1966 World Cup In spite of all of this history, it was not until the
1966 FIFA World Cup, held in and eventually won by England, that the rivalry picked up the sometimes bitter and fierce edge that it retains. The two teams met in the quarter-finals of the tournament, a game referred to in Argentina as
el robo del siglo ("the theft of the century") that England won 1–0 thanks to a goal from striker
Geoff Hurst, disputed by the Argentines due to a claimed
offside. is sent off in the historic Argentina vs England match in the
1966 FIFA World Cup The game, however, was particularly noted for the sending off of Argentina captain
Antonio Rattín after receiving his second caution of the game. The Argentines considered the second caution to be unfair, including Rattín himself, who had to be escorted from the pitch by police as he refused to leave the pitch. Rattín was cautioned at the start of the match for a lunge on
Bobby Charlton. Rattín then fouled
Geoff Hurst and received another caution (the use of yellow/red cards would not be adopted until the next World Cup in Mexico) for arguing with the referee for a teammate's foul. It was reported in Argentina that the German referee,
Rudolf Kreitlein, said that he had sent off Rattín because he did not like how he had looked at him, while British newspapers cited the official as having given the reason as "violence of the tongue", despite the referee speaking no Spanish. Rattín's intention appeared to have been to speak with the German referee, as according to the Argentines, he was ruling in favour of the English team. Rattín made a visible signal showing his
captain's armband and intention to call a translator.
Ken Aston, the English supervisor of referees, entered the field to try to persuade Rattín to leave, but he only exacerbated the situation since the Latin American teams had already suspected that the English and
Germans were collaborating to eliminate them from the competition. The next competitive game between the two teams occurred at the
1986 World Cup in Mexico, again at the quarter-final stage. The encounter was made particularly incendiary by the 1982
Falklands War fought between the Argentine Republic and the United Kingdom four years previously, and many in Argentina saw the game as being an opportunity to exact revenge upon England for England's part in the conflict. Argentina took the lead through a highly controversial goal from Maradona, who
punched the ball into the net with his hand. The goal was allowed to stand by the Tunisian referee
Ali Bin Nasser, much to the fury of the English team and its fans. The goal, dubbed the "
Hand of God goal" after Maradona's tongue-in-cheek description of how it was scored, has become infamous in England, particularly as England went on to lose the game and Argentina later won the tournament. Also in this game, Maradona scored a second goal, voted in 2002 as the
best goal in World Cup history, before English striker
Gary Lineker pulled one back, but England could not score again and lost 2–1. Despite the skill of his second goal, Maradona wrote in his autobiography that "I sometimes think I preferred the one with my hand ... It was a bit like stealing the wallet of the English." He also wrote, in reference to the Falklands conflict, that "it was as if we had beaten a country, not just a football team ... Although we had said before the game that football had nothing to do with the
Falkland Islands war, we knew they had killed a lot of Argentine boys there, killed them like little birds. And this was revenge." At the end of the game, England's
Steve Hodge swapped shirts with Maradona, and later sold the shirt at auction for £7.1 million. Maradona praised the English as they did not use rough tactics like the other teams that frequently fouled and knocked him over. The game added hugely to the rivalry between the two teams in England where they felt that they had been cheated out of the competition by Maradona's handball. The importance of both goals for the English people can be seen as the fact they were chosen sixth in the list of
100 Greatest Sporting Moments in 2002 by
Channel 4. Meanwhile, in Argentina, the game was seen as revenge for the Falklands War and for what they still see as the unfair game in the 1966 World Cup.
1991 friendly On 25 May 1991, a friendly match between the two teams was played at Wembley. Argentina, now under the management of
Alfio Basile, were preparing for the forthcoming
Copa América 1991, which they went on to win. The South Americans had a new generation of players mainly playing locally, replacing the very successful group of the previous two World Cup tournaments. The game was mostly under the control of England, but near the end, Argentina came back from two goals down to draw 2–2.
Claudio García and
Darío Franco scored with headers. Despite not being a victory, the result was celebrated in Argentina, especially as both Argentine goals came from corner kicks, which in Argentina were seen as being a part of the game at which the English usually excelled.
1998 World Cup The next meeting between the two countries came in the round of 16 of the
1998 FIFA World Cup, held in
Saint-Étienne, France. The game had many noteworthy aspects including a goal that is considered to be one of England's greatest ever goals, scored by young striker
Michael Owen. The match is also remembered for
David Beckham receiving a
red card. Beckham had been fouled by
Diego Simeone and as Simeone stood up, he rubbed his knuckles against the back of Beckham's head as Beckham lay face-down on the pitch. Lying on the floor, Beckham swung his leg at Simeone, after which Simeone fell over, and the referee sent Beckham off. Playing with ten men, England held out against the Argentine attacks and, in the dying moments of the game during a scramble in the Argentine penalty area,
Sol Campbell headed the ball into the goal. As the England players began to celebrate a winning goal, the referee blew for a foul that
Alan Shearer was judged to have committed on the Argentine goalkeeper prior to the goal and disallowed it. The consequent free kick was taken very quickly, while the England players were still celebrating, and they had to rush back to prevent the Argentines from scoring. The scores stayed level at 2–2 until the end of extra time. In the ensuing
penalty shoot-out that decided the game, Argentina won 4–3 after two English kicks were saved by their goalkeeper
Carlos Roa. Immediately following the game, Beckham was vilified by the English press for his perceived petulance and naïvety on the international stage; the headline in
The Daily Mirror the following day described the England team as: "10 Heroic Lions, One Stupid Boy", Simeone has since made a subsequent "confession" where he admitted to simulating the injury from the kick in order to get Beckham sent off, and as all his teammates urged the referee to give Beckham the red card. However,
Sports Illustrated was critical of the Argentines' theatrics in that event, stating that Simeone first delivered a "heavy-handed challenge" on Beckham and then "fell like a ton of bricks" to get Beckham sent off, noting that the Argentines used similar "theatrics" in their next match against the
Netherlands which got a Dutch player sent off (however, Argentina lost that match 2–1).
2000 friendly and 2002 World Cup scoring a penalty against Argentina at the
2002 FIFA World Cup Another friendly was played on 23 February 2000, again at Wembley, but ended 0–0. It was also the same day when former England footballer
Sir Stanley Matthews died aged 85. Then, the teams were drawn to meet once more in the group stage of the
2002 FIFA World Cup. Having been knocked out by Argentina in two of the previous three World Cups in which they had competed, tension in England was high. This tension was raised by the England team gaining only a draw in their opening match against
Sweden, meaning that they needed a good result against Argentina to avoid being eliminated from the competition.
David Beckham, the England captain, scored the only goal of the match, a
penalty kick following a foul on
Michael Owen by
Mauricio Pochettino, which many felt redeemed Beckham in the eyes of the English sporting public for his dismissal four years earlier. As
The Times described it in their match report, "vilified for the red card that helped to usher England out of the 1998 World Cup at the hands of Argentina, he wakes this morning with his halo brighter than ever." Despite a late onslaught from the Argentine players at the end of the second half of the game, England maintained the scoreline and won 1–0, and partly as a result of this Argentina (one of the pre-tournament favourites to win) were knocked out in the first round. Although the Argentine players and public criticised the awarding of the penalty kick, the game was generally played in a good, if highly competitive, spirit, and there was none of the bitterness that had affected the 1966, 1986 and 1998 meetings.
Diego Simeone and
David Beckham, whose clash in the 1998 meeting had resulted in Beckham's sending-off, shook hands in the middle of the game. As expected, Argentine fans were extremely disappointed with the result of this match and the subsequent draw with Sweden. A new "controversy" developed among the fans in the aftermath of the game when it was claimed that Argentine captain
Juan Sebastián Verón had purposely diminished the quality of his game, because he had to return to England to play with
Manchester United. Verón has denied the allegations.
2005 friendly The most recent game between the two nations occurred on neutral ground in
Geneva on 12 November 2005 when the two teams, having both already qualified for the
2006 FIFA World Cup, met in a friendly. Both teams selected strong sides. England twice came from behind to beat Argentina 3–2 with goals from
Michael Owen from crosses by
Steven Gerrard and
Joe Cole in the dying moments. The result and performance were welcomed enthusiastically by the English press and public. The general nature of the match was also less intensely vitriolic than on previous occasions, with
The Times reporting, "by the unpleasant standards of previous confrontations, the skirmish between England and Argentina edged towards the saccharine, although the concept is deeply relative. The latest encounter featured punches on the terraces, songs about the Falkland Islands, jibes regarding players' sexuality and general churlishness that, believe it or not, represents a significant thaw in diplomatic relations." England's victory was the first time either side had won consecutive matches against the other. == List of matches ==