ARGENTINA : WORLD CUP HISTORY
While Argentina is considered one of the world's soccer
powers, the South American side has underachieved since
scrapping to a second-place finish at Italia '90. Its
recent best showing was at France '98. The 1978 and
1986 titles were well deserved, but had the Argentines
defeated Germany in 1990, observers agreed it would
have set soccer back for years because of the physical,
defensive style the team played.
The Argentines lost 4-2 to bitter archrivals Uruguay
in the first championship match in 1930. It took thirty-six
years before they got past the first round again, losing
to eventual champion England in the quarterfinals in
1966.
The Argentines, embarrassed by the Diego Maradona drug
scandal at the end of the opening round, were eliminated
in the second round of USA '94, their second-worst finish
when the World Cup has been played in the Americas.
They rebounded at France '98, outlasting England in
the second round before meeting their ultimate fate
in another classic confrontation, a 2-1 last-minute
lost to the Netherlands in the quarterfinals.
Touted by many as a championship contender in 2002,
Argentina fell woefully short, getting ousted in the
first round in what many observers considered the Group
of Death (England, Sweden and Nigeria).
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