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1969 Intercontinental Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Football match
1969 Intercontinental Cup
Milan, champions
EventIntercontinental Cup
MilanEstudiantes (LP)
ItalyArgentina
42
on aggregate
First leg
MilanEstudiantes (LP)
30
Date8 September 1969 (1969-09-08)
VenueSan Siro,Milan
RefereeRoger Machin (France)
Attendance60,675
Second leg
Estudiantes (LP)Milan
21
Date22 October 1969 (1969-10-22)
VenueLa Bombonera,Buenos Aires
RefereeDomingo Massaro (Chile)
Attendance45,000
1968
1970

The1969Intercontinental Cup was atwo-leggedassociation football match contested between1968–69 European Cup championsMilan and1969 Copa Libertadores winnersEstudiantes de La Plata. It was the 10th edition of the competition.

The first leg was played at theSan Siro inMilan, on 8 October 1969. Milan won the home game 3–0. The return leg was held on 22 October, atLa Bombonera inBuenos Aires. Despite suffering a 2–1 defeat, Milan won the title on aggregate.

Violence on pitch

[edit]
A bleedingNéstor Combin attended by doctors after being stuck in the face byRamón Aguirre Suárez

Amongst other things, the tie became infamous for the violent on-pitch conduct and dirty tactics employed by Estudiantes' players in the second leg of the fixture.[1]

Estudiantes' players used violence from the beginning, with Alberto Poletti and Ramón Aguirre Suárez throwing balls to a group of Milan players that were practising on the field prior to the match. With the game already in progress, Eduardo Manera pushed around goalkeeper Fabio Cudicini, then he bit Saul Malatrasi. Aguirre Suárez (one of the most violent players) injured Néstor Combin and Pierino Prati, although he would not be expelled until another violent action against Gianni Rivera.[2]

After a match which saw two Italian players badly assaulted, events took a turn for the surreal when stretcher-boundMilan strikerNéstor Combin was arrested byArgentine police fordraft dodging (Combin had been born inArgentina but had representedFrance at international level, having moved toEurope for his professional career). The match had immediate political ramifications, partly due to Argentina's bid for the World Cup in1978. Many of the team's players were arrested and goalkeeper Alberto Poletti, who had punched Milan's "golden boy"playmakerGianni Rivera, kicked Combin and had clashed with supporters after the match, was handed a life ban. Ramon Suárez, who had broken the nose of Combin, was banned from international fixtures for five years. The match is also partly to blame for a subsequent boycott of the tournament by European teams.

No, Estudiantes ... that was not manhood, it was not temperament, it was not spirit... this has been apologetics for brutality and madness ... this has embarrassed us all and those responsible should be ashamed. If we really want to continue believing in something in the future, let's start by repudiating this unfortunate episode.

— Journalist Julio César Pasquato blaming players of Estudiantes for the violence against their rivals[2]

First leg

[edit]

Match details

[edit]
MilanItaly3–0ArgentinaEstudiantes (LP)
Report
Attendance: 60,675
White jersey with black and red collar, white shorts, and white socks
Milan
Jersey with red and white vertical stripes, black shorts, and black socks
Estudiantes (LP)
GKItalyFabio Cudicini
DFItalySaul Malatrasi
DFItalyAngelo Anquilletti
DFItalyRoberto Rosato
DFWest GermanyKarl-Heinz Schnellinger
MFItalyGiovanni Lodetti
MFItalyGianni Rivera (c)
MFItalyRomano Fogli
FWItalyAngelo Sormani
FWFranceNéstor Combindownward-facing red arrow 65'
FWItalyPierino Prati
Substitutes:
MFItalyGiorgio Rognoniupward-facing green arrow 65'
Manager:
ItalyNereo Rocco
GKArgentinaAlberto José Poletti
DFArgentinaRamón Aguirre Suárez
DFArgentina José Hugo Medina
DFArgentinaRaúl Horacio Madero
DFArgentinaOscar Malbernat (c)
MFArgentinaCarlos Bilardo
MFArgentinaNéstor Togneri
MFArgentina Juan Miguel Echecopardownward-facing red arrow 60'
MFArgentinaEduardo Flores
FWArgentinaMarcos Conigliaro
FWArgentinaJuan Ramón Verón
Substitutes:
MFArgentinaFelipe Ribaudoupward-facing green arrow 60'
Manager:
ArgentinaOsvaldo Zubeldía

Second leg

[edit]

Match details

[edit]
Estudiantes (LP)Argentina2–1ItalyMilan
Report
Attendance: 45,000
Jersey with red and white vertical stripes, black shorts, and white socks
Estudiantes (LP)
White jersey with black and red collar, white shorts, and white socks
Milan
GKArgentinaAlberto José Poletti
DFArgentinaEduardo Luján Manera
DFArgentinaRamón Aguirre Suárez
DFArgentinaRaúl Horacio Madero
DFArgentinaOscar Malbernat (c)
MFArgentinaCarlos Bilardodownward-facing red arrow 55'
MFArgentina Daniel Romeo
MFArgentinaNéstor Togneri
FWArgentinaMarcos Conigliaro
MFArgentinaJuan Taverna
FWArgentinaJuan Ramón Verón
Substitutes:
MFArgentina Juan Miguel Echecoparupward-facing green arrow 55'
Manager:
ArgentinaOsvaldo Zubeldía
GKItalyFabio Cudicini
DFItalySaul Malatrasidownward-facing red arrow 54'
DFItalyAngelo Anquilletti
DFItalyRoberto Rosato
DFWest GermanyKarl-Heinz Schnellinger
MFItalyGiovanni Lodetti
MFItalyGianni Rivera (c)
MFItalyRomano Fogli
FWItalyAngelo Sormani
FWFranceNéstor Combin
FWItalyPierino Pratidownward-facing red arrow 37'
Substitutes:
DFItalyLuigi Malderaupward-facing green arrow 54'
MFItalyGiorgio Rognoniupward-facing green arrow 37'
Manager:
ItalyNereo Rocco

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Adams, Tony."Rewind to 1969: Estudiantes Leave Their Mark". ESPN. Archived fromthe original on 11 November 2012. Retrieved13 December 2012.
  2. ^abLa página más negra del fútbol argentino onEl Gráfico, 1969

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to1969 Intercontinental Cup (association football).
Two-legged editions
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Supercup
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International
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Intercontinental Cup
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