Remaining matches Even after this loss, England could have kept their chances alive by winning their final pool match against Spain, a result which would have forced a play-off for the right to progress to the final stage of the competition.
Aftermath John Souza, the U.S. inside right forward, was selected to the World Cup All-Star team by the
Brazilian sports newspaper
Mundo Esportivo, and remained the only U.S. player selected to a World Cup All-Star team until
Claudio Reyna in 2002. Newspaper headlines in most World Cup nations trumpeted the shocking upset, except ironically in the United States and England. There was only one U.S. journalist at the World Cup:
Dent McSkimming of the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch; he could not persuade the newspaper to pay for the trip, and had taken time off work to cover the event. some other journals carried agency reports of the match. In England, newspapers at the time were generally small, and had only a few pages devoted to sports. Because the
English cricket team happened to suffer their
first-ever home defeat to the
West Indies the very same day, that was the major story in many publications. and "The Last Straw – U.S. Beat England In World Cup". Many newspapers repeated Arthur Drewry's statement that the defeat was "unbelievable". Legend has it that in publications that did report the World Cup match, so unexpected was the result that it was presumed that the 1–0 scoreline was a typing error and so it was reported that England had won on a scoreline of 10–0 or 10–1. However, historical newspapers online at The
British Newspaper Archive show that the story is a myth. Afterwards, a number of books and newspapers in England suggested that the U.S. team had arrived "through
Ellis Island", meaning that the team was made up of imported players. In actuality, eight of the starting eleven were U.S.-born, while the other three, Gaetjens, McIlvenny, and Maca, were not U.S. citizens, but had declared their intentions to gain
citizenship (only Maca ultimately became a U.S. citizen in 1957), and according to the rules of the
United States Soccer Federation at the time, were allowed to play. The U.S. was cleared of any wrongdoing by FIFA in a hearing on 2 December 1950. England's blue
kit, which had made its debut in this match, was never worn again. Although Walter Bahr once stated that England has never had a blue kit since then, the England team did wear blue in 1959 during a 1–4 away loss to
Peru, and wore a blue strip on several occasions in the 21st century. The 1950 loss was the first of several shock losses for the English team. In 1953, they were
defeated 6–3 by the "
Magical Magyars" of Hungary and in 1954, they
lost again to Hungary 7–1. The result of these losses was a reorganization of English football that culminated in England winning the
1966 World Cup on home soil. Since then, the game has become known as "The Miracle Match", in reference to the
Miracle on Ice from the
1980 Winter Olympics, in which the
U.S. ice hockey team defeated the heavily favored
Soviet Union. The United States and England have played two World Cup matches against each other since 1950: a match in the group stage of the
2010 FIFA World Cup, which ended in a 1–1 draw, and another group stage match in the
2022 FIFA World Cup, which ended drawn 0–0. ==See also==