1966 FIFA World Cup knockout stage

The knockout stage of the 1966 FIFA World Cup was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. The knockout stage began on 23 July with the quarter-finals and ended on 30 July 1966 with the final match, held at Wembley Stadium in London. The top two teams from each group (eight in total) advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament. A third place play-off also was played between the two losing teams of the semi-finals.

England won the final 4–2 against West Germany for their first World Cup title.[1]

All times listed are local time.

Qualified teams

The top two placed teams from each of the four groups qualified for the knockout stage.

Group Winners Runners-up
1  England  Uruguay
2  West Germany  Argentina
3  Portugal  Hungary
4  Soviet Union  North Korea

Bracket

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
23 July – London (Wembley)
 
 
 England1
 
26 July – London (Wembley)
 
 Argentina0
 
 England2
 
23 July – Liverpool
 
 Portugal1
 
 Portugal5
 
30 July – London (Wembley)
 
 North Korea3
 
 England (aet)4
 
23 July – Sheffield
 
 West Germany2
 
 West Germany4
 
25 July – Liverpool
 
 Uruguay0
 
 West Germany2
 
23 July – Sunderland
 
 Soviet Union1 Third place
 
 Soviet Union2
 
28 July – London (Wembley)
 
 Hungary1
 
 Portugal2
 
 
 Soviet Union1
 

Quarter-finals

England vs Argentina

England 1–0 Argentina
Hurst  78' Report
GK1Gordon Banks
RB2George Cohen
CB5Jack Charlton
CB6Bobby Moore (c)
LB3Ray Wilson
RM4Nobby Stiles
CM9Bobby Charlton
LM16Martin Peters
RF7Alan Ball
CF10Geoff Hurst
LF21Roger Hunt
Manager:
Alf Ramsey
GK1Antonio Roma
RB8Roberto Ferreiro
CB4Roberto Perfumo
CB12Rafael Albrecht
LB7Silvio Marzolini
RM10Antonio Rattín (c) 35'
CM15Jorge Solari
LM16Alberto González
RF20Ermindo Onega
CF19Luis Artime
LF21Oscar Más
Manager:
Juan Carlos Lorenzo

West Germany vs Uruguay

West Germany 4–0 Uruguay
Haller  11', 83'
Beckenbauer  70'
Seeler  75'
Report
Attendance: 40,007
Referee: Jim Finney (England)
GK1Hans Tilkowski
RB2Horst-Dieter Höttges
CB5Willi Schulz
CB6Wolfgang Weber
LB3Karl-Heinz Schnellinger
MF4Franz Beckenbauer
MF12Wolfgang Overath
RW8Helmut Haller
CF9Uwe Seeler (c)
CF10Siggi Held
LW11Lothar Emmerich
Manager:
Helmut Schön
GK1Ladislao Mazurkiewicz
RB15Luis Ubiña
CB3Jorge Manicera
CB2Horacio Troche (c) 49'
LB5Néstor Gonçalves
MF17Héctor Salva
MF6Omar Caetano
RW7Julio César Cortés
CF19Héctor Silva 54'
CF10Pedro Rocha
LW11Domingo Pérez
Manager:
Ondino Viera

Soviet Union vs Hungary

Soviet Union 2–1 Hungary
Chislenko  5'
Porkuyan  46'
Report Bene  57'
Attendance: 26,844
GK1Lev Yashin
RB4Vladimir Ponomaryov
CB6Albert Shesternyov (c)
CB12Valery Voronin
LB10Vasiliy Danilov
MF8Yozhef Sabo
MF15Galimzyan Khusainov
RW11Igor Chislenko
CF18Anatoliy Banishevskiy
CF19Eduard Malofeyev
LW17Valeriy Porkuyan
Manager:
Nikolai Morozov
GK21József Gelei
RB2Benő Káposzta
CB17Gusztáv Szepesi
CB5Kálmán Mészöly
LB3Sándor Mátrai
MF6Ferenc Sipos (c)
MF14István Nagy
RW7Ferenc Bene
CF9Flórián Albert
CF10János Farkas
LW11Gyula Rákosi
Manager:
Lajos Baróti

Portugal vs North Korea

Portugal 5–3 North Korea
Eusébio  27', 43' (pen.), 56', 59' (pen.)
José Augusto  80'
Report Pak Seung-zin  1'
Li Dong-woon  22'
Yang Seung-kook  25'
Attendance: 40,248
GK3José Pereira
RB17Morais
CB20Alexandre Baptista
CB4Vicente
LB9Hilário
CM16Jaime Graça
CM10Mário Coluna (c)
RW12José Augusto
SS13Eusébio
CF18José Torres
LW11António Simões
Manager:
Otto Glória
GK1Lee Chang-myung
RB5Lim Zoong-sun
CB3Shin Yung-kyoo
CB14Ha Jung-won
LB13Oh Yoon-kyung
MF8Pak Seung-zin
MF6Im Seung-hwi
RW11Han Bong-zin
CF7Pak Doo-ik
CF16Li Dong-woon
LW15Yang Seung-kook
Manager:
Myung Rye-hyun

Semi-finals

West Germany vs Soviet Union

West Germany 2–1 Soviet Union
Haller  43'
Beckenbauer  67'
Report Porkuyan  88'
Attendance: 38,273
GK1Hans Tilkowski
RB14Friedel Lutz
CB5Willi Schulz
CB6Wolfgang Weber
LB3Karl-Heinz Schnellinger
MF4Franz Beckenbauer
MF8Helmut Haller
RW9Uwe Seeler (c)
CF10Siggi Held
CF12Wolfgang Overath
LW11Lothar Emmerich
Manager:
Helmut Schön
GK1Lev Yashin
RB4Vladimir Ponomaryov
CB6Albert Shesternyov (c)
CB10Vasiliy Danilov
LB12Valery Voronin
MF8Yozhef Sabo
MF15Galimzyan Khusainov
RW11Igor Chislenko 44'
CF18Anatoliy Banishevskiy
CF19Eduard Malofeyev
LW17Valeriy Porkuyan
Manager:
Nikolai Morozov

England vs Portugal

England 2–1 Portugal
B. Charlton  30', 80' Report Eusébio  82' (pen.)
Attendance: 94,493
Referee: Pierre Schwinte (France)
GK1Gordon Banks
RB2George Cohen
CB5Jack Charlton
CB6Bobby Moore (c)
LB3Ray Wilson
RM4Nobby Stiles
CM9Bobby Charlton
LM16Martin Peters
RF7Alan Ball
CF10Geoff Hurst
LF21Roger Hunt
Manager:
Alf Ramsey
GK3José Pereira
RB22Alberto Festa
CB20Alexandre Baptista
CB21José Carlos
LB9Hilário
CM16Jaime Graça
CM10Mário Coluna (c)
RW12José Augusto
SS13Eusébio
CF18José Torres
LW11António Simões
Manager:
Otto Glória

Third place play-off

Portugal 2–1 Soviet Union
Eusébio  12' (pen.)
Torres  89'
Report Malofeyev  43'
Attendance: 87,696
Referee: Ken Dagnall (England)
GK3José Pereira
RB22Alberto Festa
CB20Alexandre Baptista
CB21José Carlos
LB9Hilário
CM16Jaime Graça
CM10Mário Coluna (c)
RW12José Augusto
SS13Eusébio
CF18José Torres
LW11António Simões
Manager:
Otto Glória
GK1Lev Yashin (c)
RB4Vladimir Ponomaryov
CB13Alexey Korneyev
CB7Murtaz Khurtsilava
LB10Vasiliy Danilov
MF12Valery Voronin
MF14Georgi Sichinava
RW16Slava Metreveli
FW19Eduard Malofeyev
FW18Anatoliy Banishevskiy
LW2Viktor Serebryanikov
Manager:
Nikolai Morozov

Final

England 4–2 (a.e.t.) West Germany
Report
Attendance: 96,924
England
West Germany
GK1Gordon Banks
RB2George Cohen
CB5Jack Charlton
CB6Bobby Moore (c)
LB3Ray Wilson
DM4Nobby Stiles
RM7Alan Ball
AM9Bobby Charlton
LM16Martin Peters 20'
CF10Geoff Hurst
CF21Roger Hunt
Manager:
Alf Ramsey
GK1Hans Tilkowski
RB2Horst-Dieter Höttges
CB5Willi Schulz
CB6Wolfgang Weber
LB3Karl-Heinz Schnellinger
CM4Franz Beckenbauer
CM12Wolfgang Overath
RF8Helmut Haller
CF9Uwe Seeler (c)
CF10Sigfried Held
LF11Lothar Emmerich
Manager:
Helmut Schön

Officials

References

  1. "Hurst the hero for England in the home of football". FIFA.com. Archived from the original on 20 December 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.