Sao Paulo: Argentina and the Netherlands prepare to meet again on South American soil in Wednesday’s (Thursday in India) second World Cup semifinal, 36 years on from their encounter in the final of the controversial 1978 tournament in Buenos Aires.
A World Cup played out uneasily in a country under the grip of a brutal military dictatorship culminated in the hosts beating the Dutch 3-1 after extra time in the hostile environment of the Monumental Stadium, with Mario Kempes scoring twice.
For the Dutch, it was a second consecutive final defeat, after their 2-1 loss to West Germany in 1974, but no European side has come so close to winning the World Cup in South America.
The Dutch squad was missing Johan Cruyff but otherwise it was much the same as that of four years earlier, with seven players starting both finals, including captain Ruud Krol and Rob Rensenbrink.
Kempes put Argentina ahead, but substitute Dick Nanninga equalised and Rensenbrink then hit the post in the dying seconds for the Dutch.
It was an agonising miss, and Argentina took full advantage to secure their first World Cup in extra time as tournament top scorer Kempes netted again before Daniel Bertoni added another.
The result left a bitter taste in the visitors’ mouth, as they claimed they were unsettled when the Argentines stalled the start of the match by complaining about a plaster cast on Rene van de Kerkhof’s wrist.
“I am sure they prepared everything beforehand. They made us wait and the referee did nothing,” said Krol later in David Winner’s book Brilliant Orange.
Krol also said the Argentines had pressured FIFA into selecting Italy’s Sergio Gonella to referee the match.
And that was not the only claim made that the hosts, perhaps with the influence of dictator Jorge Videla’s military government, had manipulated their way to final victory.
Indeed, in their final game of the second group stage, Argentina knew they needed to beat Peru by four clear goals to pip Brazil to a place in the final. In the end, they put six unanswered goals past Peru’s Argentine-born goalkeeper Ramon Quiroga.
Come the final itself, the intimidating atmosphere left its mark on the Dutch, with Rensenbrink left to wonder how they might have made it out of the stadium had his last-minute shot gone in.
“If it had gone in, we would have won. We would have been World Champions in Argentina. It’s a pity,” he said in Brilliant Orange.
“Though they were pretty crazy, those Argentinians. If we’d won, going back to the hotel would have been a dangerous trip.” (AFP)