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Tuesday, 24 December 2013

Le Carre Magique : 1984 France Football Team





France 1984 Euro Team








The 1984 European Championship in France had the lot, a perfect storm that culminated in French glory, their first major trophy.
"Until 1984, the European Championship had not been blessed
with great football," said BBC football commentator John Motson. "Until 1980, only four teams took parts in the finals. In 1980, there were eight, but it was a poor tournament.


"Like Jules Rimet and the World Cup, the European Championship was really invented by the French, a guy by the name of Henri Delaunay, whose name is on the trophy.
"The question was, could France win the thing that they had started?"

Michel Platini


France had gone out of the 1982 World Cup at the semi-final stage in controversial circumstances, beaten by West Germany on penalties in a game remembered forgoalkeeper Harald Schumacher's challenge on France's Patrick Battiston.
In 1984, they began their home tournament with a revamped defence and added Luis Fernandez to a talented midfield containing Michel Platini, Alain Giresse and Jean Tigana - the carre magique or 'magic square'.

Team Formation


"After 1982, we were expected to win in 1984," Fernandez told BBC Sport. "We had to win, we were the favourites and France was hoping that the French football team would be the first French team to win a big international sporting trophy.
"Before the tournament, we had a training camp in the mountains. We were a group that were happy to be together. We had pressure, but we had lots of desire and focus, and we were full of motivation to win.
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Archive: Michel Platini 
"Our style was typically French - a passing game with lots of movement, and getting the ball forward quickly because we had a player like Platini who could score lots of goals."
Fernandez's understated assessment may do Platini a disservice. The Juventus man arrived in 1984 at the peak of his powers, midway through a run of three successiveBallon D'or awards. 
And it was to be he who took the tournament by the scruff of its neck, the France captain scoring in every game, nine goals in total.
"In that tournament, Platini was unbelievable," said Motson. "I'd put him on the same level as Diego Maradona at the 1986 World Cup and Johan Cruyff in 1976.
"He was playing teams on his own. He was out of this world, a superstar. No team was able to contain him."

Alain Giresse

Jean Tigana



Two Platini hat-tricks helped France breeze through their group with three wins from three. They were to meet Portugal in the semi-finals in Marseille, a match Motson calls "the most emotional game of the tournament".
Level at 1-1, the match entered extra-time, where it looked like Rui Jordao's volley might knock the French out.








But, after Jean-Francois Domergue's scrambled equaliser,
Tigana danced his way to the byeline in the final minute of extra-time and pulled the ball back for Platini, who fired France into the final.


"I've not seen a match like this in years," proclaimed Motson on commentary.
"Marseille was an exceptional atmosphere with a passionate crowd behind us," recalled Fernandez.
"We were in the zone, every player pushed himself to the limit because we had such an absolute need to win that game, so we dug incredibly deep to overcome Portugal."
In the final against Spain, a muted affair by comparison, goalkeeper Luis Arconada spilled a Platini free-kick to give France the lead, with Bruno Bellone's late chip sealing the trophy.



"We were not nervous because we had achieved our objective to get to the final," continued Fernandez, now 52 and the host of a sport talk show on French radio station RMC.  
"It was a hard match but it was not the greatest match we had ever played. It was very cagey but we lifted the trophy and that was the most important thing.



"Before, France was a country that didn't know how to win - they used to say that the most important thing was taking part; in 1984 we showed people that we could win titles. We had become a footballing nation with the respect of other countries."


Four great midfielders joking around


And what of Platini, the man whose dominance of a European Championship may never be matched?
"No-one can repeat what Platini did," concluded Fernandez.
"It's very important to have a great leader and he was just that. When you play with a genius like Platini, all the other players will improve.
"He was a player of enormous quality. He was a great passer and always scored decisive goals. He was a leader because he had lots of personality and was a good talker. He wanted to be a real number 10 and the real chief of the team.
"He had an exceptional tournament, scoring so many crucial goals. He was the difference in every match."

Platini celebrates with his manager Michel Hidalgo after winning the Euros

Platini with Euro 1984 trophy












France 1984 Team Jersey,somebody, please get this jersey for me !!


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Highlights: France 3-2

2009 UCL Semi Final Match Report : Chelsea Vs Barcelona






 ­Barcelona vaulted over Chelsea in the third minute of stoppage time to seize a place in the Champions League final against Manchester United with their sole shot on target. It also stood apart because the strike into the top corner by Andrés Iniesta was exquisite after Lionel Messi had set him up on the fringes of the area.
There could be no sportsmanlike appreciation of that drive, which brought triumph on the away-goals rule, when Chelsea had so much to resent. They had seen a few penalty claims denied by Tom Henning Ovrebo and one still remained. In the closing moments Ballack screamed that his drive had been blocked by an arm.
The Norwegian referee was indifferent to the appeals and showed the midfielder a yellow card. A relatively inexperienced Ovrebo was not partisan and had dismissed Eric Abidal questionably in the 66th minute for denying Nicolas Anelka a goalscoring opportunity.



Full-time

Chelsea

1 - 1

Barcelona

UEFA Champions League
May 6, 2009
Stamford Bridge, England
Referee: Tom Henning Ovrebo
2nd Leg: 1 - 1 (Agg)














Furious: Didier Drogba lose his head after the 2009 semi-final



Chelsea’s rage exploded when Andrés Iniesta’s goal, deep in injury time, edged them out of the 2009 Champions League semi-final on the away-goals rule at Stamford Bridge.
Several Chelsea players, including Didier Drogba confronted referee Tom Henning Ovrebo at the final whistle, complaining they had been denied four certain penalties.
Guus Hiddink, the Chelsea manager, listed a shirt pull on Drogba by Eric Abidal, handballs by Gerard PiquéGerard Pique and Samuel Eto’o and Dani Alves’s grab on Florent Malouda as incidents the Norwegian official, who later received death threats, missed.
Uefa subsequently banned Drogba for six matches (two of which were suspended for two years), Jose Bosingwa - who had said of Ovrebo "I don’t know if he’s a referee or a thief" - for three games (one suspended) and fined Chelsea £85,000 for improper conduct by players and fans.