undisputed leader who could raise sufficient heroic volition and diamond-cutting scoring indulgence on the ball, now is the possessor. Left in his wake are three German players half-heartedly pursuing the Hungarian captain by angles, they would not be able to catch nor play a part in stopping Puskás.

The viewing public focuses on Puskás, and for millions on live radio commentary he becomes the principal subject as he strides into the clear on the left flank. Unobstructed by any defender in front of him, he enters the German penalty area. Puskás can now offer wondrous deliverance as a sainted and culminating figure, the destinies of a watchful anxious nation and belief-defying pressure of the whole enterprise heavily weighed the Hungarian captain. Only keeper Toni Turek, the last line between him and goal, could deny him. Turek issues out trying to reach the ball, but Puskás barrels downs and poignantly slides the ball under Turek in the last instant with crowning touch. The balls rolls into the net. This fascinating endgame goal by Ferenc Puskás was celebrated by the Hungarians as a miraculous epiphany of much-needed rescuing that righted the game from the door of ignominious defeat. Puskás’ peerless left foot had done the highly improbable in another sublime vindication of his skill’s truths in a grand game that would come to define the many features of his career—taking his total to 5 goals in 3 games. The English referee [[William Ling (referee)|William Ling]] approvingly signaled the players to the center meridian and legitimized the score. Regular time in the high drama filled world championship trembling in the balance was phasing out and heading into extra-time.

'''<center>Hungary 3 : 3 West Germany''' (87' minute)</center>

Members of the Golden Team were already back in the center circle awaiting the new kick-off. Gyula Grosics commented a completely new game would be played the following Tuesday if the game ended in a 3-3 draw. Almost a full minute had passed after Puskás’ equalizer, but an unusual meeting on the sideline between referee William Ling and linesman [[Sandy Griffiths|Benjamin Griffiths]] was taking place. Perhaps seeing the match from the prism that defined the Cold War era, linesman Griffiths conferred with the referee for what amounted to an unusually long time after the given goal and eventually raised his flag for offsides. Many eyewitnesses claimed that the referee was wrong, including German replacement player [[Alfred Pfaff]] who was on the bench and felt Puskás’ goal came by honestly. Fifty years after the match, footage evidencing that no offside occurred surfaced and was first shown on [[Norddeutscher Rundfunk|North German regional public channel NDR]] in 2004.

West Germany played the ball in conservative patterns to wrest precious moments approaching the final whistle. Somehow, the Golden Team intercepted in the final seconds and a full spectrum attack was shaping with virtually every member of the Hungarian team moving forward in numbers to besiege the German line for the last time. Passes were meticulously operated on so that Czibor could gain one last try. The ball was played intelligently to Czibor who was perhaps 10 yards out, slightly adrift from center on the left and sent a scalding shot aimed to the lower left corner. Toni Turek with two fists smothered the incoming ball that was on target. The monumental game was finally over.

A final appraisal saw the Golden Team posit 25 shots on target bettering the 8 shots by the West Germans by a 3:1 ratio—that stood to credit the thorough outperforming game that Hungary gave at the 1954 World Cup Final. Two of the West Germany’s goals came by way of wet turf conditions, and Rahn’s first goal was illegitimate in retrospect.

A difference of two scores badly officiated, Rahn’s first goal that was allowed to stand after Grosics was tackled and driven to the ground by Hans Schäfer and the unpardonable withdrawal of Puskás second goal proved too ruinous to overcome. A match that should have ended 3-2 in Hungary’s favor, or in the very least a honestly fought 2-2 draw, was now a very controversial 3-2 epoch-making and legendary victory for West Germany. The man refereeing the match, William Ling, would later come to be disgraced from world football as a figure of derision. The game would have lasting consequences and it would only be more than 50 years after the match that some of the other real untold reasons, long suspected by many, started to surface of all places in Germany

==1955 Hungary 4 : Scotland 2==

On 8 December 1954, [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]] hosted Hungary at [[Hampden Park]] in a friendly match, before a crowd of 113,000. Scotland were determined not to be humiliated as [[England national football team|England]] had been a year earlier, and attempted to take the game to the Hungarians in a display of counter attacking football. This made for an open, attractive game with plenty of goals; Hungary scored on 20 minutes through Bozsik, and Hidegkuti made it 2-0 six minutes later. Scotland rallied and pulled one back on 36 minutes through [[Tommy Ring]], but Sandor made it 3-1 to Hungary just before halftime.

The second half continued in the same vein, with [[Partick Thistle]] winger [[John Mackenzie (footballer)|John Mackenzie]] constantly beating Hungary full back [[Mihály Lantos]]. [[Bobby Johnstone]] scored a second goal for Scotland on 46 minutes, and only poor finishing prevented Scotland from equalising. The home side continued to press forward, but were caught on a counter break right at the end of the match when Kocsis scored to make the final score 2-4 to Hungary. It was the closest any team had come to beating Hungary in a friendly competition since 1950. Afterwards, Puskas complimented the excellent work of Mackenzie, stating that he had "never seen wing play of such a high standard".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.scotland.org/features/item/comments/the-firhill-flyer/ |title=The firhill flyer &#124; Comments &#124; The Official Gateway to Scotland |publisher=Scotland.org |date= |accessdate=2011-03-14}}</ref>


==Hungary vs. Soviet Union (Oct. 1956)==

* still to be written

==Demise==

Hungary continued to dominate international football; between July 1954 and February 1956, Hungary played a further 19 games, winning 16, drawing 3 and losing none.

Despite this, manager Sebes was sacked in June 1956, and was replaced by [[Márton Bukovi]]; however, Sebes remained President of the Hungarian Olympic Committee from 1948 to 1960, and was also Vice President of UEFA from 1954 to 1960. He also managed several Hungarian clubs in the 1960s ([[Ujpesti Dozsa]], [[Budapest Honvéd FC]] and [[Diosgyori VTK]]) with moderate success.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/coaches/coach=61688/bio.html |title=Classic Coach: Gusztav Sebes |publisher=FIFA.com |date=1953-11-25 |accessdate=2011-03-14}}</ref>

The majority of the team played for [[Budapest Honvéd]], who entered the [[1956–57 European Cup]] and were drawn against [[Athletic Bilbao]] in the first round. Honvéd lost the away leg 2–3, but before the home leg could be played, the Hungarian Revolution erupted in Budapest. The players decided against going back to Hungary and arranged for the return with Athletic to be played at [[Heysel Stadium]] in Brussels, Belgium. Honvéd were eliminated 6–5 on aggregate, and the Hungarian players were left in limbo. They summoned their families from Budapest, and despite opposition from FIFA and the Hungarian football authorities, they organised a fundraising tour of Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Brazil. After returning to Europe, the players parted ways.

Kocsis and Czibor moved to Spain to play for [[Barcelona FC|Barcelona]].

Puskás emigrated to Spain to play for [[Real Madrid]].

Hidegkuti returned to Hungary as a player and later became manager of [[MTK Budapest FC]] before emigrating to successfully manage clubs in Italy, Poland and Egypt.

Bozsik also returned in Hungary, becoming the manager of several Hungarian teams.

==Historic Significance==

The historical significance of the team lay in three areas; the introduction of new tactics, the concept of using a core set of well trained players used to playing as a team, and the idea that each player could play in any position if necessary.

The importance of Gusztáv Sebes, illustrated by the success of Hungarian national side in the 1950s, cannot be underestimated. His tactics - especially the concept of a deep lying centre forward - revolutionised a game where the majority of club of international sides had played the WM formation for the previous 20 years. The introduction and success of the Hungarian 3-2-3-2 formation led other managers and countries to experiment, with the 3-2-3-2 eventually evolving into the 4-2-4 formation. Another Hungarian, [[Bela Guttman]], travelled to Brazil where he implemented the 4-2-4 formation with the national side and won the [[1958 FIFA World Cup]].

Sebes's idea of using a core set of players, drawn from just a handful of clubs, was a new idea that was critical to the success of the team. Most national teams were selected on the concept of picking the best players, not the best team; England famously had a selection committee that selected the team for each game. By using players who were familiar with each others strengths at a club level, Sebes introduced a sense of continuity at a national level - something no other nation had at the time. The [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]] adopted this approach throughout the 1960s, with success at a European level; England won the World Cup in 1966 with a core of players from one club, [[West Ham United]]. Sebes also demanded rigorous training and standards of physical fitness from his players, as well as good tactic awareness - again, these were areas that many national sides of the time neglected. As a consequence, the Hungarian side were able to outrun, outpass and outplay their opposition.

Perhaps his most revolutionary idea was that every player should be able to play in all positions; previously, each player in a team was assigned a specific position or role, usually marking a specific opposition player. The Hungarian tactic of players constantly changing roles and positions contributed greatly to the success of the team - however, it could only be introduced by using a core set of talented players who were used to playing together at both a club and national level for a period of time. It would be nearly 20 years before the [[Dutch national football team|Dutch national team of the 1970's]] utilised the same approach with their concept of [[Total Football]].

==Results==

{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
Line 613: Line 315:
|-
|-
|1949-05-08
|1949-05-08
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1946}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6-1
|style="text-align:center;"|6–1
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (3), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]] (2)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (3), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]] (2)
|50,000
|50,000
|-
|-
|1949-06-12
|1949-06-12
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1946}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1-1
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]] (1)
|[[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]]
|47,000
|47,000
|-
|-
|1949-06-19
|1949-06-19
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Stockholm]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Stockholm]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2-2
|style="text-align:center;"|2–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[László Budai|Budai]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[László Budai|Budai]]
|38,000
|38,000
|-
|-
|1949-07-10
|1949-07-10
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Debrecen]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1946}} [[Debrecen]]
|{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|{{flagicon|POL}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|8-2
|style="text-align:center;"|8–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]](4), |[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]](2), [[Béla Egresi|Egresi]] 1, [[Kesthelyi]] 1
|[[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]] (4), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Béla Egresi|Egresi]], [[Keszthelyi]]
|30,000
|30,000
|-
|-
|1949-10-16
|1949-10-16
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4-3
|style="text-align:center;"|4–3
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]](2), |[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]](2)
|[[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]] (2), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2)
|65,000
|65,000
|-
|-
|1949-10-30
|1949-10-30
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Bulgaria}} [[Bulgaria national football team|Bulgaria]]
|{{flagicon|BUL|1946}} [[Bulgaria national football team|Bulgaria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5-0
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]](2), [[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]](1), [[László Budai|Budai]] (1), [[Ferenc Rudas|Rudas]] (1)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]], [[László Budai|Budai]], [[Ferenc Rudas|Rudas]]
|36,000
|36,000
|-
|-
|1949-11-20
|1949-11-20
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5-0
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3) |[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]](1), [[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]](1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3) [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Ferenc Deák (footballer)|Deák]]
|50,000
|50,000
|-
|-
|1950-04-30
|1950-04-30
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5-0
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2) |[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]](2), [[Gyula Szilágyi|Szilágyi]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2) [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Gyula Szilágyi (footballer)|Szilágyi]]
|47,000
|47,000
|-
|-
|1950-05-14
|1950-05-14
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3-5
|style="text-align:center;"|3–3
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1) |[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]](1), [[Gyula Szilágyi|Szilágyi]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Gyula Szilágyi (footballer)|Szilágyi]]
|65,000
|65,000
|-
|-
|1950-06-04
|1950-06-04
|{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Warsaw]]
|{{flagicon|POL}} [[Warsaw]]
|{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|{{flagicon|POL}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5–2
|style="text-align:center;"|5–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Gyula Szilágyi|Szilágyi]] (3)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Gyula Szilágyi (footballer)|Szilágyi]] (3)
|60,000
|60,000
|-
|-
|1950-09-24
|1950-09-24
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Albania|1946}} [[Albania national football team|Albania]]
|{{flagicon|ALB|1946}} [[Albania national football team|Albania]]
|style="text-align:center;"|12–0
|style="text-align:center;"|12–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (4), [[László Budai|Budai]] (3), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (4), [[László Budai|Budai]] (4), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2)
|38,000
|38,000
|-
|-
|1950-10-29
|1950-10-29
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4–3
|style="text-align:center;"|4–3
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Gyula Szilágyi|Szilágyi]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (3), [[Gyula Szilágyi (footballer)|Szilágyi]]
|45,000
|45,000
|-
|-
|1950-11-12
|1950-11-12
|{{flagicon|Bulgaria|1946}} [[Sofia]]
|{{flagicon|BUL|1946}} [[Sofia]]
|{{flagicon|Bulgaria|1946}} [[Bulgaria national football team|Bulgaria]]
|{{flagicon|BUL|1946}} [[Bulgaria national football team|Bulgaria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Gyula Szilágyi|Szilágyi]]
|[[Gyula Szilágyi (footballer)|Szilágyi]]
|35,000
|35,000
|-
|-
|1951-05-27
|1951-05-27
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|{{flagicon|POL}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6–0
|style="text-align:center;"|6–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|42,000
|42,000
|-
|-
|1951-10-14
|1951-10-14
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Ostrava]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Ostrava]]
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2–1
|style="text-align:center;"|2–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2)
|45,000
|45,000
|-
|-
|1951-11-18
|1951-11-18
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Finland national football team|Finland]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Finland national football team|Finland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|8–0
|style="text-align:center;"|8–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (3), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2)
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (3), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2)
|40,000
|40,000
|-
|-
|1952-05-18
|1952-05-18
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|East Germany}} [[East Germany national football team|East Germany]]
|{{flagicon|GDR|1949}} [[East Germany national football team|East Germany]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2), [[Ferenc Szusza|Szusza]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2), [[Ferenc Szusza|Szusza]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]]
|38,000
|38,000
|-
|-
|1952-06-15
|1952-06-15
|{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Warsaw]]
|{{flagicon|POL}} [[Warsaw]]
|{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|{{flagicon|POL}} [[Poland national football team|Poland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5–1
|style="text-align:center;"|5–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|50,000
|50,000
|-
|-
|1952-06-22
|1952-06-22
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Finland national football team|Finland]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Finland national football team|Finland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6–1
|style="text-align:center;"|6–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]]
|25,000
|25,000
|-
|-
|1952-07-15
|1952-07-15
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Turku]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Turku]]
|{{flagicon|Romania|1948}} [[Romania national football team|Romania]]
|{{flagicon|ROU|1948}} [[Romania national football team|Romania]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2–1
|style="text-align:center;"|2–1
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
Line 773: Line 475:
|-
|-
|1952-07-21
|1952-07-21
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
Line 781: Line 483:
|-
|-
|1952-07-24
|1952-07-24
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Kotka]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Kotka]]
|{{flagicon|Turkey}} [[Turkey national football team|Turkey]]
|{{flagicon|TUR}} [[Turkey national football team|Turkey]]
|style="text-align:center;"|7–1
|style="text-align:center;"|7–1
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
Line 789: Line 491:
|-
|-
|1952-07-28
|1952-07-28
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6–0
|style="text-align:center;"|6–0
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
Line 798: Line 500:
|1952-08-02
|1952-08-02
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|SFR Yugoslavia}} [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavia]]
|{{flagicon|YUG}} [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2–0
|style="text-align:center;"|2–0
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
|[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympics]]
Line 805: Line 507:
|-
|-
|1952-09-20
|1952-09-20
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Berne]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
Line 813: Line 515:
|-
|-
|1952-10-19
|1952-10-19
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Béla Egresi|Egresi]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3)
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Béla Egresi|Egresi]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3)
|48,000
|48,000
|-
|-
|1953-04-26
|1953-04-26
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|[[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|44,000
|44,000
|-
|-
|1953-05-17
|1953-05-17
|{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Rome]]
|{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Rome]]
|{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
Line 837: Line 539:
|-
|-
|1953-07-05
|1953-07-05
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Stockholm]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Stockholm]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[László Budai|Budai]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[László Budai|Budai]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|40,000
|40,000
|-
|-
|1953-10-04
|1953-10-04
|{{flagicon|Bulgaria|1946}} [[Sofia]]
|{{flagicon|BUL|1946}} [[Sofia]]
|{{flagicon|Bulgaria|1946}} [[Bulgaria national football team|Bulgaria]]
|{{flagicon|BUL|1946}} [[Bulgaria national football team|Bulgaria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Gyula Szilágyi|Szilágyi]]
|[[Gyula Szilágyi (footballer)|Szilágyi]]
|45,000
|45,000
|-
|-
|1953-10-04
|1953-10-04
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Prague]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Prague]]
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5–1
|style="text-align:center;"|5–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Lajos Csordás|Csordás]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Mihály Tóth (footballer born 1926)|M. Tóth]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]]
|[[Lajos Csordás|Csordás]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Mihály Tóth (footballer, 1926)|M. Tóth]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]]
|50,000
|50,000
|-
|-
|1953-10-11
|1953-10-11
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3–2
|style="text-align:center;"|3–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Lajos Csordás|Csordás]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2)
|[[Lajos Csordás|Csordás]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2)
|65,000
|65,000
|-
|-
|1953-11-15
|1953-11-15
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2–2
|style="text-align:center;"|2–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Péter Palotás|Palotás]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|[[Péter Palotás|Palotás]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|80,000
|80,000
|-
|-
|1953-11-25
|1953-11-25
|{{flagicon|England}} [[London]]
|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[London]]
|{{flagicon|England}} [[England national football team|England]]
|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[England national football team|England]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6–3
|style="text-align:center;"|[[1953 England v Hungary football match|6–3]]
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]] (see [[England v Hungary (1953)]])
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (3), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (3), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]]
|105,000
|105,000
|-
|-
|1954-02-12
|1954-02-12
|{{flagicon|Egypt|1952}} [[Cairo]]
|{{flagicon|EGY|1922}} [[Cairo]]
|{{flagicon|Egypt|1952}} [[Egypt national football team|Egypt]]
|{{flagicon|EGY|1922}} [[Egypt national football team|Egypt]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|28,000
|28,000
|-
|-
|1954-04-11
|1954-04-11
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1–0
|style="text-align:center;"|1–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ernst Happel|Happel]] (o.g.)
|[[Ernst Happel|Happel]] (o.g.)
|65,000
|65,000
|-
|-
|1954-05-23
|1954-05-23
|{{flagicon|Hungary|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|England}} [[England national football team|England]]
|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[England national football team|England]]
|style="text-align:center;"|7–1
|style="text-align:center;"|[[Hungary 7–1 England (1954 association football friendly)|7–1]]
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Mihály Lantos|Lantos]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Mihály Tóth (footballer born 1926)|M. Tóth]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|[[Mihály Lantos|Lantos]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Mihály Tóth (footballer, 1926)|M. Tóth]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]]
|92,000
|92,000
|-
|-
|1954-06-17
|1954-06-17
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Zurich]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Zurich]]
|{{flagicon|Korea, South}} [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]]
|{{flagicon|KOR}} [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]]
|style="text-align:center;"|9–0
|style="text-align:center;"|9–0
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
Line 917: Line 619:
|-
|-
|1954-06-20
|1954-06-20
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Basel]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Basel]]
|{{flagicon|West Germany}} [[West Germany national football team|West Germany]]
|{{flagicon|FRG}} [[Germany national football team|West Germany]]
|style="text-align:center;"|8–3
|style="text-align:center;"|8–3
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (4), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2), [[József Tóth (footballer born 1929)|J. Tóth]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (4), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2), [[József Tóth (footballer, 1929)|J. Tóth]]
|53,000
|53,000
|-
|-
|1954-06-27
|1954-06-27
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Berne]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|{{flagicon|Brazil|1889}} [[Brazil national football team|Brazil]]
|{{flagicon|BRA|1889}} [[Brazil national football team|Brazil]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
Line 933: Line 635:
|-
|-
|1954-06-30
|1954-06-30
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Lausanne]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Lausanne]]
|{{flagicon|Uruguay}} [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]]
|{{flagicon|URU}} [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2 ([[Extra time|a.e.t.]])
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2 ([[Overtime (sports)#Association football|a.e.t.]])
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2)
|[[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2)
Line 941: Line 643:
|-
|-
|1954-07-04
|1954-07-04
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Berne]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Bern]]
|{{flagicon|West Germany}} [[West Germany national football team|West Germany]]
|{{flagicon|FRG}} [[Germany national football team|West Germany]]
|style="text-align:center;"|[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|2-3]]
|style="text-align:center;"|[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|2–3]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954 World Cup]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
Line 949: Line 651:
|-
|-
|1954-09-19
|1954-09-19
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Romania}} [[Romania national football team|Romania]]
|{{flagicon|ROU|1952}} [[Romania national football team|Romania]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5-1
|style="text-align:center;"|5–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2), [[László Budai|Budai]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (2), [[László Budai|Budai]]
|93,000
|93,000
|-
|-
|1954-09-19
|1954-09-19
|{{flagicon|Soviet Union}} [[Moscow]]
|{{flagicon|URS|1936}} [[Moscow]]
|{{flagicon|Soviet Union}} [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]]
|{{flagicon|URS|1936}} [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1-1
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]]
|85,000
|85,000
|-
|-
|1954-10-10
|1954-10-10
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3-0
|style="text-align:center;"|3–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]]
|94,000
|94,000
|-
|-
|1954-10-24
|1954-10-24
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4-1
|style="text-align:center;"|4–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]]
|93,000
|93,000
|-
|-
|1954-11-14
|1954-11-14
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4-1
|style="text-align:center;"|4–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]] (1), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]] (1), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]], [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]], [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]]
|94,000
|94,000
|-
|-
|1954-12-08
|1954-12-08
|{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Glasgow]]
|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Glasgow]]
|{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]]
|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4-2
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (1), [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]] (1), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[József Bozsik|Bozsik]], [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]]
|134,000
|134,000
|-
|-
|1955-04-24
|1955-04-24
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Vienna]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2-2
|style="text-align:center;"|2–2
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (1), [[Máté Fenyvesi|Fenyvesi]] (1)
|[[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Máté Fenyvesi|Fenyvesi]]
|65,000
|65,000
|-
|-
|1955-05-08
|1955-05-08
|{{flagicon|Norway}} [[Oslo]]
|{{flagicon|NOR}} [[Oslo]]
|{{flagicon|Norway}} [[Norway national football team|Norway]]
|{{flagicon|NOR}} [[Norway national football team|Norway]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5-0
|style="text-align:center;"|5–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (1), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (2), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]] (1)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (2), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]]
|34,000
|34,000
|-
|-
|1955-05-11
|1955-05-11
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Stockholm]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Stockholm]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|7-3
|style="text-align:center;"|7–3
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (1), [[Ferenc Szojka|Szojka]] (1)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (3), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Ferenc Szojka|Szojka]]
|40,000
|40,000
|-
|-
|1955-05-15
|1955-05-15
|{{flagicon|Denmark}} [[Copenhagen]]
|{{flagicon|DEN}} [[Copenhagen]]
|{{flagicon|Denmark}} [[Denmark national football team|Denmark]]
|{{flagicon|DEN}} [[Denmark national football team|Denmark]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6-0
|style="text-align:center;"|6–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]] (3), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[Károly Sándor|Sándor]] (3), [[Péter Palotás|Palotás]]
|41,000
|41,000
|-
|-
|1955-05-19
|1955-05-19
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Helsinki]]
|{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Finland national football team|Finland]]
|{{flagicon|FIN}} [[Finland national football team|Finland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|9-1
|style="text-align:center;"|9–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (3), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (1), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]] (2), [[Lajos Csordás|Csordás]] (2), [[József Tóth (footballer born 1929)|Tóth]] (1)
|[[Péter Palotás|Palotás]] (3), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]] (2), [[Lajos Csordás|Csordás]] (2), [[József Tóth (footballer, 1929)|J. Tóth]]
|30,000
|30,000
|-
|-
|1955-05-29
|1955-05-29
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]]
|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3-1
|style="text-align:center;"|3–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]] (1), [[Máté Fenyvesi|Fenyvesi]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Nándor Hidegkuti|Hidegkuti]], [[Máté Fenyvesi|Fenyvesi]]
|100,000
|100,000
|-
|-
|1955-09-17
|1955-09-17
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}} [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]
|{{flagicon|SUI}} [[Switzerland national football team|Switzerland]]
|style="text-align:center;"|5-4
|style="text-align:center;"|5–4
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Ferenc Machos|Machos]] (2)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (2), [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Ferenc Machos|Machos]] (2)
|45,000
|45,000
|-
|-
|1955-09-25
|1955-09-25
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Soviet Union}} [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]]
|{{flagicon|URS|1955}} [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1-1
|style="text-align:center;"|1–1
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (1)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]]
|103,000
|103,000
|-
|-
|1955-10-02
|1955-10-02
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Prague]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Prague]]
|{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|{{flagicon|CSK}} [[Czechoslovakia national football team|Czechoslovakia]]
|style="text-align:center;"|3-1
|style="text-align:center;"|3–1
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]] (1), [[Zoltan Czibor|Czibor]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|50,000
|50,000
|-
|-
|1955-10-16
|1955-10-16
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Austria national football team|Austria]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6-1
|style="text-align:center;"|6–1
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (1), [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (1), [[Zoltan Czibor|Czibor]] (2), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]] (1), [[József Tóth (footballer born 1929)|Tóth]] (1)
|[[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]], [[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]] (2), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]], [[József Tóth (footballer, 1929)|J. Tóth]]
|104,000
|104,000
|-
|-
|1955-11-13
|1955-11-13
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden national football team|Sweden]]
|{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Sweden men's national football team|Sweden]]
|style="text-align:center;"|6-1
|style="text-align:center;"|4–2
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (1), [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]] (1), [[Zoltan Czibor|Czibor]] (2)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Lajos Tichy|Tichy]], [[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]] (2)
|90,000
|90,000
|-
|-
|1955-11-27
|1955-11-27
|{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|HUN|1949}} [[Budapest]]
|{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
|style="text-align:center;"|2-0
|style="text-align:center;"|2–0
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Central European International Cup|Central European Cup]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]] (1), [[József Tóth (footballer born 1929)|Tóth]] (1)
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[József Tóth (footballer, 1929)|J. Tóth]]
|103,000
|103,000
|-
|1956-06-03
|{{flagicon|BEL}} [[Brussels]]
|{{flagicon|BEL}} [[Belgium national football team|Belgium]]
|style="text-align:center;"|4–4
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Ferenc Puskás|Puskás]], [[Sándor Kocsis|Kocsis]] (2), [[László Budai|Budai]]
|75,000
|-
|-
|1956-09-23
|1956-09-23
|{{flagicon|Soviet Union}} [[Moscow]]
|{{flagicon|URS|1955}} [[Moscow]]
|{{flagicon|Soviet Union}} [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]]
|{{flagicon|URS|1955}} [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]]
|style="text-align:center;"|1-0
|style="text-align:center;"|1–0
|[[Exhibition game|Friendly]]
|[[Exhibition game#Association football|Friendly]]
|[[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]] (1)
|[[Zoltán Czibor|Czibor]]
|105,000
|105,000
|-
|-
|}
{{end}}


==Curriculum Vitae, Records & Statistics==
==Records and statistics==
[[File:Szegedvaros-aranycsapat.JPG|thumb|upright|Memorial of the ''Aranycsapat'' in [[Szeged]], [[Hungary]]]]
[[File:Szegedvaros-aranycsapat.JPG|thumb|upright|Memorial of the ''Aranycsapat'' in [[Szeged]], [[Hungary]]]]


* '''World Record''': (June 4, 1950 to Feb 19 1956) 42 victories, 7 draws, 1 defeat ("[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|''Miracle of Berne'']]") - 91.0% winning percentage ratio.
* '''World Record''': (June 4, 1950 February 19, 1956) 42 victories, 7 draws, 1 defeat ("[[1954 FIFA World Cup Final|''Miracle of Bern'']]") 91.0% winning percentage ratio.
** Team Record (June 4, 1950 to July 3, 1954) 31 game undefeated narrative.
** Team Record (June 4, 1950 July 3, 1954) 32 game undefeated narrative.
* '''World Record''': strongest power rating ever attained in the sport's history using the [[World Football Elo Ratings|Elo rating]] system for national teams, ''2166 points'' (set June 30, 1954).
* '''World Record''': most consecutive games scoring at least one goal: 73 games (April 10, 1949 June 16, 1957).
* '''World Record''': most consecutive games scoring at least one goal: 73 games (April 10, 1949 to June 16, 1957).
* '''World Record''': longest time undefeated in 20th and 21st centuries: 4 years 1 month (June 4, 1950 July 4, 1954).
* '''World Record''': longest time undefeated in 20th and 21st centuries: 4 years 1 month (June 4, 1950 to July 4, 1954).
* '''World Record''': most collaborative goals scored between two starting players (Ferenc Puskás & Sándor Kocsis) on same national side (159 goals).
* '''World Record''': most collaborative goals scored between two starting players (Ferenc Puskás & Sándor Kocsis) on same national side (159 goals).
* '''World Record''': Highest rating ever attained in the sport's history using the [[World Football Elo Ratings|Elo rating]] system for national teams with 2230 points on June 30, 1954.
[[File:Hungarian pennant World Cup 1954.jpg|right|thumb|upright|Hungarian pennant for the 1954 World Cup.]]
[[File:Hungarian pennant World Cup 1954.jpg|right|thumb|upright|Hungarian pennant for the 1954 World Cup.]]
* '''20th Century Record''': Hungary manager Gusztáv Sebes holds the highest ratio of victories per game past 30 matches with 82.58% (49 wins, 11, draws, 6 defeats). Brazil legend [[Vicente Feola]] (1955–1966) owns the second highest with 81.25 (46 wins, 12 draws, 6 defeats).
* '''20th Century Record''': Hungary manager Gusztáv Sebes holds the highest ratio of victories per game past 30 matches with 82.58% (49 wins, 11, draws, 6 defeats). Brazil legend [[Vicente Feola]] (1955–1966) owns the second highest with 81.25 (46 wins, 12 draws, 6 defeats).
Line 1,118: Line 828:
*'''World Cup Record''': +17 goal differential in a single World Cup finals tournament.
*'''World Cup Record''': +17 goal differential in a single World Cup finals tournament.
*'''World Cup Record''': 2.2 goals-per-match average for individual goal scoring in a single World Cup finals tournament (Sándor Kocsis 11 goals in 5 games).
*'''World Cup Record''': 2.2 goals-per-match average for individual goal scoring in a single World Cup finals tournament (Sándor Kocsis 11 goals in 5 games).
*'''World Cup Record''': highest margin of victory ever recorded in a World Cup finals tournament match ( Hungary 9, [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]] 0 - July 17, 1954).
*'''World Cup Record''': highest margin of victory ever recorded in a World Cup finals tournament match ( Hungary 9, [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]] 0 July 17, 1954).
*'''World Cup Precedent''': first national team to defeat two-time and reigning World Cup champion [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]] in a World Cup finals tournament (Hungary 4, Uruguay 2, semi-final&nbsp;— July 30, 1954).
*'''World Cup Precedent''': first national team to defeat two-time and reigning World Cup champion [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]] in a World Cup finals tournament (Hungary 4, Uruguay 2, semi-final&nbsp;— July 30, 1954).
*'''World Cup Precedent''': Sándor Kocsis, first player to score two hat tricks in a World Cup finals tournament (Hungary 8, [[Germany national football team|West Germany]] 3 - July 20, 1954 & Hungary 9, [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]] 0 - July 17, 1954).
*'''World Cup Precedent''': Sándor Kocsis, first player to score two hat tricks in a World Cup finals tournament (Hungary 8, [[Germany national football team|West Germany]] 3 July 20, 1954 & Hungary 9, [[South Korea national football team|South Korea]] 0 July 17, 1954).
*'''National Record''': Highest margin of victory recorded by the Hungary national team (Hungary 12, [[Albania national football team|Albania]] 0 – Sept. 23, 1950).

*'''Precedent''': first national side from outside the [[British Isles]] to defeat [[England national football team|England]] at home since the [[Laws of the Game (association football)|codification]] of association football in 1863, a span of 90 years (Hungary 6, England 3, see [[England v Hungary (1953)|"''Match of the Century''"]] – Nov. 25 1953).
*'''National Record''': Highest margin of victory recorded by Hungarian national team (Hungary 12, [[Albania national football team|Albania]] 0 - Sept. 23 1950).
** Hungary's 7–1 defeat of England in [[Budapest]] the next year is still England's record defeat.
*'''Precedent''': first national side from outside the [[British Isles]] to defeat [[England national football team|England]] at home since the [[Laws of the Game (association football)|codification]] of association football in 1863, a span of 90 years (Hungary 6, England 3, see [[England v Hungary (1953)|"''Match of the Century''"]] - Nov. 25 1953).
*'''Precedent''': first national side in the world to eclipse an 1888 [[Scotland national football team|Scottish]] record of being undefeated in 22 consecutive matches (32 games).
** Hungary's 7-1 defeat of England in [[Budapest]] the next year is still England's record defeat.
*'''Precedent''': first national side in the world to eclipse a 1888 [[Scotland national football team|Scottish]] record of being undefeated in 22 consecutive matches (32 games).
*'''Precedent''': first non-South American national side to defeat [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]] (Hungary 4, Uruguay 2, semi-final&nbsp;— July 30, 1954), breaking a 17-game Uruguayan unbeaten run against non-South American competition dating from May 26, 1924.
'''Precedent''': first non-South American national side to defeat [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguay]] (Hungary 4, Uruguay 2, semi-final&nbsp;— July 30, 1954), breaking a 17 game Uruguayan unbeaten run against non-South American competition dating from May 26, 1924.
*'''Precedent''': first national side to defeat the [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]] at home (Hungary 1, Soviet Union 0 Sept. 23 1956).
*'''Precedent''': first national side to defeat the [[Soviet Union national football team|Soviet Union]] at home (Hungary 1, Soviet Union 0 - Sept. 23 1956).
*'''Precedent''': first national team in history to simultaneously host the No.1 and No. 2 world record holders for most goals scored internationally (Ferenc Puskás 84 goals, Sándor Kocsis 75 goals) from May 11, 1955, to October 14, 1956.
* Team Record vs. Elo Ranked Opponents: (June 4, 1950 – Oct. 14 1956), vs. world Top 10 ranked opponents: 11 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss / vs. world Top 5 opponents: 4 wins, 0 draw, 1 loss.
*'''Precedent''': first national team in history to simultaneously host the No.1 and No. 2 world record holders for most goals scored internationally (Ferenc Puskás 84 goals, Sándor Kocsis 75 goals) from May 11, 1955 to October 14, 1956.

* Team Record vs. Elo Ranked Opponents: (June 4, 1950 - Oct. 14 1956), vs. world Top 10 ranked opponents: 11 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss / vs. world Top 5 opponents: 4 wins, 0 draw, 1 loss.


==Honours==
==Honours==


*'''[[Central European International Cup]]'''
{{MedalTop}}
**Champions (1): [[1948–53 Central European International Cup|1948–53]]
{{MedalSport | [[Football at the Summer Olympics|Football]]}}
{{MedalGold | [[1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Helsinki]] | [[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|Men's Football]]}}
*'''[[Football at the Summer Olympics|Summer Olympics]]'''
**Gold medal (1): [[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|1952]]
{{MedalBottom}}
*'''[[FIFA World Cup]]'''

**Runners-up (1): [[1954 FIFA World Cup|1954]]
*[[Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics|Olympic Champions]]
**1952
*[[Central European International Cup]]
**1948/53
*[[1954 FIFA World Cup|World Cup]]
**''Finalist'' 1954


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* {{ cite book | title = Puskas on Puskas: The Life and Times of a Footballing Legend | editor = Rogan Taylor | year = 1998 | publisher = Robson Books | isbn = 1861051565 }}
* {{ cite book | title = Puskas on Puskas: The Life and Times of a Footballing Legend | editor = Rogan Taylor | year = 1998 | publisher = Robson Books | isbn = 1861051565 }}
* {{ cite book | title = The World Cup: The Complete History | editor = Terry Crouch | year = 2006 | publisher = Aurum Press Ltd. | isbn = 1845131495 }}
* {{cite book | title = The World Cup: The Complete History | editor = Terry Crouch | year = 2006 | publisher = Aurum Press Ltd. | isbn = 1845131495 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/worldcup00terr }}
* {{cite book | title = The World Encyclopedia of Soccer | editor = Michael L. LaBlanc & Richard Henshaw | year = 1994 | publisher = Invisible Ink Press | isbn = 0810394421 }}
* {{cite book | title = The World Encyclopedia of Soccer | editor = Michael L. LaBlanc & Richard Henshaw | year = 1994 | publisher = Invisible Ink Press | isbn = 0810394421 }}
* {{ cite book | title = Behind the Curtain: Travels in Eastern European Football | editor = Jonathan Wilson | year = 2006 | publisher = Orion Publishing | isbn = 9780752879451 }}
* {{ cite book | title = Behind the Curtain: Travels in Eastern European Football | editor = Jonathan Wilson | year = 2006 | publisher = Orion Publishing | isbn = 9780752879451 }}
* {{ cite book | title = Kicking & Screaming: An Oral History of Football in England | editor = Rogan Taylor & Andrew War | year = 1996 | publisher = Robson Books | isbn = 0860519120 }}
* {{ cite book | title = Kicking & Screaming: An Oral History of Football in England | editor = Rogan Taylor & Andrew War | year = 1996 | publisher = Robson Books | isbn = 0860519120 }}
* Diego Mariottini, "Tiki-taka Budapest: leggenda, ascesa e declino dell'Ungheria di Puskás", Bradipolibri, 2016, {{ISBN|9788899146214}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.sportmuzeum.hu/aranycsapat ''Aranycsapat'' - dedicated web page]{{Hu}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060613194937/http://www.sportmuzeum.hu/aranycsapat/ ''Aranycsapat'' dedicated web page] {{in lang|hu}}
* [http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/06/en/p/cc/hun/sebes.html Gusztáv Sebes biography]
*[http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/06/en/p/cc/hun/sebes.html Gusztáv Sebes biography]
* [http://football.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/0,1563,1092858,00.html Hungary's Famous Victory]
*[http://football.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/0,1563,1092858,00.html Hungary's Famous Victory]
* [http://www.rsssf.com/tablesd/drgero5.html Dr. Gerő Cup 1948-53]
*[https://www.rsssf.org/tablesd/drgero5.html Dr. Gerő Cup 1948–53]
* [http://www.eloratings.net/ National football teams' rankings]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20160702073800/http://www.eloratings.net/ National football teams' rankings]


{{Hungary national football team}}
{{Golden Team}}


[[Category:Hungary national football team]]
[[Category:Hungary national football team]]
[[Category:Nicknamed groups of association football players]]
[[Category:Nicknamed groups of association football players]]
[[Category:1949–50 in Hungarian football]]

[[Category:1950–51 in Hungarian football]]
[[cs:Zlatá jedenáctka]]
[[Category:1951–52 in Hungarian football]]
[[de:Goldene Elf]]
[[Category:1952–53 in Hungarian football]]
[[es:Equipo de oro]]
[[Category:1953–54 in Hungarian football]]
[[eo:Orteamo]]
[[Category:1954–55 in Hungarian football]]
[[fr:Onze d'or hongrois]]
[[Category:1955–56 in Hungarian football]]
[[it:Squadra d'oro]]
[[Category:1956–57 in Hungarian football]]
[[hu:Aranycsapat]]
[[Category:Hungary at the 1954 FIFA World Cup]]
[[nl:Magische Magyaren]]
[[Category:Football at the 1952 Summer Olympics]]
[[ja:マジック・マジャール]]
[[pl:Złota jedenastka]]
[[pt:O Time de Ouro]]
[[ru:Золотая команда]]
[[sr:Златних једанаест]]
[[fi:Kultainen joukkue]]

Latest revision as of 06:58, 3 November 2024

The Golden Team (Hungarian: Aranycsapat, pronounced [ˈɒrɒɲˈt͡ʃɒpɒt]) refers to the Hungary national football team of the 1950s. It is associated with several notable matches, including the quarter-final ("Battle of Berne") against Brazil, semi-final (against Uruguay) and final of the 1954 FIFA World Cup ("The Miracle of Bern"). The team inflicted notable defeats on then-footballing world powers Uruguay, Soviet Union, England, Germany, Brazil and Italy before the 1956 Hungarian Revolution caused the breakup of the side. The Golden Team was also known by different nicknames, such as the Mighty Magyars, the Magical Magyars, and the Magnificent Magyars.

Medal record
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 1952 Helsinki Team
World Cup
Silver medal – second place 1954 Switzerland Team
Central European International Cup
Gold medal – first place 1948–53 Central Europe Team

Between 1950 and 1956, the team played 69 games, recorded 58 victories, 10 draws and is generally considered to have suffered only one defeat, in the 1954 World Cup final against West Germany.[1] During this process they scored 436 goals.

Under the Elo rating system they achieved the highest rating recorded by a national side (2231 points, achieved on 30 June 1954). In 2016 the BBC listed the team as the best international football team ever in football history.[2]

The team is generally credited for successfully implementing an early form of "Total Football", later used effectively by the Dutch in the 1970s. The team is also generally recognized for introducing new, scientific coaching and tactical innovations, which were subsequently adopted throughout the game. The team's success became a subject of national pride in a period of oppression by the communist regime imposed on Hungary by the Soviet Union. In this period any "nationalistic" or even patriotic expression was strongly disapproved of, since these were considered being against the internationalist ideal of the communist government. In this atmosphere, international sport events were the only tolerated fields of expression of national pride.

Key people

[edit]
The famous 2-3-3-2 formation employed by the side

The team was built around a core of six key players: Ferenc Puskás, Sándor Kocsis, Nándor Hidegkuti, Zoltán Czibor, József Bozsik and Gyula Grosics.

The manager of the team was Gusztáv Sebes, who had been a trade union organizer in Budapest and pre-war Paris at Renault car factories, and was therefore accorded a political clean bill of health to run affairs by the Deputy Sports Minister. Sebes can be credited with three key innovations. Firstly, he implemented fitness regimes for his players, as well as a club-like policy at international level to give impetus to regular practice sessions.

Secondly, he was responsible for the tactical concept of a deep-lying centre forward. At the time, the majority of footballing sides adopted the WM formation, where the centre forward spearheaded an attack line of 3 forwards and 2 wingers. Sebes's tactic was to withdraw the centre forward back to the midfield, as well as dropping the wingers back to the midfield when necessary. This effectively created an extremely flexible 3–2–3–2 formation, allowing the team to quickly switch between attack and defense. The tactic also drew defenders out of position, as centre halves used to man-marking a centre forward would follow the deep-lying centre forward back to the midfield.

Thirdly, Sebes encouraged his players to be versatile – the ideal would be for any of his players to be able to play in any position. This was a revolutionary idea – most players were used to playing in one specific position. This was an early form of Total Football. Ferenc Puskas commented, "When we attacked, everyone attacked, and in defence it was the same. We were the prototype for Total Football."[3]

Finally, the influence of Jimmy Hogan on Sebes and the team cannot be underestimated. The then president of the Hungarian Football Association, Sandor Barcs, said: "Jimmy Hogan taught us everything we know about football".[4] and Sebes himself said of Hogan, "We played football as Jimmy Hogan taught us. When our football history is told, his name should be written in gold letters".[5]

Notable matches

[edit]

1952 Olympic Games (Yugoslavia vs. Hungary)

[edit]

The Hungarians arrived at the 1952 Summer Olympics unbeaten for two years. The team easily defeated opponents in the preliminary rounds, before meeting the 1948 defending Olympic champions, Sweden, in the semi-finals. Hungary demolished Sweden 6–0 to set up a final against Yugoslavia. Goals from Ferenc Puskás and Zoltán Czibor ensured a 2–0 victory and the Olympic gold for Hungary.

1953 Central European Championship (Italy vs. Hungary)

[edit]

Hungary took part in the 1948-53 Central European International Cup, a nations cup for teams from Central Europe and the forerunner of the European championship. The competing teams included Austria, Czechoslovakia, Italy and Switzerland. Hungary eased their way to a final against Italy on 17 May 1953, which they won 3–0 with a goal from Nándor Hidegkuti and two from Puskás.

1953 "Match of the Century" (England vs. Hungary)

[edit]

A friendly match was arranged for 25 November 1953 against England. England had never been defeated on home soil by a team from outside the British Isles (they lost to the Republic of Ireland in 1949), and the FA were complacent – as the inventors of the game, they were assured that their players were technically and tactically superior to any other countries. At the time, England were ranked as the 3rd best team in the world and Hungary were ranked as the best team in the world. The game was eagerly anticipated; the British Press reported it as "the Match of the Century".[6][7]

The game was played in front of 105,000 in Wembley Stadium. Hungary scored in the first minute, and after 27 minutes they were 4–1 up. The final score was 6–3, with a hat-trick from Hidegkuti, two goals from Puskás and one from Bozsik. It was a footballing lesson that sent shockwaves through English football, and which ultimately caused English clubs to adapt more modern coaching and tactics.[6]

1954 Hungary 7 England 1

[edit]
The Hungarian crowd cheers following the conclusion of England's heaviest ever defeat (1–7)

England were anxious for revenge after the defeat at Wembley, and a return match was scheduled in Budapest for 23 May 1954, three weeks before the start of the 1954 World Cup. Any hopes that the Wembley game had been an aberration were immediately dispelled as Hungary won 7–1, inflicting England's heaviest ever defeat that still stands to this day.[6]

1954 World Cup First Round Games

[edit]

Hungary went to the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland as firm favourites; they were unbeaten since 1950, and had issued served notice of their ability with 6–3 and 7–1 thrashings of England.

The 16 finalists were assigned to four groups, with each group having four teams in it. Each group contained two seeded teams and two unseeded teams. Only four matches were scheduled for each group, each pitting a seeded team against an unseeded team (this contrasts with a conventional round-robin in which every team plays every other team, which would have resulted in six matches in each group). In a further oddity, extra time would be played if the teams were level after ninety minutes in the group games, with the result being a draw if the scores were still level after 120 minutes.

The top two teams from each group would qualify for the quarter-finals. Hungary shared Group B with Turkey, West Germany and South Korea; Hungary and Turkey were the two seeded sides in the group.

Hungary won their opening game against South Korea 9–0, with Kocsis scoring a hat-trick. In the second game, Hungary thrashed West Germany 8–3, with Kocsis scoring another 4 goals; however, fouling on Puskás left him with a hairline fracture of the ankle which left him unavailable for selection for the quarter-final and semi final stages.

1954 World Cup Quarter-final: "Battle of Berne" (Brazil vs. Hungary 1954)

[edit]

Hungary met Brazil in an eagerly anticipated quarter final; both sides had a reputation for open, attacking football. The Brazilians had lost the last and deciding match of the 1950 World Cup to Uruguay, and were anxious to reach the final again.

Unfortunately, the game was notable for the number of cynical fouls performed by both sides rather than as an exhibition of footballing technique; Hungary took a 2–0 lead after 7 minutes, and after that the game descended into a series of fouls, free kicks and fights on the pitch resulting in three dismissals. The game ended 4–2 to Hungary. Fighting continued off the pitch in the tunnels and in the players' dressing rooms.

The game's English referee Arthur Ellis commented: "I thought it was going to be the greatest game I'd ever see. I was on top of the world. Whether politics and religion had something to do with it I don't know, but they behaved like animals. It was a disgrace. It was a horrible match. In today's climate so many players would have been sent off the game would have been abandoned. My only thought was that I was determined to finish it."[8]

1954 World Cup Semi-final (Uruguay vs. Hungary)

[edit]

Uruguay were the defending champions, and had never lost a World Cup match in their history, winning both tournaments they had previously entered.

Hungary were without Puskás, but still managed to take the lead via Zoltán Czibor. Uruguay rallied but were unable to even the scores before half-time. Almost immediately after the restart, Nándor Hidegkuti scored a second goal for Hungary. Uruguay's unbeaten World Cup record seemed to be over, but they still had most of the second half to recover.

The champions were not going to give up without a fight, and spent much of the remainder of the match launching attack after attack at the Hungarian defence. With a quarter of an hour to play Juan Hohberg scored for Uruguay; Hungary defended desperately until the 86th minute, when Hohberg scored his second to force extra time.

Appearing to have much more energy than their opponents, Hungary retook the lead midway through the second period of extra-time when Sándor Kocsis headed home from close range; Kocsis scored again four minutes from injury time. Uruguay were beaten 4–2, their first ever World Cup loss, while Hungary went on to their second World Cup final.

The game was in direct contrast to the quarter-final between Hungary and Brazil; both Hungary and Uruguay had played attractive, attacking football in what was arguably one of the finest displays of football in a World Cup.

1954 World Cup Final: "The Miracle of Bern" (West Germany vs. Hungary)

[edit]
A well-known photograph of the 1954 final is installed in front of the Wankdorf's successor stadium, the Stade de Suisse.

The final was between Hungary and West Germany. Hungary were in their second World Cup Final (their 1938 team had lost to Italy 4–2 in Paris); in addition, they had a record of 34 wins, 6 draws, and 1 defeat since August 1949, and were unbeaten in their last 32 matches. Hungary had beaten West Germany 8–3 in a first-round game. The only issue the Hungarians faced was the ankle injury sustained to Puskás in the same game, from which he had not fully recovered – Sebes still took the decision to play him.

Hungary took an early lead in the 6th minute, with a goal from Puskás. Two minutes later, Czibor made it 2–0 to Hungary. However, the Germans rallied, and swiftly pulled the score back to 2–1 through Max Morlock. In the 18th minute, the Germans drew level from a corner kick; the goal was scored by Helmut Rahn.

In the second half, Hungary poured forward looking to retake the lead, but their attempts were repeatedly foiled by the German defence, with goalkeeper Toni Turek pulling off several fine saves.[9]

With six minutes left and the score still 2–2, Helmut Rahn scored West Germany's third goal. Two minutes before the end, Puskás appeared to equalise, but he was ruled off-side. The match ended Hungary's unbeaten run in one of the biggest upsets in the history of football; West Germany won 3–2 in the "Miracle of Bern".

There were three controversial incidents in the final, each favouring the Germans; Hungarian goalkeeper Grosics was allegedly obstructed for the second German goal, Puskás apparently equalised in the 89th minute but was deemed to be offside, and there was an alleged foul on Kocsis in the penalty area in the final minute of the game.

1955 Scotland 2 Hungary 4

[edit]

On 8 December 1954, Scotland hosted Hungary at Hampden Park in a friendly match, before a crowd of 113,000.[10] Scotland were determined not to be humiliated as England had been a year earlier, and attempted to take the game to the Hungarians in a display of counterattacking football. This made for an open, attractive game with plenty of goals; Hungary scored on 20 minutes through Bozsik, and Hidegkuti made it 2–0 six minutes later. Scotland rallied and pulled one back on 36 minutes through Tommy Ring, but Sandor made it 3–1 to Hungary just before halftime.

The second half continued in the same vein, with Partick Thistle winger John Mackenzie constantly beating Hungary full back Mihály Lantos. Bobby Johnstone scored a second goal for Scotland on 46 minutes, and only poor finishing prevented Scotland from equalising. The home side continued to press forward, but were caught on a counter break right at the end of the match when Kocsis scored to make the final score 2–4 to Hungary. It was the closest any team had come to beating Hungary in a friendly competition since 1950. Afterwards, Puskas complimented the excellent work of Mackenzie, stating that he had "never seen wing play of such a high standard".[11]

1956 Soviet Union 0 Hungary 1

[edit]

On 23 September 1956, the Soviet Union played Hungary in a friendly game at the Lenin Central Stadium in Moscow, before a crowd of 102,000.[12] The Soviet Union were unbeaten at home, and were generally regarded as the natural successors to the Hungarians as the world's premier footballing side. In addition, the Soviet team and players were regarded as ideals of socialist principles by senior communist authorities, who expected the Soviet Union to win comfortably, as befitting the senior member of the Eastern Bloc. However, a single goal from Zoltán Czibor ended the Soviet Union's unbeaten home record; the result did little to encourage good relations between the two countries, and was a minor contributing factor to a wave of patriotic fervour that resulted in the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

Demise

[edit]

Hungary continued to dominate international football; between July 1954 and February 1956, Hungary played a further 19 games, winning 16, drawing 3 and losing none. From 1950 until their demise in 1956 the team played a total of 69 games, winning 58, drawing 10 and losing just once and scored 436 goals.

Despite this, manager Sebes was sacked in June 1956, and was replaced by Márton Bukovi; however, Sebes remained President of the Hungarian Olympic Committee from 1948 to 1960, and was also Vice President of UEFA from 1954 to 1960.

The majority of the team played for Budapest Honvéd, who entered the 1956–57 European Cup and were drawn against Athletic Bilbao in the first round. Honvéd lost the away leg 3–2, but before the home leg could be played, the Hungarian Revolution erupted in Budapest. The players decided against going back to Hungary and arranged for the return with Athletic to be played at Heysel Stadium in Brussels, Belgium. Honvéd were eliminated 6–5 on aggregate, and the Hungarian players were left in limbo. They summoned their families from Budapest, and despite opposition from FIFA and the Hungarian football authorities, they organised a fundraising tour of Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Brazil. After returning to Europe, the players parted ways.

Kocsis and Czibor moved to Spain to play for Barcelona. Puskás emigrated to Spain to play for Real Madrid. Hidegkuti returned to Hungary as a player and later became manager of MTK Budapest FC before emigrating to successfully manage clubs in Italy, Poland, and Egypt. Bozsik also returned in Hungary, becoming the manager of several Hungarian teams. Sebes also managed several Hungarian clubs in the 1960s (Ujpesti Dozsa, Budapest Honvéd FC and Diosgyori VTK) with moderate success.[13]

Historic significance

[edit]
Statue of Ferenc Puskás in Óbuda.

The historical significance of the team lay in three areas; the introduction of new tactics, the concept of using a core set of well trained players used to playing as a team, and the idea that each player could play in any position if necessary.

The importance of Gusztáv Sebes and the influence of Jimmy Hogan cannot be underestimated. The tactics of Sebes – especially the concept of a deep lying centre forward – revolutionised a game where the majority of club and international sides had played the WM formation for the previous 20 years. The introduction and success of the Hungarian 3–2–3–2 formation led other managers and countries to experiment, with the 3–2–3–2 eventually evolving into the 4–2–4 formation.

Sebes's idea of using a core set of players, drawn from just a handful of clubs, was a new idea that was critical to the success of the team. Most national teams were selected on the concept of picking the best players, not the best team; England famously had a selection committee that selected the team for each game, with little or no sense of continuity. By using players who were familiar with each other's strengths at a club level, Sebes introduced a sense of continuity at a national level – something no other nation had at the time. The Soviet Union adopted this approach throughout the 1960s, with success at a European level; England won the World Cup in 1966 with a core of players from one club, West Ham United. Sebes also demanded rigorous training and standards of physical fitness from his players, as well as good tactic awareness – again, these were areas that many national sides of the time neglected. As a consequence, the Hungarian side were able to outrun, outpass and outplay their opposition.

Finally, Sebes's successful implementation of Jimmy Hogan's theory that every player should be able to play in all positions was critical to the success of the team; previously, each player in a team was assigned a specific position or role, usually marking a specific opposition player. The Hungarian tactic of players constantly changing roles and positions could only be introduced by using a core set of talented players who were used to playing together at both a club and national level for a period of time. It would be nearly 20 years before the Netherlands national team of the 1970s utilised the same approach with their concept of Total Football.

All-time team highs and lows

[edit]

The following is a list of national football teams ranked by the highest Elo rating they ever reached.[14] The table also includes the highest ranking as well as the lowest rating and ranking reached by each nation. The team that has achieved the highest rank in each confederation is shown in color.

  1. ^ The ranking in parentheses is that at the time the highest rating was reached.
  2. ^ a b The date given is when the highest or lowest rating was first reached.
  3. ^ The team's indicated lowest ratings and rank may not have coincided in time.
  4. ^ Russia reached its lowest rating as the Russian Empire (after 7 matches) and its highest rating and ranking as the Soviet Union.

International football's highest rated matches

[edit]

The Mighty Magyars feature in three of the top 10 highest rated matches all-time. A list of the 10 matches between teams with the highest combined Elo ratings (the nation's points before the matches are given) as of July 16, 2010.

Rank Combined
points
Nation 1 Elo 1 Nation 2 Elo 2 Score Date Occasion Location
1 4211  Netherlands 2100  Spain 2111 0 : 1 2010-07-11 World Cup F South Africa Johannesburg
2 4161  West Germany 1995  Hungary 2166 3 : 2 1954-07-04 World Cup F Switzerland Bern
3 4157  Netherlands 2050  Brazil 2107 2 : 1 2010-07-02 World Cup QF South Africa Port Elizabeth
4 4148  West Germany 2068  Brazil 2080 0 : 1 1973-06-16 Friendly West Germany Berlin
5 4129  Spain 2085  Germany 2044 1 : 0 2010-07-07 World Cup SF South Africa Durban
6 4119  Brazil 2050  West Germany 2069 1 : 0 1982-03-21 Friendly Brazil Rio de Janeiro
7 4118  Hungary 2108  Brazil 2010 4 : 2 1954-06-27 World Cup QF Switzerland Bern
8 4116  Hungary 2141  Uruguay 1975 4 : 2 1954-06-30 World Cup SF Switzerland Lausanne
9 4113  West Germany 2079  Netherlands 2034 2 : 1 1974-07-07 World Cup F West Germany Munich
10 4108  Brazil 2015  West Germany 2093 1 : 1 1977-06-12 Friendly Brazil Rio de Janeiro

Results

[edit]
Date Venue Opponents Score Comp Hungary scorers Attendance
1949-05-08 Hungary Budapest Austria Austria 6–1 Central European Cup Puskás (3), Kocsis, Deák (2) 50,000
1949-06-12 Hungary Budapest Italy Italy 1–1 Central European Cup Deák 47,000
1949-06-19 Sweden Stockholm Sweden Sweden 2–2 Friendly Kocsis, Budai 38,000
1949-07-10 Hungary Debrecen Poland Poland 8–2 Friendly Deák (4), Puskás (2), Egresi, Keszthelyi 30,000
1949-10-16 Austria Vienna Austria Austria 4–3 Friendly Deák (2), Puskás (2) 65,000
1949-10-30 Hungary Budapest Bulgaria Bulgaria 5–0 Friendly Puskás (2), Deák, Budai, Rudas 36,000
1949-11-20 Hungary Budapest Sweden Sweden 5–0 Friendly Kocsis (3) Puskás, Deák 50,000
1950-04-30 Hungary Budapest Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 5–0 Friendly Kocsis (2) Puskás (2), Szilágyi 47,000
1950-05-14 Austria Vienna Austria Austria 3–3 Friendly Kocsis, Puskás, Szilágyi 65,000
1950-06-04 Poland Warsaw Poland Poland 5–2 Friendly Puskás (2), Szilágyi (3) 60,000
1950-09-24 Hungary Budapest Albania Albania 12–0 Friendly Puskás (4), Budai (4), Palotás (2), Kocsis (2) 38,000
1950-10-29 Hungary Budapest Austria Austria 4–3 Friendly Puskás (3), Szilágyi 45,000
1950-11-12 Bulgaria Sofia Bulgaria Bulgaria 1–1 Friendly Szilágyi 35,000
1951-05-27 Hungary Budapest Poland Poland 6–0 Friendly Kocsis (2), Sándor, Puskás (2), Czibor 42,000
1951-10-14 Czechoslovakia Ostrava Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 2–1 Friendly Kocsis (2) 45,000
1951-11-18 Hungary Budapest Finland Finland 8–0 Friendly Hidegkuti (3), Kocsis (2), Czibor, Puskás (2) 40,000
1952-05-18 Hungary Budapest East Germany East Germany 5–0 Friendly Hidegkuti (2), Szusza, Kocsis, Sándor 38,000
1952-06-15 Poland Warsaw Poland Poland 5–1 Friendly Kocsis (2), Puskás (2), Hidegkuti 50,000
1952-06-22 Finland Helsinki Finland Finland 6–1 Friendly Puskás, Bozsik, Kocsis (3), Palotás 25,000
1952-07-15 Finland Turku Romania Romania 2–1 1952 Olympics Czibor, Kocsis 14,000
1952-07-21 Finland Helsinki Italy Italy 3–0 1952 Olympics Palotás (2), Kocsis 20,000
1952-07-24 Finland Kotka Turkey Turkey 7–1 1952 Olympics Palotás, Kocsis (2), Lantos, Puskás (2), Bozsik 20,000
1952-07-28 Finland Helsinki Sweden Sweden 6–0 1952 Olympics Puskás, Palotás, Lindh (o.g.), Kocsis (2), Hidegkuti 35,000
1952-08-02 Finland Helsinki Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia 2–0 1952 Olympics Puskás, Czibor 60,000
1952-09-20 Switzerland Bern Switzerland Switzerland 4–2 Central European Cup Puskás (2), Kocsis, Hidegkuti 35,000
1952-10-19 Hungary Budapest Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 5–0 Friendly Hidegkuti, Egresi, Kocsis (3) 48,000
1953-04-26 Hungary Budapest Austria Austria 1–1 Friendly Czibor 44,000
1953-05-17 Italy Rome Italy Italy 3–0 Central European Cup Hidegkuti, Puskás (2) 90,000
1953-07-05 Sweden Stockholm Sweden Sweden 4–2 Friendly Puskás, Budai, Kocsis, Hidegkuti 40,000
1953-10-04 Bulgaria Sofia Bulgaria Bulgaria 1–1 Friendly Szilágyi 45,000
1953-10-04 Czechoslovakia Prague Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 5–1 Friendly Csordás (2), Hidegkuti, M. Tóth, Puskás 50,000
1953-10-11 Austria Vienna Austria Austria 3–2 Friendly Csordás, Hidegkuti (2) 65,000
1953-11-15 Hungary Budapest Sweden Sweden 2–2 Friendly Palotás, Czibor 80,000
1953-11-25 England London England England 6–3 Friendly Hidegkuti (3), Puskás (2), Bozsik 105,000
1954-02-12 Egypt Cairo Egypt Egypt 3–0 Friendly Puskás (2), Hidegkuti 28,000
1954-04-11 Austria Vienna Austria Austria 1–0 Friendly Happel (o.g.) 65,000
1954-05-23 Hungary Budapest England England 7–1 Friendly Lantos, Puskás (2), Kocsis (2), M. Tóth, Hidegkuti 92,000
1954-06-17 Switzerland Zurich South Korea South Korea 9–0 1954 World Cup Puskás (2), Lantos, Kocsis (3), Czibor, Palotás (2) 15,000
1954-06-20 Switzerland Basel West Germany West Germany 8–3 1954 World Cup Kocsis (4), Puskás, Hidegkuti (2), J. Tóth 53,000
1954-06-27 Switzerland Bern Brazil Brazil 4–2 1954 World Cup Hidegkuti, Kocsis (2), Lantos 60,000
1954-06-30 Switzerland Lausanne Uruguay Uruguay 4–2 (a.e.t.) 1954 World Cup Czibor, Hidegkuti, Kocsis (2) 50,000
1954-07-04 Switzerland Bern West Germany West Germany 2–3 1954 World Cup Puskás, Czibor 65,000
1954-09-19 Hungary Budapest Romania Romania 5–1 Friendly Kocsis (2), Hidegkuti (2), Budai 93,000
1954-09-19 Soviet Union Moscow Soviet Union Soviet Union 1–1 Friendly Kocsis 85,000
1954-10-10 Hungary Budapest Switzerland Switzerland 3–0 Friendly Kocsis (2), Bozsik 94,000
1954-10-24 Hungary Budapest Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 4–1 Friendly Kocsis (3), Sándor 93,000
1954-11-14 Hungary Budapest Austria Austria 4–1 Friendly Kocsis, Czibor, Sándor, Palotás 94,000
1954-12-08 Scotland Glasgow Scotland Scotland 4–2 Friendly Kocsis, Hidegkuti, Bozsik, Sándor 134,000
1955-04-24 Austria Vienna Austria Austria 2–2 Central European Cup Hidegkuti, Fenyvesi 65,000
1955-05-08 Norway Oslo Norway Norway 5–0 Friendly Puskás, Kocsis, Palotás (2), Tichy 34,000
1955-05-11 Sweden Stockholm Sweden Sweden 7–3 Friendly Puskás (2), Kocsis (3), Hidegkuti, Szojka 40,000
1955-05-15 Denmark Copenhagen Denmark Denmark 6–0 Friendly Kocsis (2), Sándor (3), Palotás 41,000
1955-05-19 Finland Helsinki Finland Finland 9–1 Friendly Palotás (3), Puskás, Tichy (2), Csordás (2), J. Tóth 30,000
1955-05-29 Hungary Budapest Scotland Scotland 3–1 Friendly Kocsis, Hidegkuti, Fenyvesi 100,000
1955-09-17 Hungary Budapest Switzerland Switzerland 5–4 Central European Cup Puskás (2), Kocsis, Machos (2) 45,000
1955-09-25 Hungary Budapest Soviet Union Soviet Union 1–1 Friendly Puskás 103,000
1955-10-02 Czechoslovakia Prague Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 3–1 Central European Cup Kocsis, Tichy, Czibor 50,000
1955-10-16 Hungary Budapest Austria Austria 6–1 Central European Cup Kocsis, Puskás, Czibor (2), Tichy, J. Tóth 104,000
1955-11-13 Hungary Budapest Sweden Sweden 4–2 Friendly Puskás, Tichy, Czibor (2) 90,000
1955-11-27 Hungary Budapest Italy Italy 2–0 Central European Cup Puskás, J. Tóth 103,000
1956-06-03 Belgium Brussels Belgium Belgium 4–4 Friendly Puskás, Kocsis (2), Budai 75,000
1956-09-23 Soviet Union Moscow Soviet Union Soviet Union 1–0 Friendly Czibor 105,000

Records and statistics

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Memorial of the Aranycsapat in Szeged, Hungary
  • World Record: (June 4, 1950 – February 19, 1956) 42 victories, 7 draws, 1 defeat ("Miracle of Bern") – 91.0% winning percentage ratio.
    • Team Record (June 4, 1950 – July 3, 1954) 32 game undefeated narrative.
  • World Record: most consecutive games scoring at least one goal: 73 games (April 10, 1949 – June 16, 1957).
  • World Record: longest time undefeated in 20th and 21st centuries: 4 years 1 month (June 4, 1950 – July 4, 1954).
  • World Record: most collaborative goals scored between two starting players (Ferenc Puskás & Sándor Kocsis) on same national side (159 goals).
  • World Record: Highest rating ever attained in the sport's history using the Elo rating system for national teams with 2230 points on June 30, 1954.
Hungarian pennant for the 1954 World Cup.
  • 20th Century Record: Hungary manager Gusztáv Sebes holds the highest ratio of victories per game past 30 matches with 82.58% (49 wins, 11, draws, 6 defeats). Brazil legend Vicente Feola (1955–1966) owns the second highest with 81.25 (46 wins, 12 draws, 6 defeats).
  • 20th Century Record: Most International Goals: Ferenc Puskás (84 goals).
  • World Cup Record: 27 goals scored in a single World Cup finals tournament.
  • World Cup Record: 5.4 goals-per-match in a single World Cup finals tournament.
  • World Cup Record: +17 goal differential in a single World Cup finals tournament.
  • World Cup Record: 2.2 goals-per-match average for individual goal scoring in a single World Cup finals tournament (Sándor Kocsis 11 goals in 5 games).
  • World Cup Record: highest margin of victory ever recorded in a World Cup finals tournament match ( Hungary 9, South Korea 0 – July 17, 1954).
  • World Cup Precedent: first national team to defeat two-time and reigning World Cup champion Uruguay in a World Cup finals tournament (Hungary 4, Uruguay 2, semi-final — July 30, 1954).
  • World Cup Precedent: Sándor Kocsis, first player to score two hat tricks in a World Cup finals tournament (Hungary 8, West Germany 3 – July 20, 1954 & Hungary 9, South Korea 0 – July 17, 1954).
  • National Record: Highest margin of victory recorded by the Hungary national team (Hungary 12, Albania 0 – Sept. 23, 1950).
  • Precedent: first national side from outside the British Isles to defeat England at home since the codification of association football in 1863, a span of 90 years (Hungary 6, England 3, see "Match of the Century" – Nov. 25 1953).
    • Hungary's 7–1 defeat of England in Budapest the next year is still England's record defeat.
  • Precedent: first national side in the world to eclipse an 1888 Scottish record of being undefeated in 22 consecutive matches (32 games).
  • Precedent: first non-South American national side to defeat Uruguay (Hungary 4, Uruguay 2, semi-final — July 30, 1954), breaking a 17-game Uruguayan unbeaten run against non-South American competition dating from May 26, 1924.
  • Precedent: first national side to defeat the Soviet Union at home (Hungary 1, Soviet Union 0 – Sept. 23 1956).
  • Precedent: first national team in history to simultaneously host the No.1 and No. 2 world record holders for most goals scored internationally (Ferenc Puskás 84 goals, Sándor Kocsis 75 goals) from May 11, 1955, to October 14, 1956.
  • Team Record vs. Elo Ranked Opponents: (June 4, 1950 – Oct. 14 1956), vs. world Top 10 ranked opponents: 11 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss / vs. world Top 5 opponents: 4 wins, 0 draw, 1 loss.

Honours

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References

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  1. ^ "Mighty Magyars and Hungary's four-year unbeaten streak". FIFA.
  2. ^ "The greatest international team ever?". BBC Sport.
  3. ^ FIFA.com
  4. ^ "How total football inventor was lost to Hungary". TheGuardian.com. 22 November 2003.
  5. ^ Jonathan Wilson, The Anatomy of England: a History in Ten Matches (Orion Publishing Group, London 2010)
  6. ^ a b c Glanville, Brian (17 May 2009). "The Hungarian disasters – England v Hungary, 1953-4". The Observer. Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
  7. ^ "Hungary marks 50th year since England win". Sports Illustrated. CNN/Sports Illustrated. 25 November 2003. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
  8. ^ "Football: Ellis a knockout during the Battle of Berne – Sport". The Independent. 1998-06-09. Retrieved 2011-03-14.
  9. ^ Werner Raupp: Toni Turek – „Fußballgott“. Eine Biographie. Arete Verlag, Hildesheim 2019 (ISBN 978-3-96423-008-9), p. 107-114.
  10. ^ "Scotland International Matches 1951–1955". Retrieved 2012-10-12.
  11. ^ "The firhill flyer | Comments | The Official Gateway to Scotland". Scotland.org. Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-03-14.
  12. ^ "International football MATCH report: 23.09.1956 Soviet Union vs Hungary". Retrieved 2012-09-19.
  13. ^ "Classic Coach: Gusztav Sebes". FIFA.com. 1953-11-25. Archived from the original on 2007-07-09. Retrieved 2011-03-14.
  14. ^ World Football Elo Ratings; under the columns tab choose "Highest Rank / Rating" as well as "Lowest Rank / Rating"

Bibliography

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  • Rogan Taylor, ed. (1998). Puskas on Puskas: The Life and Times of a Footballing Legend. Robson Books. ISBN 1861051565.
  • Terry Crouch, ed. (2006). The World Cup: The Complete History. Aurum Press Ltd. ISBN 1845131495.
  • Michael L. LaBlanc & Richard Henshaw, ed. (1994). The World Encyclopedia of Soccer. Invisible Ink Press. ISBN 0810394421.
  • Jonathan Wilson, ed. (2006). Behind the Curtain: Travels in Eastern European Football. Orion Publishing. ISBN 9780752879451.
  • Rogan Taylor & Andrew War, ed. (1996). Kicking & Screaming: An Oral History of Football in England. Robson Books. ISBN 0860519120.
  • Diego Mariottini, "Tiki-taka Budapest: leggenda, ascesa e declino dell'Ungheria di Puskás", Bradipolibri, 2016, ISBN 9788899146214
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