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1962 FIFA World Cup

The 1962 FIFA World Cup was the seventh edition of the FIFA World Cup, the quadrennial international football championship for senior men's national teams. It was held from 30 May to 17 June 1962 in Chile. The qualification rounds took place between August 1960 and December 1961, with 56 teams entering from six confederations, and fourteen qualifying for the finals tournament alongside Chile, the hosts, and Brazil, the defending champions.

1962 FIFA World Cup
Tournament details
Host countryChile
Dates30 May – 17 June
Teams16 (from 3 confederations)
Venue(s)4 (in 4 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Brazil (2nd title)
Runners-up Czechoslovakia
Third place Chile
Fourth place Yugoslavia
Tournament statistics
Matches played32
Goals scored89 (2.78 per match)
Attendance893,172 (27,912 per match)
Top scorer(s) Garrincha
Vavá
Leonel Sánchez
Flórián Albert
Valentin Ivanov
Dražan Jerković
(4 goals each)
1958
1966

Brazil successfully defended their World Cup title, defeating Czechoslovakia 3–1 in the final in the Chilean capital of Santiago. They became the second team, after Italy in 1934 and 1938, to win the World Cup twice consecutively; no team has since achieved the feat. Host nation Chile finished third, defeating Yugoslavia 1–0 in the third-place play-off.

The tournament was marred by violence between players on the pitch and a toxic atmosphere; it included the first-round match between Chile and Italy (2–0), which became known as the Battle of Santiago, one of a number of violent matches played throughout the tournament. It was the first World Cup that used goal average as a means of separating teams with the same number of points. It was also the first World Cup in which the average number of goals per match was less than three (2.78); this has been repeated at every World Cup since, despite expansion of the tournament.

Host selection Edit

After Europe hosted two consecutive World Cups, the American federations claimed the 1962 edition must be held in South America or they would stage a complete boycott of the tournament, similar to 1938.[1] Argentina, after previously failed candidacies, was the favorite. Magallanes' chairman, Ernesto Alvear, attended a FIFA Congress held in Helsinki while the Finnish city was hosting the 1952 Summer Olympics. He considered that Chile was able to organise the World Cup. Several sources also say that FIFA did not want Argentina to run alone, requesting the participation of Chile as almost symbolic. Chile registered its candidacy in 1954 alongside Argentina and West Germany, the latter withdrawing at the request of FIFA.[1]

Chile's football federation committee, led by Carlos Dittborn and Juan Pinto Durán, toured many countries convincing various football associations about the country's ability to organise the tournament in comparison to Argentina's superior sports infrastructure and prestige. The FIFA Congress met in Lisbon, Portugal on 10 June 1956. That day, Raul Colombo, representing Argentina's candidacy, ended his speech with the phrase "We can start the World Cup tomorrow. We have it all." The next day, Dittborn presented four arguments that supported Chile's candidacy: Chile's continued participations at FIFA-organised conferences and tournaments, sports climate, tolerance of race and creed and political and institutional stability of the country. In addition, Dittborn invoked Article 2 of the FIFA statutes that addressed the tournament's role in promoting the sport in countries deemed "underdeveloped".[2] In a counter-point to Colombo's claim that "We have it all" Dittborn coined the phrase "Because we have nothing, we want to do it all" (Spanish: Porque no tenemos nada, queremos hacerlo todo) around the fifteenth minute of his speech.[3] Chile won 32 votes to Argentina's 10.[3] Fourteen members abstained from voting.[3]

Qualification Edit

 
  Countries qualified for World Cup
  Country failed to qualify
  Countries that did not enter World Cup
  Country not a FIFA member

57 teams entered the 1962 World Cup (due to rejected entries and withdrawals, 52 teams eventually participated in the qualifying stages). Chile as host nation and Brazil as reigning World Cup champions were granted automatic qualification, with the remaining 14 finals places divided among the continental confederations.

Eight places were contested by UEFA teams (Europe) and three by CONMEBOL teams (South America). CAF teams (Africa), AFC teams (Asia), NAFC teams (North America), and CCCF teams (Central America and Caribbean) contested three play-offs slots. The three winners would then face a European or South American team for entry into the World Cup. The 1962 tournament was the last one for which only nations from Europe or the Americas qualified.

Two teams qualified for the first time ever: Colombia and Bulgaria. Colombia would not qualify for another World Cup until 1990.

Among the teams who failed to qualify were the 1958 runners up Sweden and third-place finishers France. Austria withdrew during the qualification tournament due to financial problems.

Italy, Switzerland and Uruguay all qualified for the first time since 1954, and Spain for the first time since 1950. Scotland failed to qualify for the first time since rejoining FIFA in 1946 (though they had ultimately also declined to participate in the 1950 edition).

List of qualified teams Edit

The following 16 teams qualified for the final tournament.

Venues Edit

Originally, eight stadiums were selected to host the World Cup matches in eight cities: Santiago, Viña del Mar, Rancagua, Arica, Talca, Concepción, Talcahuano and Valdivia.

The Valdivia earthquake, the most powerful earthquake ever recorded, occurred on 22 May 1960. With over 50,000 casualties and more than 2 million people affected, the earthquake forced the organising committee to completely modify the World Cup's calendar. Talca, Concepción, Talcahuano and Valdivia were severely damaged and discarded as venues. Antofagasta and Valparaíso declined to host any matches as their venues were not financially self-sustainable. Viña del Mar and Arica managed to rebuild their stadiums while Braden Copper Company, then an American company that controlled the El Teniente copper mine, allowed the use of its stadium in Rancagua. Due to these setbacks, this is the World Cup edition with the smallest number of venues spread across the country (while the 1930 FIFA World Cup was held in three venues, all of them were located in a single city). The most used stadium was the Estadio Nacional in Santiago, with 10 matches; the Estadio Sausalito in Viña del Mar hosted 8 matches, and the stadiums in Rancagua and far-away Arica (the only location that was not close to the other cities) both hosted 7 matches. Being that Estadio Nacional was the only large venue of the tournament (all others had less than 20,000 seats), it also saw the largest attendance average, by far, with Estadio Sausalito's attendance only being boosted with the Brazil matches it hosted (the semifinal between Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia was the only one in the stadium with less than 10,000 spectators).

Being largely concerned with the build-up of the country after the 1960 earthquake, government support for the tournament was minimal.[4]

Santiago Viña del Mar
Estadio Nacional Estadio Sausalito
33°27′52″S 70°36′38″W / 33.46444°S 70.61056°W / -33.46444; -70.61056 (Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos) 33°00′51.83″S 71°32′6.84″W / 33.0143972°S 71.5352333°W / -33.0143972; -71.5352333 (Estadio Sausalito)
Capacity: 66,660 Capacity: 18,037
   
Rancagua Arica
Estadio Braden Copper Co. Estadio Carlos Dittborn
34°10′39.95″S 70°44′15.79″W / 34.1777639°S 70.7377194°W / -34.1777639; -70.7377194 (Estadio El Teniente) 18°29′15.47″S 70°17′56.96″W / 18.4876306°S 70.2991556°W / -18.4876306; -70.2991556 (Estadio Carlos Dittborn)
Capacity: 18,000 Capacity: 17,786
   

Team bases Edit

Team Site City
  Argentina Hostería El Sauzal Rancagua
  Brazil Villa Retiro Quilpué
  Bulgaria Parque Municipal Machalí
  Chile Villa del Seleccionado Santiago
  Colombia Hotel El Morro Arica
  Czechoslovakia Posada Quebrada Verde Valparaíso
  England Staff House Braden Copper Co. Coya
  Hungary Hotel Turismo Rengo
  Italy Escuela de Aviación Cap. Ávalos Santiago
  Mexico Hotel O'Higgins Viña del Mar
  Soviet Union Hostería Arica Arica
  Spain Hotel Miramar Caleta Abarca Viña del Mar
   Switzerland Club Suizo Santiago
  Uruguay Hotel Azapa Arica
  West Germany Escuela Militar Bernardo O'Higgins Santiago
  Yugoslavia Hotel El Paso Arica

Squads Edit

Squads for the 1962 World Cup consisted of 22 players, as for the previous tournament in 1958.

After Attilio Demaría and Luis Monti, who both represented Argentina in 1930 and Italy in 1934, Ferenc Puskás (Hungary in 1954, then Spain), José Santamaría (Uruguay in 1954, then Spain) and José Altafini (Brazil in 1958, then Italy) became the third, fourth and fifth players to play for two national teams in the World Cup. In light of this, FIFA created stipulations describing that once a player represents a nation during a World Cup or its qualifying rounds the player cannot switch to another national team.[5] Robert Prosinečki and Robert Jarni would later become the sixth and seventh such players, playing for Yugoslavia in 1990, then for Croatia in 1998; Davor Šuker was also selected in both squads, but did not play in 1990. This was accepted by FIFA because Croatia was a newly independent former republic of Yugoslavia.

Match officials Edit

Eighteen match officials from 17 countries were assigned to the tournament to serve as referees and assistant referees.

Seeding Edit

Pot 1: South America Pot 2: Europe I Pot 3: Europe II Pot 4: Rest of the World

Format Edit

The format of the competition was similar to that of the 1958 competition: 16 teams qualified, divided into four groups of four. Four teams were seeded in the draw taking place in Santiago, on 18 January 1962: Brazil, England, Italy and Uruguay.[6] The top two teams in each group advanced to the quarter-finals.

Two points were awarded for a win and one for a draw. In a change from the 1958 format, goal average was used to separate any teams equal on points.[7] (In 1958, goal average was available, but was only between teams level on points in first place, or if a playoff between teams equal in second place failed to yield a result after extra time). Argentina became the first team in World Cup history to be eliminated on goal average when England advanced from Group 4 in second place.

In the knockout games, if the teams were level after ninety minutes, thirty minutes of extra time were played. For any match other than the final, if the teams were still even after extra time then lots would be drawn to determine the winner. The final would have been replayed if still tied after extra time; but if still tied after the replay, the champion would have been decided by drawing lots. In the event, no replays or drawing of lots were necessary.

 
Qualifying countries and their result

Summary Edit

In May 1960, as the preparations were well under way, Chile suffered the largest earthquake ever recorded (9.5 magnitude), which caused enormous damage to the national infrastructure. In the face of this, Carlos Dittborn, the president of the Organization Committee, coined the phrase "Porque nada tenemos, lo haremos todo" (Because we have nothing, we will do everything).[8] Stadia and other infrastructure were rebuilt at record speed and the tournament occurred on schedule with no major organisational flaw. Dittborn did not live to see the success of his efforts, as he died one month before the start of the tournament. The World Cup venue at Arica was named Estadio Carlos Dittborn in his honour and bears his name to this day.[9] Even with these few and low-capacity stadiums Chile was able to meet the demand for seats as international travel to Chile, far-away for Europe, was minimal at the time.[4]

President Jorge Alessandri gave an uninspiring inaugural speech before the first match, which was played between Chile and Switzerland. Alessandri left however before the end of the match. While Chilean society was living in a "footballized" atmosphere, Alessandri was criticized for his cold attitude towards the tournament, which forced his ministers to come out and claim he was as "footballized" as everybody else, but was too busy to devote too much attention to the competition.[4]

 
Official 1962 FIFA World Cup poster.

The competition was marred by constant violence on the pitch. This poisonous atmosphere culminated in the first-round match between host Chile and Italy (2–0), known as the Battle of Santiago. Two Italian journalists had written unflattering articles about the host country and its capital city; describing Santiago as a "proudly backwards and poverty-stricken dump full of prostitution and crime".[10] Although only two players (both of them Italian) were sent off by the English referee Ken Aston, the match saw repeated attempts from players on both sides to harm opponents, and the Italian team needed police protection to leave the field in safety.[11] Articles in the Italian papers La Nazione and Corriere della Sera were saying that allowing Chile to host the World Cup was "pure madness"; this was used and magnified by local newspapers to inflame the Chilean population. The British newspaper the Daily Express wrote "The tournament shows every sign of developing into a violent bloodbath. Reports read like battlefront despatches; the Italy vs West Germany match was described as 'wrestling and warfare'".

As the competition began, a shift in strategy was imminent. Defensive strategies began to take hold as the average goals per match dropped to 2.78, under 3 for the first time in competition history (the average has never been above 3 since).[12]

Pelé was injured in the second group match against Czechoslovakia. The Soviet Union goalkeeper Lev Yashin, arguably the best goalkeeper in the world at the time, was in poor form and his team went out to Chile (1–2) in the quarter-finals. Bright spots included the emergence of the young Brazilians Amarildo (standing in for Pelé) and Garrincha, the heroics of Czechoslovakia goalkeeper Viliam Schrojf against Hungary and Yugoslavia, and the performance of the host nation Chile, who took third place with a squad of relatively unknown players.[citation needed]. This has been the best performance of a South American team in a World Cup so far without taking into account the historical ones (Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay).

In the first round, Brazil topped their group with Czechoslovakia finishing second, above Mexico and Spain. USSR and Yugoslavia finished above Uruguay and Colombia. Hungary, along with England progressed to the quarter-finals, while Argentina and Bulgaria were eliminated. England had the same number of points as Argentina but progressed due to a superior goal average; the first time such a requirement had been necessary in a World Cup finals tournament. Switzerland lost all three games while West Germany and Chile both went through over Italy.

 
Brazil national football team in the World Cup, 1962. National Archives of Brazil.

Chile defeated European champions USSR to earn a semi-final game against the winner of the England – Brazil game. Garrincha scored two goals in a 3–1 win against England. Meanwhile, 1–0 wins for Yugoslavia against West Germany – and another 1–0 win of Czechoslovakia against neighbours Hungary – saw the two Slavic states meet in the semi-finals.

Viña del Mar was the original venue for the South American semi-final and Santiago for the Slavic one, but due to Chile's surprise qualification, the organisers prompted FIFA to switch the venues. This irritated crowds in Viña del Mar and only a little under 6,000 spectators came to Estadio Sausalito to watch Czechoslovakia beat Yugoslavia 3–1, whereas a capacity crowd of 76,600 in Santiago watched Brazil beat the hosts 4–2.[13] This game saw Garrincha sent off for Brazil and Honorino Landa sent off for Chile. Chile eventually took third place in a 1–0 victory over Yugoslavia with the last play of the match. The same player, Eladio Rojas, had also scored the winning goal in Chile's game against USSR.

Santiago's Estadio Nacional served as the venue for the final, and after 15 minutes, Brazil again found themselves a goal behind in the World Cup final, as a long ball from Adolf Scherer was latched onto by Josef Masopust: 1–0 Czechoslovakia. As in the previous final in 1958, Brazil soon hit back, equalising two minutes later through Amarildo after an error by Czechoslovak goalkeeper Schroijf. The Brazilians scored goals from Zito and Vavá (another Schrojf error) midway through the second half, and the Czechoslovaks could not get back into the game. The match ended 3–1 to Brazil, a successful defence of the title for only the second time in the history of the competition in spite of the absence of one of their star players of 1958, Pelé, who was replaced by Amarildo.

Group stage Edit

Group 1 Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification
1   Soviet Union 3 2 1 0 8 5 1.600 5 Advance to knockout stage
2   Yugoslavia 3 2 0 1 8 3 2.667 4
3   Uruguay 3 1 0 2 4 6 0.667 2
4   Colombia 3 0 1 2 5 11 0.455 1
Source:
Uruguay  2–1  Colombia
Cubilla   56'
Sasía   75'
Report Zuluaga   19' (pen.)
Attendance: 7,908
Referee: Andor Dorogi (Hungary)
Soviet Union  2–0  Yugoslavia
Ivanov   51'
Ponedelnik   83'
Report
Attendance: 9,622
Referee: Albert Dusch (West Germany)

Yugoslavia  3–1  Uruguay
Skoblar   25' (pen.)
Galić   29'
Jerković   49'
Report Cabrera   19'
Soviet Union  4–4  Colombia
Ivanov   8', 11'
Chislenko   10'
Ponedelnik   56'
Report Aceros   21'
Coll   68'
Rada   72'
Klinger   86'
Attendance: 8,040
Referee: João Etzel Filho (Brazil)

Soviet Union  2–1  Uruguay
Mamykin   38'
Ivanov   89'
Report Sasía   54'
Attendance: 9,973
Referee: Cesare Jonni (Italy)
Yugoslavia  5–0  Colombia
Galić   20', 61'
Jerković   25', 87'
Melić   82'
Report
Attendance: 7,167
Referee: Carlos Robles (Chile)

Group 2 Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification
1   West Germany 3 2 1 0 4 1 4.000 5 Advance to knockout stage
2   Chile 3 2 0 1 5 3 1.667 4
3   Italy 3 1 1 1 3 2 1.500 3
4    Switzerland 3 0 0 3 2 8 0.250 0
Source:
Chile  3–1   Switzerland
L. Sánchez   44', 55'
Ramírez   51'
Report Wüthrich   6'
Attendance: 65,006
West Germany  0–0  Italy
Report

Chile  2–0  Italy
Ramírez   73'
Toro   87'
Report
Attendance: 66,057
West Germany  2–1   Switzerland
Brülls   45'
Seeler   59'
Report Schneiter   73'
Attendance: 64,922

West Germany  2–0  Chile
Szymaniak   21' (pen.)
Seeler   82'
Report
Italy  3–0   Switzerland
Mora   2'
Bulgarelli   65', 67'
Report

Group 3 Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification
1   Brazil 3 2 1 0 4 1 4.000 5 Advance to knockout stage
2   Czechoslovakia 3 1 1 1 2 3 0.667 3
3   Mexico 3 1 0 2 3 4 0.750 2
4   Spain 3 1 0 2 2 3 0.667 2
Source:
Brazil  2–0  Mexico
Zagallo   56'
Pelé   73'
Report
Czechoslovakia  1–0  Spain
Štibrányi   80' Report
Attendance: 12,700
Referee: Carl Erich Steiner (Austria)

Brazil  0–0  Czechoslovakia
Report
Attendance: 14,903
Referee: Pierre Schwinte (France)
Spain  1–0  Mexico
Peiró   90' Report
Attendance: 11,875
Referee: Branko Tesanić (Yugoslavia)

Brazil  2–1  Spain
Amarildo   72', 86' Report Adelardo   35'
Attendance: 18,715
Referee: Sergio Bustamante (Chile)
Mexico  3–1  Czechoslovakia
Díaz   12'
Del Águila   29'
Hernández   90' (pen.)
Report Mašek   1'

Group 4 Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification
1   Hungary 3 2 1 0 8 2 4.000 5 Advance to knockout stage
2   England 3 1 1 1 4 3 1.333 3[a]
3   Argentina 3 1 1 1 2 3 0.667 3[a]
4   Bulgaria 3 0 1 2 1 7 0.143 1
Source:
Notes:
  1. ^ a b England finished ahead of Argentina on goal average.
Argentina  1–0  Bulgaria
Facundo   4' Report
Hungary  2–1  England
Tichy   17'
Albert   71'
Report Flowers   60' (pen.)
Attendance: 7,938

England  3–1  Argentina
Flowers   17' (pen.)
Charlton   42'
Greaves   67'
Report Sanfilippo   81'
Hungary  6–1  Bulgaria
Albert   1', 6', 53'
Tichy   8', 70'
Solymosi   12'
Report Sokolov   64'[14]
Attendance: 7,442
Referee: Juan Garay Gardeazábal (Spain)

Hungary  0–0  Argentina
Report
Attendance: 7,945
Referee: Arturo Yamasaki Maldonado (Peru)
England  0–0  Bulgaria
Report

Knockout stage Edit

Bracket Edit

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
10 June – Arica
 
 
  Soviet Union1
 
13 June – Santiago
 
  Chile2
 
  Chile2
 
10 June – Viña del Mar
 
  Brazil4
 
  Brazil3
 
17 June – Santiago
 
  England1
 
  Brazil3
 
10 June – Santiago
 
  Czechoslovakia1
 
  West Germany0
 
13 June – Viña del Mar
 
  Yugoslavia1
 
  Yugoslavia1
 
10 June – Rancagua
 
  Czechoslovakia3 Third place
 
  Hungary0
 
16 June – Santiago
 
  Czechoslovakia1
 
  Chile1
 
 
  Yugoslavia0
 

Quarter-finals Edit

Chile  2–1  Soviet Union
L. Sánchez   11'
Rojas   29'
Report Chislenko   26'
Attendance: 17,268

Czechoslovakia  1–0  Hungary
Scherer   13' Report

Brazil  3–1  England
Garrincha   31', 59'
Vavá   53'
Report Hitchens   38'
Attendance: 17,736
Referee: Pierre Schwinte (France)

Yugoslavia  1–0  West Germany
Radaković   85' Report
Attendance: 63,324
Referee: Arturo Yamasaki Maldonado (Peru)

Semi-finals Edit

Czechoslovakia  3–1  Yugoslavia
Kadraba   48'
Scherer   80', 84' (pen.)
Report Jerković   69'

Brazil  4–2  Chile
Garrincha   9', 32'
Vavá   47', 78'
Report Toro   42'
L. Sánchez   61' (pen.)
Attendance: 76,594

Third place play-off Edit

Chile  1–0  Yugoslavia
Rojas   90' Report

Final Edit

Brazil  3–1  Czechoslovakia
Amarildo   17'
Zito   69'
Vavá   78'
Report Masopust   15'

Goalscorers Edit

With four goals each, Flórián Albert, Garrincha, Valentin Ivanov, Dražan Jerković, Leonel Sánchez and Vavá were the top scorers in the tournament. In total, 89 goals were scored by 54 players, with none of them credited as own goal.

4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

FIFA retrospective ranking Edit

In 1986, FIFA published a report that ranked all teams in each World Cup up to and including 1986, based on progress in the competition, overall results and quality of the opposition.[15][16] The rankings for the 1962 tournament were as follows:

R Team G P W D L GF GA GD Pts.
1   Brazil 3 6 5 1 0 14 5 +9 11
2   Czechoslovakia 3 6 3 1 2 7 7 0 7
3   Chile 2 6 4 0 2 10 8 +2 8
4   Yugoslavia 1 6 3 0 3 10 7 +3 6
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
5   Hungary 4 4 2 1 1 8 3 +5 5
6   Soviet Union 1 4 2 1 1 9 7 +2 5
7   West Germany 2 4 2 1 1 4 2 +2 5
8   England 4 4 1 1 2 5 6 −1 3
Eliminated in the group stage
9   Italy 2 3 1 1 1 3 2 +1 3
10   Argentina 4 3 1 1 1 2 3 −1 3
11   Mexico 3 3 1 0 2 3 4 −1 2
12   Spain 1 3 1 0 2 2 3 −1 2
13   Uruguay 3 3 1 0 2 4 6 −2 2
14   Colombia 1 3 0 1 2 5 11 −6 1
15   Bulgaria 4 3 0 1 2 1 7 −6 1
16    Switzerland 2 3 0 0 3 2 8 −6 0

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ a b "FIFA World Cup 1962 – Historical Football Kits". Historicalkits.co.uk. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  2. ^ Paul (16 December 2012). . DoFooty.com. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  3. ^ a b c Zamorano, Javier (31 May 2022). ""Porque no tenemos nada...": la icónica respuesta a Argentina que pasó a la historia". Radio Bío-Bío (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Ortega, Luis (2005), "De pasión de multitudes a rito privado", in Sagredo, Rafael; Gazmuri, Cristián (eds.), Historia de la vida privada en Chile (in Spanish), vol. 3: El Chile contemporáneo. De 1925 a nuestros días (4th ed.), Santiago de Chile: Aguilar Chilena de Ediciones, ISBN 956-239-337-2
  5. ^ Ryan, Kelly. "FIFA national team eligibility: Rules, players who have switched & everything you need to know". Goal.com. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  6. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  7. ^ "for the first time goal average was brought in as a means of separating teams with the same number of points" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 December 2013.
  8. ^ Brewin, John; Williamson, Martin (30 April 2014). "World Cup History: 1962". ESPN FC. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  9. ^ Fett, Matthias (2 July 2020). "The game has changed – a systematic approach to classify FIFA World Cups". International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics. 12 (3): 455–470. doi:10.1080/19406940.2020.1784978. ISSN 1940-6940. S2CID 221714908.
  10. ^ "Italy World Cup Rewind: Infamy at the Battle of Santiago, 1962". Bleacher Report.
  11. ^ Lopresti, Sam (28 February 2014). "Italy World Cup Rewind: Infamy at the Battle of Santiago, 1962". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  12. ^ . FIFA. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  13. ^ Grüne, Hardy (2006). "WM 1962 Chile". Fussball WM Enzyklopädie 1930–2006. Agon Sportverlag. ISBN 978-3-89784-261-8.
  14. ^ RSSSF credits this goal to Georgi Asparuhov.
  15. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2010. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  16. ^ (PDF). FIFA. 26 March 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 May 2013.

External links Edit

  • 1962 FIFA World Cup Chile , FIFA.com
  • Details at RSSSF

1962, fifa, world, seventh, edition, fifa, world, quadrennial, international, football, championship, senior, national, teams, held, from, june, 1962, chile, qualification, rounds, took, place, between, august, 1960, december, 1961, with, teams, entering, from. The 1962 FIFA World Cup was the seventh edition of the FIFA World Cup the quadrennial international football championship for senior men s national teams It was held from 30 May to 17 June 1962 in Chile The qualification rounds took place between August 1960 and December 1961 with 56 teams entering from six confederations and fourteen qualifying for the finals tournament alongside Chile the hosts and Brazil the defending champions 1962 FIFA World CupTournament detailsHost countryChileDates30 May 17 JuneTeams16 from 3 confederations Venue s 4 in 4 host cities Final positionsChampions Brazil 2nd title Runners up CzechoslovakiaThird place ChileFourth place YugoslaviaTournament statisticsMatches played32Goals scored89 2 78 per match Attendance893 172 27 912 per match Top scorer s Garrincha Vava Leonel Sanchez Florian Albert Valentin Ivanov Drazan Jerkovic 4 goals each 19581966 Brazil successfully defended their World Cup title defeating Czechoslovakia 3 1 in the final in the Chilean capital of Santiago They became the second team after Italy in 1934 and 1938 to win the World Cup twice consecutively no team has since achieved the feat Host nation Chile finished third defeating Yugoslavia 1 0 in the third place play off The tournament was marred by violence between players on the pitch and a toxic atmosphere it included the first round match between Chile and Italy 2 0 which became known as the Battle of Santiago one of a number of violent matches played throughout the tournament It was the first World Cup that used goal average as a means of separating teams with the same number of points It was also the first World Cup in which the average number of goals per match was less than three 2 78 this has been repeated at every World Cup since despite expansion of the tournament Contents 1 Host selection 2 Qualification 2 1 List of qualified teams 3 Venues 3 1 Team bases 4 Squads 5 Match officials 6 Seeding 7 Format 8 Summary 9 Group stage 9 1 Group 1 9 2 Group 2 9 3 Group 3 9 4 Group 4 10 Knockout stage 10 1 Bracket 10 2 Quarter finals 10 3 Semi finals 10 4 Third place play off 10 5 Final 11 Goalscorers 12 FIFA retrospective ranking 13 Footnotes 14 External linksHost selection EditMain article FIFA World Cup hosts After Europe hosted two consecutive World Cups the American federations claimed the 1962 edition must be held in South America or they would stage a complete boycott of the tournament similar to 1938 1 Argentina after previously failed candidacies was the favorite Magallanes chairman Ernesto Alvear attended a FIFA Congress held in Helsinki while the Finnish city was hosting the 1952 Summer Olympics He considered that Chile was able to organise the World Cup Several sources also say that FIFA did not want Argentina to run alone requesting the participation of Chile as almost symbolic Chile registered its candidacy in 1954 alongside Argentina and West Germany the latter withdrawing at the request of FIFA 1 Chile s football federation committee led by Carlos Dittborn and Juan Pinto Duran toured many countries convincing various football associations about the country s ability to organise the tournament in comparison to Argentina s superior sports infrastructure and prestige The FIFA Congress met in Lisbon Portugal on 10 June 1956 That day Raul Colombo representing Argentina s candidacy ended his speech with the phrase We can start the World Cup tomorrow We have it all The next day Dittborn presented four arguments that supported Chile s candidacy Chile s continued participations at FIFA organised conferences and tournaments sports climate tolerance of race and creed and political and institutional stability of the country In addition Dittborn invoked Article 2 of the FIFA statutes that addressed the tournament s role in promoting the sport in countries deemed underdeveloped 2 In a counter point to Colombo s claim that We have it all Dittborn coined the phrase Because we have nothing we want to do it all Spanish Porque no tenemos nada queremos hacerlo todo around the fifteenth minute of his speech 3 Chile won 32 votes to Argentina s 10 3 Fourteen members abstained from voting 3 Qualification EditMain article 1962 FIFA World Cup qualification nbsp Countries qualified for World Cup Country failed to qualify Countries that did not enter World Cup Country not a FIFA member57 teams entered the 1962 World Cup due to rejected entries and withdrawals 52 teams eventually participated in the qualifying stages Chile as host nation and Brazil as reigning World Cup champions were granted automatic qualification with the remaining 14 finals places divided among the continental confederations Eight places were contested by UEFA teams Europe and three by CONMEBOL teams South America CAF teams Africa AFC teams Asia NAFC teams North America and CCCF teams Central America and Caribbean contested three play offs slots The three winners would then face a European or South American team for entry into the World Cup The 1962 tournament was the last one for which only nations from Europe or the Americas qualified Two teams qualified for the first time ever Colombia and Bulgaria Colombia would not qualify for another World Cup until 1990 Among the teams who failed to qualify were the 1958 runners up Sweden and third place finishers France Austria withdrew during the qualification tournament due to financial problems Italy Switzerland and Uruguay all qualified for the first time since 1954 and Spain for the first time since 1950 Scotland failed to qualify for the first time since rejoining FIFA in 1946 though they had ultimately also declined to participate in the 1950 edition List of qualified teams Edit The following 16 teams qualified for the final tournament AFC 0 None qualifiedCAF 0 None qualified CONCACAF 1 nbsp MexicoCONMEBOL 5 nbsp Argentina nbsp Brazil nbsp Chile hosts nbsp Colombia debut nbsp Uruguay UEFA 10 nbsp Bulgaria debut nbsp Czechoslovakia nbsp England nbsp Hungary nbsp Italy nbsp Soviet Union nbsp Spain nbsp Switzerland nbsp West Germany nbsp YugoslaviaVenues EditOriginally eight stadiums were selected to host the World Cup matches in eight cities Santiago Vina del Mar Rancagua Arica Talca Concepcion Talcahuano and Valdivia The Valdivia earthquake the most powerful earthquake ever recorded occurred on 22 May 1960 With over 50 000 casualties and more than 2 million people affected the earthquake forced the organising committee to completely modify the World Cup s calendar Talca Concepcion Talcahuano and Valdivia were severely damaged and discarded as venues Antofagasta and Valparaiso declined to host any matches as their venues were not financially self sustainable Vina del Mar and Arica managed to rebuild their stadiums while Braden Copper Company then an American company that controlled the El Teniente copper mine allowed the use of its stadium in Rancagua Due to these setbacks this is the World Cup edition with the smallest number of venues spread across the country while the 1930 FIFA World Cup was held in three venues all of them were located in a single city The most used stadium was the Estadio Nacional in Santiago with 10 matches the Estadio Sausalito in Vina del Mar hosted 8 matches and the stadiums in Rancagua and far away Arica the only location that was not close to the other cities both hosted 7 matches Being that Estadio Nacional was the only large venue of the tournament all others had less than 20 000 seats it also saw the largest attendance average by far with Estadio Sausalito s attendance only being boosted with the Brazil matches it hosted the semifinal between Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia was the only one in the stadium with less than 10 000 spectators Being largely concerned with the build up of the country after the 1960 earthquake government support for the tournament was minimal 4 nbsp nbsp Santiago nbsp Vina del Mar nbsp Rancagua nbsp Arica Santiago Vina del MarEstadio Nacional Estadio Sausalito33 27 52 S 70 36 38 W 33 46444 S 70 61056 W 33 46444 70 61056 Estadio Nacional Julio Martinez Pradanos 33 00 51 83 S 71 32 6 84 W 33 0143972 S 71 5352333 W 33 0143972 71 5352333 Estadio Sausalito Capacity 66 660 Capacity 18 037 nbsp nbsp Rancagua AricaEstadio Braden Copper Co Estadio Carlos Dittborn34 10 39 95 S 70 44 15 79 W 34 1777639 S 70 7377194 W 34 1777639 70 7377194 Estadio El Teniente 18 29 15 47 S 70 17 56 96 W 18 4876306 S 70 2991556 W 18 4876306 70 2991556 Estadio Carlos Dittborn Capacity 18 000 Capacity 17 786 nbsp nbsp Team bases Edit Team Site City nbsp Argentina Hosteria El Sauzal Rancagua nbsp Brazil Villa Retiro Quilpue nbsp Bulgaria Parque Municipal Machali nbsp Chile Villa del Seleccionado Santiago nbsp Colombia Hotel El Morro Arica nbsp Czechoslovakia Posada Quebrada Verde Valparaiso nbsp England Staff House Braden Copper Co Coya nbsp Hungary Hotel Turismo Rengo nbsp Italy Escuela de Aviacion Cap Avalos Santiago nbsp Mexico Hotel O Higgins Vina del Mar nbsp Soviet Union Hosteria Arica Arica nbsp Spain Hotel Miramar Caleta Abarca Vina del Mar nbsp Switzerland Club Suizo Santiago nbsp Uruguay Hotel Azapa Arica nbsp West Germany Escuela Militar Bernardo O Higgins Santiago nbsp Yugoslavia Hotel El Paso AricaSquads EditFurther information 1962 FIFA World Cup squads Squads for the 1962 World Cup consisted of 22 players as for the previous tournament in 1958 After Attilio Demaria and Luis Monti who both represented Argentina in 1930 and Italy in 1934 Ferenc Puskas Hungary in 1954 then Spain Jose Santamaria Uruguay in 1954 then Spain and Jose Altafini Brazil in 1958 then Italy became the third fourth and fifth players to play for two national teams in the World Cup In light of this FIFA created stipulations describing that once a player represents a nation during a World Cup or its qualifying rounds the player cannot switch to another national team 5 Robert Prosinecki and Robert Jarni would later become the sixth and seventh such players playing for Yugoslavia in 1990 then for Croatia in 1998 Davor Suker was also selected in both squads but did not play in 1990 This was accepted by FIFA because Croatia was a newly independent former republic of Yugoslavia Match officials EditEighteen match officials from 17 countries were assigned to the tournament to serve as referees and assistant referees Europe nbsp Erich Steiner nbsp Arthur Blavier nbsp Ken Aston nbsp Juan Gardeazabal nbsp Pierre Schwinte nbsp Albert Dusch nbsp Andor Dorogi nbsp Cesare Jonni nbsp Leo Horn nbsp Robert Holley Davidson nbsp Gottfried Dienst nbsp Karol Galba nbsp Nikolay Latyshev nbsp Branko TesanicSouth America nbsp Joao Etzel Filho nbsp Sergio Bustamante nbsp Carlos Robles nbsp Arturo YamasakiSeeding EditPot 1 South America Pot 2 Europe I Pot 3 Europe II Pot 4 Rest of the World nbsp Chile host nation nbsp Brazil defending champions nbsp Argentina nbsp Uruguay nbsp Czechoslovakia nbsp England nbsp Soviet Union nbsp West Germany nbsp Italy nbsp Hungary nbsp Spain nbsp Yugoslavia nbsp Bulgaria nbsp Colombia nbsp Mexico nbsp SwitzerlandFormat EditThe format of the competition was similar to that of the 1958 competition 16 teams qualified divided into four groups of four Four teams were seeded in the draw taking place in Santiago on 18 January 1962 Brazil England Italy and Uruguay 6 The top two teams in each group advanced to the quarter finals Two points were awarded for a win and one for a draw In a change from the 1958 format goal average was used to separate any teams equal on points 7 In 1958 goal average was available but was only between teams level on points in first place or if a playoff between teams equal in second place failed to yield a result after extra time Argentina became the first team in World Cup history to be eliminated on goal average when England advanced from Group 4 in second place In the knockout games if the teams were level after ninety minutes thirty minutes of extra time were played For any match other than the final if the teams were still even after extra time then lots would be drawn to determine the winner The final would have been replayed if still tied after extra time but if still tied after the replay the champion would have been decided by drawing lots In the event no replays or drawing of lots were necessary nbsp Qualifying countries and their resultSummary EditIn May 1960 as the preparations were well under way Chile suffered the largest earthquake ever recorded 9 5 magnitude which caused enormous damage to the national infrastructure In the face of this Carlos Dittborn the president of the Organization Committee coined the phrase Porque nada tenemos lo haremos todo Because we have nothing we will do everything 8 Stadia and other infrastructure were rebuilt at record speed and the tournament occurred on schedule with no major organisational flaw Dittborn did not live to see the success of his efforts as he died one month before the start of the tournament The World Cup venue at Arica was named Estadio Carlos Dittborn in his honour and bears his name to this day 9 Even with these few and low capacity stadiums Chile was able to meet the demand for seats as international travel to Chile far away for Europe was minimal at the time 4 President Jorge Alessandri gave an uninspiring inaugural speech before the first match which was played between Chile and Switzerland Alessandri left however before the end of the match While Chilean society was living in a footballized atmosphere Alessandri was criticized for his cold attitude towards the tournament which forced his ministers to come out and claim he was as footballized as everybody else but was too busy to devote too much attention to the competition 4 nbsp Official 1962 FIFA World Cup poster The competition was marred by constant violence on the pitch This poisonous atmosphere culminated in the first round match between host Chile and Italy 2 0 known as the Battle of Santiago Two Italian journalists had written unflattering articles about the host country and its capital city describing Santiago as a proudly backwards and poverty stricken dump full of prostitution and crime 10 Although only two players both of them Italian were sent off by the English referee Ken Aston the match saw repeated attempts from players on both sides to harm opponents and the Italian team needed police protection to leave the field in safety 11 Articles in the Italian papers La Nazione and Corriere della Sera were saying that allowing Chile to host the World Cup was pure madness this was used and magnified by local newspapers to inflame the Chilean population The British newspaper the Daily Express wrote The tournament shows every sign of developing into a violent bloodbath Reports read like battlefront despatches the Italy vs West Germany match was described as wrestling and warfare As the competition began a shift in strategy was imminent Defensive strategies began to take hold as the average goals per match dropped to 2 78 under 3 for the first time in competition history the average has never been above 3 since 12 Pele was injured in the second group match against Czechoslovakia The Soviet Union goalkeeper Lev Yashin arguably the best goalkeeper in the world at the time was in poor form and his team went out to Chile 1 2 in the quarter finals Bright spots included the emergence of the young Brazilians Amarildo standing in for Pele and Garrincha the heroics of Czechoslovakia goalkeeper Viliam Schrojf against Hungary and Yugoslavia and the performance of the host nation Chile who took third place with a squad of relatively unknown players citation needed This has been the best performance of a South American team in a World Cup so far without taking into account the historical ones Brazil Argentina and Uruguay In the first round Brazil topped their group with Czechoslovakia finishing second above Mexico and Spain USSR and Yugoslavia finished above Uruguay and Colombia Hungary along with England progressed to the quarter finals while Argentina and Bulgaria were eliminated England had the same number of points as Argentina but progressed due to a superior goal average the first time such a requirement had been necessary in a World Cup finals tournament Switzerland lost all three games while West Germany and Chile both went through over Italy nbsp Brazil national football team in the World Cup 1962 National Archives of Brazil Chile defeated European champions USSR to earn a semi final game against the winner of the England Brazil game Garrincha scored two goals in a 3 1 win against England Meanwhile 1 0 wins for Yugoslavia against West Germany and another 1 0 win of Czechoslovakia against neighbours Hungary saw the two Slavic states meet in the semi finals Vina del Mar was the original venue for the South American semi final and Santiago for the Slavic one but due to Chile s surprise qualification the organisers prompted FIFA to switch the venues This irritated crowds in Vina del Mar and only a little under 6 000 spectators came to Estadio Sausalito to watch Czechoslovakia beat Yugoslavia 3 1 whereas a capacity crowd of 76 600 in Santiago watched Brazil beat the hosts 4 2 13 This game saw Garrincha sent off for Brazil and Honorino Landa sent off for Chile Chile eventually took third place in a 1 0 victory over Yugoslavia with the last play of the match The same player Eladio Rojas had also scored the winning goal in Chile s game against USSR Santiago s Estadio Nacional served as the venue for the final and after 15 minutes Brazil again found themselves a goal behind in the World Cup final as a long ball from Adolf Scherer was latched onto by Josef Masopust 1 0 Czechoslovakia As in the previous final in 1958 Brazil soon hit back equalising two minutes later through Amarildo after an error by Czechoslovak goalkeeper Schroijf The Brazilians scored goals from Zito and Vava another Schrojf error midway through the second half and the Czechoslovaks could not get back into the game The match ended 3 1 to Brazil a successful defence of the title for only the second time in the history of the competition in spite of the absence of one of their star players of 1958 Pele who was replaced by Amarildo Group stage EditGroup 1 Edit Main article 1962 FIFA World Cup Group 1 Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification1 nbsp Soviet Union 3 2 1 0 8 5 1 600 5 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Yugoslavia 3 2 0 1 8 3 2 667 43 nbsp Uruguay 3 1 0 2 4 6 0 667 24 nbsp Colombia 3 0 1 2 5 11 0 455 1Source FIFA 30 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Uruguay nbsp 2 1 nbsp ColombiaCubilla nbsp 56 Sasia nbsp 75 Report Zuluaga nbsp 19 pen Estadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 7 908Referee Andor Dorogi Hungary 31 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Soviet Union nbsp 2 0 nbsp YugoslaviaIvanov nbsp 51 Ponedelnik nbsp 83 ReportEstadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 9 622Referee Albert Dusch West Germany 2 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Yugoslavia nbsp 3 1 nbsp UruguaySkoblar nbsp 25 pen Galic nbsp 29 Jerkovic nbsp 49 Report Cabrera nbsp 19 Estadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 8 829Referee Karol Galba Czechoslovakia 3 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Soviet Union nbsp 4 4 nbsp ColombiaIvanov nbsp 8 11 Chislenko nbsp 10 Ponedelnik nbsp 56 Report Aceros nbsp 21 Coll nbsp 68 Rada nbsp 72 Klinger nbsp 86 Estadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 8 040Referee Joao Etzel Filho Brazil 6 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Soviet Union nbsp 2 1 nbsp UruguayMamykin nbsp 38 Ivanov nbsp 89 Report Sasia nbsp 54 Estadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 9 973Referee Cesare Jonni Italy 7 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Yugoslavia nbsp 5 0 nbsp ColombiaGalic nbsp 20 61 Jerkovic nbsp 25 87 Melic nbsp 82 ReportEstadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 7 167Referee Carlos Robles Chile Group 2 Edit Main article 1962 FIFA World Cup Group 2 Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification1 nbsp West Germany 3 2 1 0 4 1 4 000 5 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Chile 3 2 0 1 5 3 1 667 43 nbsp Italy 3 1 1 1 3 2 1 500 34 nbsp Switzerland 3 0 0 3 2 8 0 250 0Source FIFA 30 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Chile nbsp 3 1 nbsp SwitzerlandL Sanchez nbsp 44 55 Ramirez nbsp 51 Report Wuthrich nbsp 6 Estadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 65 006Referee Kenneth Aston England 31 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 West Germany nbsp 0 0 nbsp ItalyReportEstadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 65 440Referee Robert Holley Davidson Scotland Main article Battle of Santiago 1962 FIFA World Cup 2 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Chile nbsp 2 0 nbsp ItalyRamirez nbsp 73 Toro nbsp 87 ReportEstadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 66 057Referee Kenneth Aston England 3 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 West Germany nbsp 2 1 nbsp SwitzerlandBrulls nbsp 45 Seeler nbsp 59 Report Schneiter nbsp 73 Estadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 64 922Referee Leo Horn Netherlands 6 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 West Germany nbsp 2 0 nbsp ChileSzymaniak nbsp 21 pen Seeler nbsp 82 ReportEstadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 67 224Referee Robert Holley Davidson Scotland 7 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Italy nbsp 3 0 nbsp SwitzerlandMora nbsp 2 Bulgarelli nbsp 65 67 ReportEstadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 59 828Referee Nikolay Latyshev Soviet Union Group 3 Edit Main article 1962 FIFA World Cup Group 3 Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification1 nbsp Brazil 3 2 1 0 4 1 4 000 5 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Czechoslovakia 3 1 1 1 2 3 0 667 33 nbsp Mexico 3 1 0 2 3 4 0 750 24 nbsp Spain 3 1 0 2 2 3 0 667 2Source FIFA 30 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Brazil nbsp 2 0 nbsp MexicoZagallo nbsp 56 Pele nbsp 73 ReportEstadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 10 484Referee Gottfried Dienst Switzerland 31 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Czechoslovakia nbsp 1 0 nbsp SpainStibranyi nbsp 80 ReportEstadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 12 700Referee Carl Erich Steiner Austria 2 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Brazil nbsp 0 0 nbsp CzechoslovakiaReportEstadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 14 903Referee Pierre Schwinte France 3 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Spain nbsp 1 0 nbsp MexicoPeiro nbsp 90 ReportEstadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 11 875Referee Branko Tesanic Yugoslavia 6 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Brazil nbsp 2 1 nbsp SpainAmarildo nbsp 72 86 Report Adelardo nbsp 35 Estadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 18 715Referee Sergio Bustamante Chile 7 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Mexico nbsp 3 1 nbsp CzechoslovakiaDiaz nbsp 12 Del Aguila nbsp 29 Hernandez nbsp 90 pen Report Masek nbsp 1 Estadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 10 648Referee Gottfried Dienst Switzerland Group 4 Edit Main article 1962 FIFA World Cup Group 4 Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GR Pts Qualification1 nbsp Hungary 3 2 1 0 8 2 4 000 5 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp England 3 1 1 1 4 3 1 333 3 a 3 nbsp Argentina 3 1 1 1 2 3 0 667 3 a 4 nbsp Bulgaria 3 0 1 2 1 7 0 143 1Source FIFANotes a b England finished ahead of Argentina on goal average 30 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Argentina nbsp 1 0 nbsp BulgariaFacundo nbsp 4 ReportEstadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 7 134Referee Juan Gardeazabal Garay Spain 31 May 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Hungary nbsp 2 1 nbsp EnglandTichy nbsp 17 Albert nbsp 71 Report Flowers nbsp 60 pen Estadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 7 938Referee Leo Horn Netherlands 2 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 England nbsp 3 1 nbsp ArgentinaFlowers nbsp 17 pen Charlton nbsp 42 Greaves nbsp 67 Report Sanfilippo nbsp 81 Estadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 9 794Referee Nikolay Latyshev Soviet Union 3 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Hungary nbsp 6 1 nbsp BulgariaAlbert nbsp 1 6 53 Tichy nbsp 8 70 Solymosi nbsp 12 Report Sokolov nbsp 64 14 Estadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 7 442Referee Juan Garay Gardeazabal Spain 6 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 Hungary nbsp 0 0 nbsp ArgentinaReportEstadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 7 945Referee Arturo Yamasaki Maldonado Peru 7 June 196215 00 CLT UTC 04 England nbsp 0 0 nbsp BulgariaReportEstadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 5 700Referee Antoine Blavier Belgium Knockout stage EditMain article 1962 FIFA World Cup knockout stage Bracket Edit Quarter finalsSemi finalsFinal 10 June Arica nbsp Soviet Union1 13 June Santiago nbsp Chile2 nbsp Chile2 10 June Vina del Mar nbsp Brazil4 nbsp Brazil3 17 June Santiago nbsp England1 nbsp Brazil3 10 June Santiago nbsp Czechoslovakia1 nbsp West Germany0 13 June Vina del Mar nbsp Yugoslavia1 nbsp Yugoslavia1 10 June Rancagua nbsp Czechoslovakia3Third place nbsp Hungary0 16 June Santiago nbsp Czechoslovakia1 nbsp Chile1 nbsp Yugoslavia0 Quarter finals Edit 10 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Chile nbsp 2 1 nbsp Soviet UnionL Sanchez nbsp 11 Rojas nbsp 29 Report Chislenko nbsp 26 Estadio Carlos Dittborn AricaAttendance 17 268Referee Leo Horn Netherlands 10 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Czechoslovakia nbsp 1 0 nbsp HungaryScherer nbsp 13 ReportEstadio El Teniente RancaguaAttendance 11 690Referee Nikolay Latyshev Soviet Union 10 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Brazil nbsp 3 1 nbsp EnglandGarrincha nbsp 31 59 Vava nbsp 53 Report Hitchens nbsp 38 Estadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 17 736Referee Pierre Schwinte France 10 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Yugoslavia nbsp 1 0 nbsp West GermanyRadakovic nbsp 85 ReportEstadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 63 324Referee Arturo Yamasaki Maldonado Peru Semi finals Edit 13 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Czechoslovakia nbsp 3 1 nbsp YugoslaviaKadraba nbsp 48 Scherer nbsp 80 84 pen Report Jerkovic nbsp 69 Estadio Sausalito Vina del MarAttendance 5 890Referee Gottfried Dienst Switzerland 13 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Brazil nbsp 4 2 nbsp ChileGarrincha nbsp 9 32 Vava nbsp 47 78 Report Toro nbsp 42 L Sanchez nbsp 61 pen Estadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 76 594Referee Arturo Yamasaki Peru Third place play off Edit 16 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Chile nbsp 1 0 nbsp YugoslaviaRojas nbsp 90 ReportEstadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 66 697Referee Juan Gardeazabal Garay Spain Final Edit Main article 1962 FIFA World Cup final 17 June 196214 30 CLT UTC 04 Brazil nbsp 3 1 nbsp CzechoslovakiaAmarildo nbsp 17 Zito nbsp 69 Vava nbsp 78 Report Masopust nbsp 15 Estadio Nacional SantiagoAttendance 68 679Referee Nikolay Latyshev Soviet Union Goalscorers EditWith four goals each Florian Albert Garrincha Valentin Ivanov Drazan Jerkovic Leonel Sanchez and Vava were the top scorers in the tournament In total 89 goals were scored by 54 players with none of them credited as own goal 4 goals nbsp Garrincha nbsp Vava nbsp Leonel Sanchez nbsp Florian Albert nbsp Valentin Ivanov nbsp Drazan Jerkovic 3 goals nbsp Amarildo nbsp Adolf Scherer nbsp Lajos Tichy nbsp Milan Galic 2 goals nbsp Jaime Ramirez nbsp Eladio Rojas nbsp Jorge Toro nbsp Ron Flowers nbsp Giacomo Bulgarelli nbsp Igor Chislenko nbsp Viktor Ponedelnik nbsp Jose Sasia nbsp Uwe Seeler 1 goal nbsp Hector Facundo nbsp Jose Sanfilippo nbsp Pele nbsp Mario Zagallo nbsp Zito nbsp Georgi Sokolov nbsp German Aceros nbsp Marcos Coll nbsp Marino Klinger nbsp Antonio Rada nbsp Francisco Zuluaga nbsp Josef Kadraba nbsp Vaclav Masek nbsp Josef Masopust nbsp Jozef Stibranyi nbsp Bobby Charlton nbsp Jimmy Greaves nbsp Gerry Hitchens nbsp Erno Solymosi nbsp Bruno Mora nbsp Alfredo del Aguila nbsp Isidoro Diaz nbsp Hector Hernandez nbsp Aleksei Mamykin nbsp Adelardo nbsp Joaquin Peiro nbsp Heinz Schneiter nbsp Rolf Wuthrich nbsp Angel Cabrera nbsp Luis Cubilla nbsp Albert Brulls nbsp Horst Szymaniak nbsp Vojislav Melic nbsp Petar Radakovic nbsp Josip SkoblarFIFA retrospective ranking EditIn 1986 FIFA published a report that ranked all teams in each World Cup up to and including 1986 based on progress in the competition overall results and quality of the opposition 15 16 The rankings for the 1962 tournament were as follows R Team G P W D L GF GA GD Pts 1 nbsp Brazil 3 6 5 1 0 14 5 9 112 nbsp Czechoslovakia 3 6 3 1 2 7 7 0 73 nbsp Chile 2 6 4 0 2 10 8 2 84 nbsp Yugoslavia 1 6 3 0 3 10 7 3 6Eliminated in the quarter finals5 nbsp Hungary 4 4 2 1 1 8 3 5 56 nbsp Soviet Union 1 4 2 1 1 9 7 2 57 nbsp West Germany 2 4 2 1 1 4 2 2 58 nbsp England 4 4 1 1 2 5 6 1 3Eliminated in the group stage9 nbsp Italy 2 3 1 1 1 3 2 1 310 nbsp Argentina 4 3 1 1 1 2 3 1 311 nbsp Mexico 3 3 1 0 2 3 4 1 212 nbsp Spain 1 3 1 0 2 2 3 1 213 nbsp Uruguay 3 3 1 0 2 4 6 2 214 nbsp Colombia 1 3 0 1 2 5 11 6 115 nbsp Bulgaria 4 3 0 1 2 1 7 6 116 nbsp Switzerland 2 3 0 0 3 2 8 6 0Footnotes Edit a b FIFA World Cup 1962 Historical Football Kits Historicalkits co uk Retrieved 29 June 2014 Paul 16 December 2012 Carlos Dittborn Pinto 1962 FIFA World Cup DoFooty com Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 15 June 2014 a b c Zamorano Javier 31 May 2022 Porque no tenemos nada la iconica respuesta a Argentina que paso a la historia Radio Bio Bio in Spanish Retrieved 6 October 2022 a b c Ortega Luis 2005 De pasion de multitudes a rito privado in Sagredo Rafael Gazmuri Cristian eds Historia de la vida privada en Chile in Spanish vol 3 El Chile contemporaneo De 1925 a nuestros dias 4th ed Santiago de Chile Aguilar Chilena de Ediciones ISBN 956 239 337 2 Ryan Kelly FIFA national team eligibility Rules players who have switched amp everything you need to know Goal com Retrieved 17 January 2020 History of the World Cup Final Draw PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2008 Retrieved 2 March 2012 for the first time goal average was brought in as a means of separating teams with the same number of points Compact book of the World Cup PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 December 2013 Brewin John Williamson Martin 30 April 2014 World Cup History 1962 ESPN FC ESPN Internet Ventures Retrieved 12 June 2015 Fett Matthias 2 July 2020 The game has changed a systematic approach to classify FIFA World Cups International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics 12 3 455 470 doi 10 1080 19406940 2020 1784978 ISSN 1940 6940 S2CID 221714908 Italy World Cup Rewind Infamy at the Battle of Santiago 1962 Bleacher Report Lopresti Sam 28 February 2014 Italy World Cup Rewind Infamy at the Battle of Santiago 1962 Bleacher Report Retrieved 15 June 2014 FIFA World Cup Record Organisation FIFA Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 15 June 2014 Grune Hardy 2006 WM 1962 Chile Fussball WM Enzyklopadie 1930 2006 Agon Sportverlag ISBN 978 3 89784 261 8 RSSSF credits this goal to Georgi Asparuhov page 45 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2010 Retrieved 2 March 2012 FIFA World Cup Milestones facts amp figures Statistical Kit 7 PDF FIFA 26 March 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 21 May 2013 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1962 FIFA World Cup nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to 1962 FIFA World Cup nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for 1962 FIFA World Cup 1962 FIFA World Cup Chile FIFA com Details at RSSSFPortals nbsp 1960s nbsp Association football nbsp Chile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1962 FIFA World Cup amp oldid 1179701865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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