1960 Withdrew With a
team packed with stars such as Alfredo Di Stefano, Luis Suarez and Ladislao
Kubala, Spain defeated Poland 4-2 away (Di Stefano 2, Suarez 2) and 3-0 at home
(Di Stefano, Gensana, Gento). In the next round they were drawn against the
Soviet Union, but Franco decided to withdraw for political reasons.
1964 Champions Spain
eliminated Romania in the first round with a 6-0 victory at home (Guillot 3,
Veloso, Amancio, Nunweiler og) despite losing 3-1 away (Veloso). They were
paired with Northern Ireland in the next round, and after only drawing 1-1 at
home (Amancio) coach Villalonga called on two players who were playing in the
Italian league (Del Sol and Suarez) and Spain won 1-0 in Belfast, with Gento
scoring the only goal. In the quarter finals, Spain beat the Republic of
Ireland 5-1 in Sevilla (Amancio 2, Fusté, Marcelino 2) in a match which
saw the debut of the legendary goalkeeper, Jose Angel Iribar. The return match
was also won (2-0 in Dublin) with both goals from Zaballa. The final matches
were in Spain. The semi final was against Hungary, with Spain running out
winners by 2-1 with goals from Pereda and Amancio. The great final was Spain vs
Soviet Union, bringing together the two best goalkeepers in the world, Lev
Yashin and Iribar. Pereda scored the first goal for Spain, but Jusainov
equalized. Then Marcelino scored the most important goal in Spain's history to
claim the trophy with a 2-1 scoreline. The winning team was Iribar, Rivilla,
Olivella, Calleja, Zoco, Fuste, Amancio, Pereda, Marcelino, Suarez and Lapetra.
1968 Quarter-finalist
Spain won their qualifying group (with Rep.Ireland, Turkey and Czechoslovakia)
and the quarter finals were against England. The first leg at Wembley was 1-0
for England with the winner scored by Bobby Charlton. In Madrid, Amancio scored
to level but England rallied with goals from Martin Peters and Norman Hunter
for a final score of 2-1 to England and elimination for Spain.
1972 Failed to
qualify In the qualifying group Spain finished second and were thus out of
the competition. They beat Cyprus 2-0 away (Pirri, Violeta) and 7-0 at home
(Pirri 2, Quino 2, Aguilar, Lora, Txetxu Rojo) but Spain lost and drew with the
Soviet Union 2-1 (Rexach) and 0-0, and after beating Northern Ireland 3-0 in
Sevilla (Rexach, Pirri, Luis), could only draw 1-1 (Txetxu Rojo) in Northern
Ireland. The coach Kubala blamed their failure on the high number of foreign
and Spanish nationalised players who were playing in the Spanish league at the
time, preventing youngsters from coming through.
1976 Quarter finals
Spain won their qualifying group with wins against Denmark, 1-2 away (Claramunt
pen, Roberto Martínez) and 2-0 at home (Pirri, Capón), draws
against Romania 1-1 (Velázquez) at home and 2-2 away (Villar,
Santillana), and a win and a draw against Scotland, 1-2 away (Quini 2) and 1-1
at home (Megido). In the quarter finals they had to play World Cup holders,
West Germany. The home leg finished 1-1 (Santillana) but the return game saw
the Germans run out 2-0 winners.
1980 Qualified Again
Spain won their qualifying group with the following results:
Yugoslavia: 0-1; 1-2
(Juanito, Santillana) Romania: 1-0 (Asensi); 2-2 (Dani 2) Cyprus: 5-0
(Santillana 2, Asensi, Ruben Cano, Del Bosque); 1-3 (Villar, Santillana,
Saura)
This gave them the passage
through to the final stage in Italy. However they were drawn in a strong group
and they finished last with the following results: Italy 0-0 Spain; Belgium 2-1
Spain (Quini); England 2-1 Spain (Dani pen). Coach Ladislao Kubala was fired
after 11 years with a record of 31 wins, 21 draws and 16 defeats.
1984 Finalist Spain
were drawn with Holland, Eire, Iceland and Malta in the qualifying stage. After
five wins and a draw, with 11 goals for (Maceda 2, Señor 2, Santillana,
Rincón, Pedraza, Víctor, Carrasco, Gordillo and an own goal) and
only five against, they lost narrowly to Holland by 2-1, with Houlman and
Gullit scoring for the Dutch and Santillana for Spain. |
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They therefore went into the
last match needing to score 11 goals more than Malta to reach the finals at the
expense of the Netherlands. With the half-time score 3-1 in Spain's favour,
this looked unlikely but a second half barrage produced a final scoreline of
12-1 (Santillana 4, Rincón 4, Maceda 2, Sarabia and Señor) and
Spain had booked their ticket.
In the finals in France, two
draws with Romania 1-1 (Carrasco pen) and Portugal 1-1 (Santillana) didn't bode
well given that the third match was against West Germany, but Spain won 1-0
thanks to Maceda's last minute goal after Carrasco had missed a penalty. The
semi final was against Denmark and after a 1-1 draw (Maceda), the game went to
penalties. Sarabia scored the crucial kick for a 5-4 victory and Spain had
reached their first final in 20 years. Spain played well in the final despite
key players Goikoetxea, Maceda and Gordillo missing from the side. France had
all the luck though as a dubious penalty scored by Platini gave them the lead
and a last minute own goal by keeper Arconada flattered the hosts with a 2-0
victory.
1988 Qualified Spain
were lucky to qualify in a relatively weak group. Results were as follows:
Romania: 1-0 (Michel);
3-1 (Calderé) Albania: 5-0 (Bakero 3, Michel, Llorente); 1-2
(Arteche, Joaquín) Austria: 2-0 (Michel pen, Sanchís); 2-3
(Eloy 2, Carrasco)
Their performance in the
finals in Germany was disappointing. In the first game of the group, Spain beat
Denmark 3-2 (Michel, Butragueño, Gordillo), but the second goal was
clearly offside and the third was a terrible error from the Danish goalkeeper.
Spain then lost 1-0 to Italy and 2-0 to West Germany. It was a very poor
performance and coach Miguel Munoz was fired.
1992 Failed to
qualify Spain failed to qualify in a group with France, Czechoslovakia,
Iceland and Albania. Results were as follows:
France: 1-2 (Abelardo);
3-1 (Bakero) Czechoslovakia: 2-1 (Abelardo, Michel pen); 3-2 (Roberto,
Carlos) Iceland: 2-1 (Butragueño, Carlos); 2-0 Albania: 9-0
(Butragueño 4, Carlos 2, Amor, Hierro, Bakero)
The last match at Albania
was never played due to political trouble in that country, but it didn't
matter. Spain failed to qualify, and yet another coach, this time Luis Suarez,
fell.
1996 Quarter finals
Spain came up against some old faces, and some totally new. They qualified well
for the finals in England, with these results:
Cyprus: 6-0 (Guerrero,
Alfonso, Pizzi 2, Hierro, Caminero); 1-2 (Higuera 2) Macedonia: 3-0 (Kiko,
Manjarín, Caminero); 0-2 (Salimas 2) Denmark: 3-0 (Nadal, Donato,
Luis Enrique); 1-1 (Hierro pen) Belgium: 1-1 (Guerrero); 1-4 (Hierro,
Donato pen, Salinas, Luis Enrique) Armenia: 1-0 (Hierro pen); 0-2
(Amavisca, Goekoetxea)
In the finals, Spain played
all their group B matches in Leeds as a top seed. The first game was against
Hristo Stoichkov's Bulgaria, and they put up a disappointing performance to
draw 1-1. Bulgaria took the lead in the second half through a Stoichkov penalty
after Sergi brought down Kostadinov. Clemente brought on Alfonso with 20
minutes to go, and the Betis striker scrambled in an equaliser. The second
match was against France, and again Spain came back from behind to draw, this
time Caminero scoring five minutes from the end. In the third group game, they
finally got the victory they needed, beating Rumania 2-1 with goals from
Manjarín and Amor. In the quarter final they came up against hosts
England, and after a heart stopping 120 minutes without goals, including a
golden goal extra time, it went to a penalty shoot out. Hierro's first kick
rebounded off the bar, and although Amor and Belsué scored, Nadal shot
was saved by Seaman, and England went through 4-2. |