1954 Hungary v England football match
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Date | 23 May 1954 | ||||||
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Venue | Népstadion, Budapest, Hungary | ||||||
Referee | Giorgio Bernardi (Italy) | ||||||
Attendance | 92,000 |
Hungary v England (1954) was an international football game played on 23 May 1954. The game was played between the Hungary national football team—then the world's number one ranked team and the Olympic champions—and the England national football team, hailing from the birthplace of the game of football and reputed "Kings of Football".[1] The game was a return fixture from the 1953 game in the old Wembley Stadium, where Hungary had beaten England 6–3.[2]
England approached the game in the hope that the 6–3 result had been an aberration; instead, Hungary provided a phenomenal masterclass of football, and thrashed England 7–1.[3] The match still remains England’s largest defeat to this day.
Background
Under the stewardship of Gusztáv Sebes, Hungary had been unbeaten since May 1950, and had won the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki. They were rated the number one team in the world by FIFA and were firm favourites for the 1954 World Cup.
England were rated the number four team in the world by FIFA, but were still existing in a climate of complacency;
Hungary had visited England in 1953 and delivered a 6–3 thrashing at Wembley—the first time a foreign team outside the British Isles had beaten England on home soil. The result had sent a shockwave through English football, with several prominent managers and players such as Matt Busby, Don Revie, Bill Nicholson and Ron Greenwood realising that the English game had to adapt if the national team was to compete at the highest levels. The FA on the other hand viewed the defeat as a "one-off", and retained Winterbottom and an outdated WM formation for the return game in Budapest.
Date, venue and attendance
The match was played on 23 May 1954 at
The England team
The England team lined up in its usual
The Hungarian team
The Hungarian team lined up in the 4–2–4
First half
Hungary dominated the game; England were unable to obtain the ball for much of the time, and when they did they were unable to make any inroads against a fitter and more tactically adept Hungary side. No lessons had been learnt from the 6–3 defeat at Wembley; England were drawn out of position time and time again.
Mihály Lantos scored for Hungary after 10 minutes; Ferenc Puskás added a second goal seven minutes later, before Sándor Kocsis made it 3–0 on 19 minutes.[2] England were simply outclassed and outplayed for the rest of the half.
Second half
The second half continued in same vein; Kocsis added his second goal on 57 minutes, Nándor Hidegkuti scored two minutes later, Tóth added a sixth and Puskás scored the final Hungarian goal on the 71st minute. It was a wretched tactical performance by England, with the sole highlight being Ivor Broadis scoring with a hooked shot when the Hungarians were 6–0 up.[2]
The final result was Hungary 7 England 1—this still ranks as England's heaviest footballing defeat.[2]
Long-term influences
The result confirmed what many in the English football world had suspected after the 6–3 defeat at Wembley: that England were no longer a major footballing force, and that the English game needed to look to the continent for tactical and training advances.[5]
Details
Hungary | 7–1 | England |
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Tóth 63' |
Match summary | Broadis 68' |
Hungary
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England
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See also
References
- ^ "The Miracle on Grass as USA beat England". ESPN. 9 June 2010. Archived from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
- ^ a b c d e "Ivor Broadis full career profile". Archived from the original on 13 July 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ "Hungary defeated England 7-1 on this day in 1954". en.mlsz.hu. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ISBN 1-86105-083-6.
- ^ "England v Hungary - a football match that started a revolution". BBC News. BBC. 23 November 2013.