GERMANY : WORLD CUP HISTORY
Between 1966 and 1990, no team had a better record
than Germany, which reached the championship game in
1966, 1974, 1982, 1986 and 1990 and came away victorious
in 1974 and 1990. In 1954, the West Germans stunned
heavily favored Hungary in the championship match, 3-2,
after losing a first-round encounter, 8-3.
In 1974, behind Der Kaiser, Franz Beckenbauer (now
head of the 2006 World Cup Organizing Committee), the
Germans defeated the Netherlands, 2-1, to capture the
Cup at home. And in 1990, under the direction of coach
Beckenbauer, they emerged as the best team in a rather
mediocre tournament, edging Argentina, 1-0 in the championship
match.
The 1994 competition wasn't kind to the Germans, who
lost a 1-0 lead in a quarterfinal encounter with surprising
Bulgaria. The Bulgarians struck twice late in the match
en route to a 2-1 upset. In 1998, however, the Germans
proved to be closer to mere mortals. They managed to
reach the second round, where they were dispatched by
another surprise side, Croatia, 3-0. The Germans rode
the stellar goalkeeping of Oliver Kahn, the skills of
Michael Ballack, some gritty play and even some luck
(that non-handball call against the U.S. in the quarterfinals)
to win all of their knockout round games by 1-0 scores
to reach the championship game before Brazil prevailed,
2-0, in the first World Cup encounter ever between those
two powerhouse nations.
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