El Maracanazo (1990 FIFA World Cup qualification)

Brazil v Chile (1989)

The Maracanã Stadium, venue of the match
Event 1990 FIFA World Cup qualification – South American zone – Group 3
Match abandoned in the 67th minute with the score Brazil 1–0 Chile
FIFA awarded Brazil a 2–0 victory
Date 3 September 1989
Venue Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro
Referee Juan Carlos Loustau (Argentina)

The Maracanazo of the Chilean selection (also known as Condorazo or Bengalazo) was an incident which happened during the football match between Brazil and Chile, at the Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on 3 September 1989, in which Chilean goalkeeper Roberto Rojas pretended to be hurt by a flare thrown by Brazilian fans. The incident is considered by historians and football experts as one of the most shameful events in world football. The incident deprived Chile of competing in the 1994 World Cup qualifiers and ended Rojas' career.

Background

For the 1990 FIFA World Cup, the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) received 3.5 berths (including Argentina who already qualified as title holders). The other teams were grouped into 3 groups. The winners of the Groups 1 and 3 qualified directly to the World Cup, while the winner of Group 2 had to play an intercontinental play-off against the winner of Oceania's qualifying. Chile, Venezuela and Brazil were assigned to Group 3.

In the qualifiers, Chile beat Venezuela 3–1 in Caracas, drew 1–1 with Brazil in Santiago and beat Venezuela 5–0 in Mendoza, Argentina as FIFA banned Chile from playing at home due to crowd trouble against Brazil. With both teams due to play each other, Chile and Brazil were leading the group with 5 points each although Brazil were top on goal difference. This meant Chile needed to beat the home team Brazil to qualify.

The match

After a goalless first half, Careca of Brazil scored the only goal in the 49th minute. In the 67th minute, Chilean goalkeeper Roberto Rojas fell into the ground, pretending to be hurt by a flare thrown by the Brazilian fans. Immediately the Chilean players, led by Fernando Astengo, left the pitch in protest while Argentinian referee Juan Carlos Loustau unsuccessfully tried to convince them to continue with the game.[1] While Rojas was being seen to, Patricio Yáñez made an obscene gesture to the Brazilian fans by grabbing his genitals. This gesture was later known in Chile as pato Yáñez. [2]

The next day, television images and several photos revealed that the flare thrown by Brazilian fans didn't fall on the supposedly affected player, but landed just over one metre (3.3 ft) away. With that evidence, CONMEBOL managers considered unacceptable Rojas' version about an "attack" done by Brazilian fans, putting into doubt the true origin of the injury that Rojas claimed he had suffered. That injury didn't show signs of burning or gunpowder traces, but signs of being generated by a cutting object. However, Brazilian police identified and arrested the fan that threw the flare onto the pitch: a 24-year-old fan called Rosenery Mello do Nascimento, known later as Fogueteira do Maracanã.[3][4]

As the investigation progressed, it became evident to CONMEBOL managers that Rojas' injury was not caused by an object thrown from the grandstands. Rojas confessed to having cut himself with a razor blade hidden in one of his gloves[5] to fake an attack by Brazilian fans. Such action was part of a plan aimed to get a third match on neutral soil.[6][7] In addition, Chilean coach Orlando Aravena asked Rojas and Daniel Rodríguez (the team's doctor) to stay on the pitch to force a scandal with the purpose of nullifying the result of the game or even disqualify the Maracanã stadium as a venue.

Ten days after the game, after uncovering the truth about the incident, FIFA decided that Rojas should be banned "in perpetuity" from professional football pitches (he would receive amnesty in 2000) and Chile would be excluded from playing in the qualifiers to the 1994 FIFA World Cup due to severely violating regulations. In addition, they ruled that the game would be deemed to have been won by Brazil, by an official score of 2–0. In addition, Sergio Stoppel (president of the Football Federation of Chile), Orlando Aravena (coach), Fernando Astengo (player) and Daniel Rodríguez (team's doctor), among others, were punished by FIFA.

Over the following days, there were incidents in front of the Brazilian embassy in Chile, due to the propaganda broadcast in the Chilean media, which echoed the version provided by Rojas and Stoppel. Sports magazines (specially Minuto 90) even launched a conspiracy theory, according to which everything was a plot by João Havelange to secure Brazil's qualification.

Match details

September 3, 1989
Brazil  2–0 (W.O.)  Chile
Careca  49'
Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro
Referee: Juan Carlos Loustau (Argentina)
Brazil
Chile
GK 1 Claudio Taffarel
DF 4 Mauro Galvão
DF 2 Jorginho
DF 3 Aldair
DF 6 Ricardo Gomes
MF 5 Branco
MF 11 Valdo Condido
MF 8 Dunga
FW 10 Paulo Silas
FW 9 Careca
FW 7 Bebeto
Manager:
Brazil Sebastião Lazaroni
GK 1 Roberto Rojas
DF 18 Patricio Reyes
DF 5 Hugo González
DF 11 Fernando Astengo
DF 4 Héctor Puebla
MF 2 Alejandro Hisis
MF 8 Jaime Vera
MF 6 Jaime Pizarro
MF 10 Jorge Aravena
FW 14 Patricio Yáñez
FW 7 Juan Carlos Letelier
Manager:
Chile Orlando Aravena

Assistant referees:
Argentina Carlos Espósito
Argentina Francisco Lamolina

References

  1. "Astengo revela nuevos antecedentes del incidente en el Maracaná en 1989". emol.com (in Spanish). El Mercurio. 2013-12-17. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  2. Martínez, Alfredo (2009-09-03). "El gesto técnico "Pato Yáñez" cumple 20 años" (in Spanish). Las Últimas Noticias. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  3. Souto, Luiza. "Rosinery Mello (1965-2011) - A fogueteira do Maracanã" (in Portuguese). Folha de Sao Paulo. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  4. "La "Fogueteira" ahora se las gana vendiendo completos" (in Spanish). La Cuarta. 2009-11-24. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  5. Edwards, Piers (2014-06-28). "World Cup scandal! The unbelievable plot to eliminate Brazil". CNN. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  6. Kennedy, Kostya (1993-11-14). "BACKTALK; The Fall of the Condor: Chile's National Disgrace". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  7. "The untold scandal: When Chile plotted to eliminate Brazil from the World Cup". Sports Keeda. 2014-06-18. Retrieved 2016-03-03.

External links

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