London - Part one of a brief history of the World Cup finals covering the tournaments from
1930 to 1954:
URUGUAY 1930
Final: URUGUAY 4 ARGENTINA 2
Thirteen countries took part in the first World Cup finals
which were held in Uruguay in recognition of their victories in
the 1924 and 1928 Olympic Games.
Fifa had planned to stage an international competition from
the time it was founded, in 1904, and there was an idea to stage
an inaugural world championship for 16 teams in Switzerland in
1906.
In reality, it was to be 26 years before the World Cup began
and, when it did, it was rather with a whimper than a bang.
Because of the long distances involved, only four European
teams travelled to South America, and they sailed together on
the same boat.
Belgium, France, Yugoslavia and Romania made the trip and
Romania were there only because of the intervention of King
Carol who asked companies, whose employees were chosen for the
squad, to give them time off work.
Fifa president Jules Rimet and his fellow Frenchman Henri
Delauney worked tirelessly to launch the competition and
appropriately France played in the first World Cup match,
beating Mexico 4-1 in Montevideo on July 13, 1930.
French striker Lucien Laurent scored the first World Cup
goal 19 minutes into the match.
Although several matches were poorly supported, the final
between neighboring South American rivals Uruguay and Argentina
on July 30 attracted a crowd of 93 000. Uruguay won 4-2.
ITALY 1934
Final: ITALY 2 CZECHOSLOVAKIA 1 (after extra-time)
Fifa decided at their October 1932 Congress to award the 1934
finals to Italy, then under the Facist regime of Benito
Mussolini.
Fifa's membership had grown to more than 50 countries since
1930 and 32 teams entered the World Cup qualifying round chasing
16 places in the finals.
Uruguay, however, became the only champions not to defend
their crown. They refused to enter because they were aggrieved
so many European countries ignored their tournament in 1930.
Half the countries involved played only one match because
the 1934 finals were organised as a knockout competition.
Mexico made the lengthy trip to Italy to play one match that
was not even part of the competition proper.
They had to play an extra qualifying match against the
United States, who entered late and missed the original
qualifying competition.
Mexico lost 4-2 to the United States in Rome, three days
before the World Cup began on May 27 when the U.S. were promptly
knocked out 7-1 by Italy.
The Italians continued with a 1-0 replay win over Spain in
the second round, then beat Austria 1-0 in the semi-finals
before winning the World Cup for the first time, beating
Czechoslovakia 2-1 in the final in Rome on June 10, 1934.
FRANCE 1938
Final: ITALY 4 HUNGARY 2
The third World Cup was played with the growing threat of
war over-shadowing the competition.
Argentina had bid to stage it but Fifa awarded the finals to
France because of the problems of travelling to South America.
As a result, Argentina stayed away.
The competition was played along knockout lines again, which
is how the Dutch East Indies came to play their one and only
match in the finals.
They were paired with Japan in a two-team qualifying group;
Japan withdrew and the Dutch East Indies went through.
They lost 6-0 to Hungary who went all the way to the final
in Paris where they played champions Italy.
Italy had won the 1934 finals at home under the astute and
innovative coach Vittorio Pozzo. He was in charge again as Italy
beat Norway (2-1), hosts France (3-1) and Brazil (2-1) in the
semi-finals to reach the final.
Italy won a superb match 4-2 to become the first country to
win the World Cup twice. Little did they know but they were to
wait until 1982 for a third triumph.
BRAZIL 1950
Final: URUGUAY 2 BRAZIL 1
After 11 years, because of World War II and its aftermath,
World Cup football returned on June 2, 1949 when Sweden beat
Ireland 3-1 in Stockholm in a qualifying round game for the 1950
finals in Brazil.
The Swedes qualified eventually and were among 13 countries
who took part in a quirkily-organised tournament in the South
American country the following year.
For the first time, England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and
Wales entered but Scotland decided perversely not to take the
place awarded to them after finishing second to England in the
all-British qualifying group.
England, the home of soccer, had pompously refused to enter
the competition before the war but beat Chile in their opening
match and looked set to do well.
Badly-prepared and badly-organised, they were punished by
falling victim to one of the greatest shocks in World Cup
history when they were beaten 1-0 by the United States in Belo
Horizonte.
A 1-0 defeat against Spain, in their next match, meant they
were out. It was to be a long time before England made any
impression in the tournament.
Hosts and strong favourites Brazil, flexing their muscles,
made the last four along with Sweden, Spain and Uruguay.
Bizarrely, there was no actual final in 1950 but, luckily
for the organisers and future historians, the final group match
was the one that would decide the group winner and, therefore,
world champion.
The Uruguay-Brazil match, in front of a world record crowd
of 199 854 in the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro became a de
facto final.
Uruguay won 2-1 to lift the Jules Rimet trophy for a second
time.
Brazil were stunned by the defeat. They had to wait eight
years to become champions but Uruguay have never been champions
again.
SWITZERLAND 1954
Final: WEST GERMANY 3 HUNGARY 2
Sixteen teams took part in the fifth World Cup and there was
limited television coverage.
There was still a long way to go but the dawn of a modern
age was approaching.
Although 16 teams were placed in four opening round groups,
another chaotic seeding and qualifying system meant that,
instead of playing three first round games, teams played only
two matches and several had to resort to playoffs to get through
to the quarter-finals.
But there were goals in abundance, 140 in 26 matches, and
several remarkable results. These included Hungary 8, West
Germany 3; Hungary 9, South Korea 0; and Austria 7, Switzerland
5, the highest-scoring match played in the finals.
Hungary went to Switzerland as odds-on favourites and it
seemed inconceivable they would not be taking the Jules Rimet
trophy back to Budapest.
The 'Magical Magyars' had not lost a match since 1950, were
Olympic champions and had several of the greatest players in the
world in their ranks including the absolute master: Ferenc
Puskas.
Yet the final in Berne on July 4 still defies logic.
Hungary, who crushed a largely reserve Germany team 8-3 in
the first round, raced into a 2-0 lead with goals from Puskas
and Zoltan Czibor.
But Puskas had been injured and was below his best, Hungary
relaxed and they allowed the Germans to play their way back into
the game.
In the end, they were stunned as West Germany came back to
create the biggest upset in a final by winning 3-2. Uwe Rahan
scored twice and Max Morlock once.
It was the only match Hungary lost between 1950 and 1956.
Captain Fritz Walter lifted the cup, a hugely significant
event for West Germany, nine years after the end of World War II.