The format of the competition stayed the same as in the
1990 World Cup: 24 teams qualified, divided into six groups of four. Sixteen teams would qualify for the knockout phase: the six group winners, the six group runners-up, and the four third-placed teams with the best records. This was the last time this format was used, due to the
expansion of the finals tournament in 1998 to 32 teams. FIFA introduced three rule changes for this tournament to encourage attacking play:
three points awarded for a win in a group stage match instead of two, a relaxed
offside rule and a
ban on picking up back-passes to goalkeepers. The number of goals increased to 2.73 per game from the record-low of 2.21 in 1990. The tournament saw the end of
Diego Maradona's World Cup career, having played in the
1982,
1986, and
1990 World Cups, and leading
Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title and the final of the 1990 World Cup. Maradona was expelled from the tournament by FIFA after he failed a drug test that uncovered
ephedrine, a weight-loss drug, in his blood.
Colombia, despite high expectations due to their style and impressive qualifying campaign,
failed to advance from the round robin. The team was dogged by influence from betting syndicates and drug cartels, with coach
Francisco Maturana receiving death threats over squad selection. After scoring an own goal for the
United States and effectively eliminating Colombia from the competition, defender
Andrés Escobar was shot to death on his return to Colombia outside a bar in a
Medellín suburb 10 days later, possibly in retaliation for his mistake. scoring a penalty kick in Germany's quarterfinal against Bulgaria at
Giants Stadium on July 10. Bulgaria came back to win the game.
Bulgaria was one of the biggest surprises of the tournament. The Bulgarians had never won a game in five previous World Cup appearances, but, led by
Hristo Stoichkov, who would eventually share the tournament lead in
scoring, they presented a formidable challenge for the title. The team won two of their three group games to qualify for the second round, where they advanced after a 3–1 penalty shootout win over
Mexico. They then faced reigning world champions
Germany in the quarterfinals, where goals from Stoichkov and
Letchkov gave them a 2–1 victory. Bulgaria went on to finish in fourth place after losing to Italy in the semifinals and Sweden in the match for third place. The host nation United States, after a 23rd-place finish in the 1990 tournament, advanced to the second round as one of the best third-place teams. They were eliminated in the Round of 16 in a 1–0 defeat to
Brazil on
Independence Day. Brazil's win over the hosts helped take them to the final against
Italy. Brazil's path was relatively smooth as they never trailed over 270 minutes of the knockout stage, defeating the
Netherlands in the quarterfinals and
Sweden in the semis after the aforementioned win over the hosts. The Italians meanwhile had made hard work of reaching the final. During the group stage, Italy struggled and narrowly advanced to the next round, despite losing 1–0 to the
Republic of Ireland. Italian playmaker
Roberto Baggio, who as the reigning FIFA World Player of the Year and Ballon D'Or holder, was expected to be one of the stars of the tournament, had not yet scored a goal. During the Round of 16 games against
Nigeria, Italy was trailing 1–0 in the dying minutes when Baggio scored the tying goal, forcing the game into
extra time. He scored again with a penalty kick to send Italy through. Baggio carried the Italians from there, scoring the game-winning goal in the quarterfinal against
Spain, and both goals in Italy's semifinal victory over Bulgaria. The match for third place was set between Bulgaria and Sweden, the team which scored more goals than any other in this World Cup with 15 over seven matches. These teams had also previously met in the
qualifying group. Sweden won, 4–0. Swedish forward
Tomas Brolin was named to the All-star team. The
final game at the
Rose Bowl was tense but devoid of scoring chances. It was the second time in
24 years that the two nations had met in a
final. After 120 goalless minutes, the World Cup was decided for the first time by a penalty shootout. After four rounds, Brazil led 3–2, and Baggio, playing injured, had to score to keep Italy's hopes alive. The tournament's
Golden Boot went jointly to Bulgaria's Stoichkov and
Oleg Salenko of
Russia, the latter becoming the first player to score five goals in a game, coming in a 6–1 victory against
Cameroon. Both players scored six goals in the tournament. Brazilian striker
Romário, with five goals, won the
Golden Ball as the tournament's best player. Despite previous controversy, the U.S. staged a hugely successful tournament, with an average attendance of nearly 70,000, surpassing the
1966 FIFA World Cup average attendance of 51,000, thanks to the large seating capacities of the stadiums in the United States in comparison to the generally smaller venues of Europe and Latin America. To this day, the total attendance for the final tournament of nearly 3.6 million remains the highest in World Cup history, despite the expansion of the competition from 24 to 32 teams at the 1998 World Cup in France. Instead, she kicked the ball wide to the left, missing the goal, but the goalposts collapsed anyway in accordance with the stunt plans. In addition,
Daryl Hall and
Jon Secada also gave musical performances. It was officially opened by then-President
Bill Clinton. ==Group stage==