Nigeria’s American dramatics
Posted on December 22, 2010 12:43 am
After the scoreless final of the 1994 World Cup, another event in the United States just two years later, the 1996 Olympic Games men’s soccer tournament, stands in stark contrast and deserves to be remembered a lot better than it is. The Nigeria-Brazil semifinal and the Nigeria-Argentina final produced a total of 12 goals and one of the most rip-roaring finishes to a significant tournament in world soccer history.
Olympic men’s soccer has often been a rather strange contraption. From 1952 through 1980, the tournament was dominated by Communist countries who fielded their full national teams and insisted, despite the world’s knowledge that it was a sham, that all their players were amateurs. Professionals now are allowed in the Olympics, but the under-23 teams that play in the Olympics these days tend to be third-string national teams, if that.
The 1996 tournament was better, however, at least in the final stages. Brazil had never won the Olympic soccer title (it still hasn’t) and thought it saw an opportunity to change that. Since the previous year, it had been using its Olympic team in full internationals as part of that campaign, but that wasn’t really much of a sacrifice. Since the 1994 World Cup, Brazil had developed three new superstars in Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos and Juninho, and all three were under 23. In addition, the Brazilian team at these Olympics included such other national-team mainstays as Bebeto, Rivaldo, Aldair and Flavio Conceicao.
Still, Brazil got through the group stage with not much to spare, suffering an upset against Japan and advancing only on goal difference. In the quarterfinals, Brazil looked the way it was supposed to, leaving Ghana in the dust with three unanswered goals in the second half of a 4-2 victory. The other particularly impressive quarterfinal winner was Argentina, which beat defending champion Spain, 4-0, with a team that included Hernan Crespo, Roberto Ayala, Ariel Ortega, Diego Simeone and Javier Zanetti. Nigeria beat Mexico, 2-0, and Portugal beat France, 2-1.
For the semifinal between Brazil and Nigeria on July 31, 1996 in Athens, Ga., Nigeria was able to counter Brazil’s stars with its own galaxy of national-team luminaries such as Daniel Amokachi, Nwankwu Kanu, Emmanuel Amunike, Jay-Jay Okocha, Victor Ikpeba, Taribo West, Sunday Oliseh and Celestine Babayaro.
Brazil’s momentum from its outburst against Ghana extended into the first half against Nigeria. By the 37th minute, it had a 3-1 lead on two goals by Flavio Conceicao and one by Bebeto, and it kept that margin until 15 minutes were left in the game. In the 76th minute, a pass from Amokachi put Ikpeba through to cut the margin to 3-2. The tide was going Nigeria’s way, but Brazil held out until the 90th minute before Kanu took a pass from Taslim Fatusi and scored the goal that sent the game into overtime. After that, Kanu’s winning goal seems almost fated. The Ajax Amsterdam striker completed the comeback in the third minute of overtime (remember, this was in golden-goal days) when the ball ricocheted to him off the back of a teammate and he scored from 20 yards out.
The other semifinal was less dramatic, but Argentina still looked good, beating Portugal by 2-0 on two goals by Crespo.
The final, before a crowd of 86,117 in Athens, was made more emotional by the fact that Nigerian soccer had been surrounded by controversy in the previous year, marked particularly by its boycotting the African Nations Cup and being banned from the next one. Nigeria had to come from behind twice, after Argentine goals by Crespo and Claudio Lopez. Babayaro tied the score at 1-1 in the 28th minute, and Amokachi tied it at 2-2 in the 75th. Amunike then got the gamewinner in the 90th minute after beating an Argentine offside trap.
Many people consider the most exciting soccer event in the United States in 1996 to have been the overtime MLS final in Foxboro, but as great as that game was, it does have some competition for that honor.
Excellent tournament!
I clearly remember that final, standing in an Echo Park bar in LA called The Gold Room (broken neon nicely proclaiming it The Go Room at night). I remember it mostly for the thrilling match, the rowdy Central American crowd and for the beautiful woman I managed to drag with me.
But I’ll never, ever forget that free kick and the sight of the Argentinian defensive line sprinting in unison away from their goal while the Nigerian collected the ball and waltzed in unchallenged for the winner.
I have no recollection about the validity of the non-offside call, just how wonderfully bizarre it looked through the haze of beer and how happy I was for that team of Nigerian superstars.
I so wish they could have sustained that national program. They were a joy to watch.
I was at the Nigeria-Brazil semi!
The Olympics were never the same again since 1996. Both Nigeria and Argentina based their 1998 WC team from the Olympics. If you looked at the tam, they only made a few chances.
The final:
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6JN1AvxcSE"]YouTube – Atlanta 96′ Olympic Final: Nigeria vs Argentina[/ame]
What a terrible time try the offside trick…
Amazing to think my hometown hosted this game. I actually played football (American) on that field.
Happened right in front of me and it was kind of surreal. If I remember correctly the ball that was ricocheted was a throw in that hit the teammates back. I was there for all the men’s and women’s games played in Athens and those memories will remain forever. I only wish I was a bit older so I could have appreciated who I was actually watching.
Me too. It was well and truly awesome. Both the game and the fans.
Also: Kanu’s goal celebrations against Brazil were especially noteworthy. Ecstatic, spontaneous and hilarious.
I had tickets to the men’s semifinals and didn’t go at the last minute. Long, sad story.
In fact, I had 23 tickets, though I only ordered 2. Another long, costly story. Atlanta didn’t have the best-run Olympics.
could only watch on TV unfortunately (still a teen, not money for anything(… but those two games were absolutely awesome.. though you could always hear grumbles about the Nigerian players’ ages…. NOt fair to do IMO w/o any substantial proof….
I was at the Portugal/France game in Miami. It was the first international game I ever attended. Pierre Luigi was the ref. At some point in the game he slipped and fell down. I remember the crowd roaring with laughter, and Luigi getting up with a big grin and a flourish.
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