Figure caption,

Germany 2006: Italy win World Cup after Zidane headbutt

9. Italy 1-1 France (5-3 pens) (2006)

The image of Zinedine Zidane trudging past the pitchside World Cup trophy is legendary. Just not for the manner the Frenchman would wish.

Zizou was enjoying a stellar tournament and had already Panenka’d Gianluigi Buffon in the final with a spot-kick that kissed the bar and wriggled just over the goalline before he was later dismissed in extra time.

Marco Materazzi would prove the main protagonist in Berlin. Having fouled Florent Malouda for France’s opener, the towering defender levelled with a thundering header from Andrea Pirlo’s corner inside 20 minutes.

The Inter Milan centre-back’s most memorable contribution, though, was to get a reaction out of Zidane, the balding French playmaker landing a headbutt on the Italian’s sternum.

It was Zidane’s last act as a player, having declared his decision to retire after the World Cup.

Zidane walked, and Italy won on penalties. Materazzi, of course, scored his.

Zinedine Zidane walks past the World Cup trophy after being sent off against ItalyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Zidane was sent in the 2006 final with 10 minutes of extra time remaining

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West Germany v the Netherlands in World Cup final 1974Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The Netherlands had not qualified for a World Cup since 1938 until they reached back-to-back finals in 1974 and 1978

8. West Germany 2-1 Netherlands (1974)

This was supposed to be the Netherlands’ time, as Johan Cruyff and co dazzled throughout the tournament with their revolutionary Total Football approach.

By the final, the Oranje were supremely confident, despite complaining local media were trying to unsettle them, with a story about a party thrown in their hotel appearing in the Bild newspaper under the headline: Cruyff, champagne, naked girls and a refreshing dip.

An early goal at Munich’s Olympiastadion only added to their swagger, leading before West Germany even touched the ball. Cruyff went on a mazy run and was brought down by Uli Hoeness; Johan Neeskens converted from the spot.

Yet the hosts had other ideas. Paul Breitner responded from the spot and by half-time West Germany led through Gerd Muller. The Dutch were unable to recover.

Four years later, without Cruyff, they reached the final again, only to be beaten by Argentina in extra time under a sky of Buenos Aires ticker tape.

Argentina beat Netherlands in 1978Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The Netherlands took hosts Argentina to extra time in the 1978 final, but ended up losing 3-1

7. West Germany 3-2 Hungary (1954)

In the summer of 1954, no team was more fancied than Hungary’s Magical Magyars with their swashbuckling superstars Sandor Kocsis, Nandor Hidegkuti and, of course, Ferenc Puskas.

Hungary recorded a famous victory over England at Wembley the previous year and beat them 7-1 before the tournament. They were the Olympic champions and had not lost in more than 30 games – a spell stretching back five years.

Furthermore, they had scored an average of 6.25 goals per game on their way to the final and thrashed the same West Germany side they would meet in the showpiece 8-3 in the group stages.

Come the final, the Hungarians even raced into a 2-0 lead inside eight minutes at Wankdorf Stadium – Pukas and Zoltan Czibor on target – but West Germany were level 10 minutes later and somehow survived as the Golden Team hit the post, crossbar and had a number of efforts scrambled off the line.

Instead, with six minutes remaining, Helmut Rahn scored a shock winner in a victory that would become known as The Miracle of Bern.

West Germany score against Hungary in 1954Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Hungary, also beaten finalists in 1938, have not reached a final since their shock 3-2 defeat by West Germany in 1954

6. Argentina 3-2 West Germany (1986)

This was very much Diego Maradona’s tournament, even if for most of the final Lothar Matthaus attempted to stick to the diminutive Argentine like a sweat-drenched polyester jersey in the Azteca heat.

Argentina opened up a two-goal lead, Jose Luis Brown scoring the opener and Jorge Valdano finishing a swift counter attack in the second half.

The South Americans should have added to their advantage before the green-jerseyed West Germans mounted a comeback.

Captain Karl-Heinz Rummenigge poked home in the 74th minute and substitute Rudi Voller levelled soon after from another corner.

But, with six minutes remaining, a moment of Maradona magic settled the final – the forward’s superb first-time half-volleyed through ball sent Jorge Burruchaga racing away to nab the winner. El Diego had his crown.

Maradona celebrates with World Cup 1986Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Diego Maradona scored five goals and set up another five at the 1986 World Cup

5. France 3-0 Brazil (1998)

Given France’s modern World Cup prestige, it is hard to imagine a time when Les Bleus had never won the game’s biggest prize. In 1998, however, when they hosted the tournament for the first time in 60 years, that was the case.

France boasted a multicultural squad that represented a diverse nation, with second-generation Algerian immigrant Zinedine Zidane at its heart.

As defender Lilian Thuram told me: “That all of these players from these different backgrounds could represent France and go on and win, that was a very powerful message to send out to society.”

While France’s superstars dazzled on the pitch, the final is, however, remembered for pre-match hysteria surrounding the world’s best player, Brazil striker Ronaldo.

Ronaldo suffered a convulsion earlier in the day but was given the green light to start for Mario Zagallo’s side. Yet he was nowhere near his best.

France ran out comfortable 3-0 winners, Zidane netting twice and Emmanuel Petit grabbing a late third.

Figure caption,

France 1998: Zidane inspires host nation

4. Brazil 5-2 Sweden (1958)

Pele who? The teenager was already a superstar in Brazil, netting goals at an incredible rate and becoming his country’s youngest ever scorer, but the forward was not unleashed on the wider footballing world until the quarter-final stage at the 1958 World Cup after arriving in Sweden with a knee injury.

He netted against Wales and then bagged a second-half hat-trick against France in the semi-finals, with his legend cemented in the final.

Pele, the 17-year-old with number 10 etched on his makeshift blue shirt, scored twice in a 5-2 win – the highest-scoring World Cup final on record.

His first remains one of the showpiece’s all-time great goals, taking the ball on his chest and lofting it over a defender before volleying into the bottom corner.

It was Brazil’s first World Cup triumph, and Pele delivered on a promise he made to his father after the ‘Maracanazo’ in 1950, when Uruguay stunned Brazil in Rio.

“I remember seeing him sitting next to the radio, sobbing,” Pele later told Fifa. “And he stated to me, ‘Brazil have lost the World Cup’.

“I remember jokingly saying to him, ‘Don’t cry, dad – I’ll win the World Cup for you’.”

The Brazil team of 1958 pose for a photo with the Jules Rimet trophyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Brazil had been beaten by Uruguay in the decisive match at the 1950 World Cup – eight years later, they secured their first crown in Sweden

3. England 4-2 West Germany aet (1966)

Sixty years of hurt later, this remains the Three Lions’ crowning glory.

Kenneth Wolstenholme’s commentary lives on and Sir Geoff Hurst remains the only man to score a World Cup final hat-trick for the winning side.

There was no lack of drama, either. England trailed to Helmut Haller’s early opener yet then looked to have won it through goals from Hurst and Martin Peters – only for Wolfgang Weber to level in the 89th minute.

Up stepped Hurst in extra time, crashing one in off the crossbar – to much controversy – before adding his third and England’s fourth in the dying seconds.

“Some people are on the pitch…”

England players celebrate on the Wembley pitch in 1966Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

England became the first host nation to win the World Cup since Italy in 1934

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Qatar 2022: Messi Achieves World Cup Glory

2. Argentina 3-3 France (4-2 pens) (2022)

The defining moment for arguably the game’s greatest ever player.

There was a narrative that Lionel Messi could not be considered in such terms without a World Cup to his name, both in the global consciousness but also in Argentina, where Diego Maradona’s legacy loomed.

But, four years ago, Messi and Argentina delivered in what must be the most dramatic final of all time.

The South Americans were 2-0 up and seemingly cruising until Kylian Mbappe scored twice in a remarkable 90 seconds to take the final in Qatar to extra time.

Messi grabbed his second goal, from the spot, to restore Argentina’s lead, but Mbappe’s third levelled things up with two minutes to go.

Messi and Mbappe both converted from 12 yards in the shootout, but maverick stopper Emi Martinez – who also denied Randal Kolo Muani a last-gasp winner – proved the Argentine hero.

“We will never forget that game, I was so lucky to be here,” beamed former Argentina defender Pablo Zabaleta on the BBC.

The party in Buenos Aires and beyond lasted for days.

Lionel Messi celebrates while sat on the shoulders of Sergio AgueroImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Lionel Messi scored twice in the 2022 final as Argentina won a first World Cup since 1986

1. Brazil 4-1 Italy (1970)

The magic and mystique of the Azteca. Vibrant canary yellow and savoy blue jerseys that cut through even the grainiest television footage. The world’s most dominant football nations meeting for a chance to keep the Jules Rimet trophy.

Brazil 1970 are still held as the pinnacle of footballing brilliance, the bar by which every Selecao side since has been measured – with Pele, of course, alongside Jairzinho, Tostao and Rivellino.

In the Mexican sunshine, this was a crowning performance for the ages as Mario Zagallo’s outfit dismantled an Azzurri side packed with their own stars in Gigi Riva, Sandro Mazzola and Giacinto Facchetti.

Pele rose to head the opener before some Brazilian midfield showboating was punished by the Italians. But in the second half Brazil blew their European counterparts away.

Gerson fired beyond gloveless Italy goalkeeper Enrico Albertosi, Jairzinho pounced on Pele’s nod down, and Carlos Alberto capped perhaps the World Cup final’s most complete performance with arguably its greatest goal. Beautiful.

Pele is mobbed after the 1970 finalImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Brazil kept the Jules Rimet trophy after beating Italy in 1970 for their third World Cup triumph

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Related topics

  • Football
  • FIFA World Cup 2026
  • England Men’s Football Team
  • Brazil
  • France
  • Argentina
  • Netherlands
  • Hungary

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