1958 FIFA World Cup








































































1958 FIFA World Cup
Världsmästerskapet i Fotboll
Sverige 1958

WorldCup1958logo.jpg
1958 FIFA World Cup official logo

Tournament details
Host country Sweden
Dates 8–29 June (22 days)
Teams 16 (from 3 confederations)
Venue(s) 12 (in 12 host cities)
Final positions
Champions
 Brazil (1st title)
Runners-up  Sweden
Third place  France
Fourth place  West Germany
Tournament statistics
Matches played 35
Goals scored 126 (3.6 per match)
Attendance 819,810 (23,423 per match)
Top scorer(s)
France Just Fontaine (13 goals)
Best player(s)
Brazil Didi[1]
Best young player
Brazil Pelé

← 1954


1962 →


The 1958 FIFA World Cup, the sixth staging of the World Cup, was hosted by Sweden from 8 to 29 June. The tournament was won by Brazil, who beat Sweden 5–2 in the final in the Stockholm suburb of Solna for their first title. The tournament is also notable for marking the debut on the world stage of a then 17-year-old Pelé.




Contents






  • 1 Host selection


  • 2 Qualification


    • 2.1 List of qualified teams




  • 3 Format


  • 4 Summary


    • 4.1 Final




  • 5 Venues


  • 6 Match officials


  • 7 Seeding


  • 8 Squads


  • 9 Group stage


    • 9.1 Group 1


      • 9.1.1 Play-off




    • 9.2 Group 2


    • 9.3 Group 3


      • 9.3.1 Play-off




    • 9.4 Group 4


      • 9.4.1 Play-off






  • 10 Knockout stage


    • 10.1 Bracket


    • 10.2 Quarter-finals


    • 10.3 Semi-finals


    • 10.4 Third place play-off


    • 10.5 Final




  • 11 Goalscorers


  • 12 FIFA retrospective ranking


  • 13 See also


  • 14 References


  • 15 External links





Host selection



Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and Sweden expressed interest in hosting the tournament.[2] Swedish delegates lobbied other countries at the FIFA Congress held in Rio de Janeiro around the opening of the 1950 World Cup finals.[2] Sweden was awarded the 1958 tournament unopposed on 23 June 1950.[3]



Qualification



The hosts (Sweden) and the defending champions (West Germany) qualified automatically. Of the remaining 14 places, nine were allocated to Europe, three to South America, one to North/Central America, and one to Asia/Africa.


Aside from the main European zone matches, Wales, which finished second in its group behind Czechoslovakia, was drawn into a play-off with Israel after Israel won its group by default because its three opponents, Turkey, Indonesia and Sudan, refused to play. FIFA had imposed a rule that no team would qualify without playing at least one match, something that had happened in several previous World Cups. Wales won the play-off and qualified for the first, and so far only, time. With Northern Ireland making its debut, and England and Scotland also qualifying, this World Cup was the only one to feature all four of the United Kingdom's Home Nations.


This World Cup also saw the entry and qualification of the Soviet Union for the first time, while Argentina appeared for the first time since 1934. Until 2018, this FIFA World Cup was the only one for which Italy failed to qualify (Italy did not take part in the 1930 tournament but there was no qualification for that competition). Other teams that failed to qualify included two-time champions and 1954 semifinalists Uruguay, as well as the Spain and Belgium national teams.


On 8 February 1958, in Solna, Lennart Hyland and Sven Jerring presented the results of the draw where the qualified teams were divided into four groups. Seeding was geographical rather than by team strength, with each group containing one western European team, one eastern European team, one of the four British teams that had qualified, and one from the Americas.[4]



List of qualified teams


The following 16 teams qualified for the final tournament.













Format


The format of the competition changed from 1954: 16 teams still competed in four groups of four, but this time each team played each of the other teams in its group at least once, without extra time in the event of a draw. Two points were awarded for a win and one point for a draw. If the first two teams finished on equal points then goal average would decide who was placed first and second. As in 1954, if the second and third placed teams finished on the same points, then there would be a play-off with the winner going through. If a play-off resulted in a draw, goal average from the group games would be used to determine who went through to the next round. If the goal averages were equal then lots would have been drawn. These arrangements had not been finalised by the time the tournament started and were still being debated as it progressed. Some teams complained that a play-off match, meaning three games in five days, was too much, and before the second round of group matches FIFA informed the teams that goal average would be used before resorting to a play-off.[5] This was overturned when the Swedish Football Association complained, ostensibly that it was wrong to change the rules mid-tournament, but also because it wanted the extra revenue from playoff matches.[5]


This was the first time that goal average was available to separate teams in a World Cup. It was used to separate the teams finishing first and second in one of the groups. However, all three playoffs finished with decisive results and so it was not needed to separate the teams involved in a tied playoff.


Almost all the matches kicked off simultaneously in each of the three rounds of the group phase, as did the quarter-finals and semi-finals. The exceptions were Sweden's three group matches, all of which were televised by Sveriges Radio; these started at other times so Swedes could attend other matches without missing their own team's. Apart from these, one match per round was televised, and relayed across Europe by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Many Swedes bought their first television for the World Cup.


The official ball was the "Top-Star VMbollen 1958" model made by Sydsvenska Läder & Remfabriks AB (aka "Remmen" or "Sydläder") in Ängelholm. It was chosen from 102 candidates in a blind test by four FIFA officials.[6][7]



Summary




Official 1958 FIFA World Cup poster.


In Group 4, Pelé did not play until the last of Brazil's group games, against the Soviet Union. He failed to score, but Brazil won the game 2–0 (much thanks to an impressive exhibition of dribbling prowess by his partner Garrincha) and the group by two points. Previously, they had drawn 0–0 with England in what was the first ever goalless game in World Cup history. Eventually, the Soviet Union and England went to a playoff game, in which Anatoli Ilyin scored in the 67th minute to knock England out, while Austria had already been eliminated. The English side had been weakened by the Munich air disaster earlier in the year, which killed three internationals on the books of Manchester United, including England's young star Duncan Edwards.


Playoffs were also needed in Group 1 (Northern Ireland beat Czechoslovakia to join the defending champions West Germany in the quarter-finals) and Group 3 (Wales topped Hungary to advance with hosts Sweden). Hungary had become a spent force after their appearance in the final of the previous tournament. They had lost their best players two years before, when they fled in the wake of the failed uprising against the communist regime. In a rather restrictive sense, from the 1954 team, only goalkeeper Gyula Grosics, defender Jozsef Bozsik and forward Nándor Hidegkuti remained.


In Group 2, Scotland faced Yugoslavia, Paraguay, and France. France topped the group, with Just Fontaine netting six goals. Yugoslavia finished second, while Scotland came in last.


The quarter-finals saw France's Just Fontaine continue in similar form as in the group stage, managing another two goals as France triumphed over Northern Ireland. West Germany's Helmut Rahn put them into the semi-finals with a single goal against Yugoslavia, while Sweden went through at the expense of USSR. The other game in the quarter-finals saw Pelé score the only goal against Wales.


In the semi-finals, Sweden continued their strong run as they defeated West Germany 3–1 in a vicious game that saw the German player Erich Juskowiak sent off (the first ever German player to be sent off in an international game) and German veteran forward Fritz Walter injured, which further weakened the German team (substitutes were first allowed in the 1970 FIFA World Cup).


In the other semi-final, Brazil and France were tied 1-1 for much of the first half. However, 36 minutes into the game French captain and most experienced defender Robert Jonquet suffered broken leg in a clash with Vavá, and France was down to ten men for the rest of the game (substitutions were not allowed back then). Brazil dominated the rest of the match, as a Pelé hat-trick gave them a 5–2 victory. Fontaine of France added one goal to his impressive tally.


The third place match saw Fontaine score four more goals as France defeated West Germany 6–3. This brought his total to 13 goals in one competition, a record that still stands.



Final


The final was played in Solna, in the Råsunda Stadium; 50,000 people watched as the Brazilians went a goal down after four minutes. However Vavá equalised shortly afterwards and then put them a goal ahead before half time. In the second half Pelé outshone everyone, notching up two goals, including the first one where he lobbed the ball over Bengt Gustavsson then followed it with a precise volley shot. Zagallo added a goal in between, and Sweden managed a consolation goal.


The Final saw many records made in World Cup history that still stand as of 2014[update]. At age 17, Pelé simultaneously became the youngest player to participate in, score, and win a World Cup Final. Conversely, Nils Liedholm became the oldest player to score in a World Cup Final at 35 years, 263 Days. This final had the highest number of goals scored by a winning team (5), the highest number of total goals scored (7), and together with the 1970 and 1998 finals shares the highest goal margin of difference (3); Brazil played in all those three finals.


The game is also notable for many firsts in FIFA World Cup. With the exception of the 1950 FIFA World Cup final group stage, this marked the first time that a World Cup host reached the final without winning it. Additionally, the match marked the first time two nations from different continents (Europe and South America) met in a World Cup final. It also marks the first and only World Cup hosted in Europe not won by a European team; a feat mirrored in 2014 where a World Cup hosted in the Americas was not won by a team from the Americas for the first time, with Germany beating Argentina 1-0 at the final.



Venues


A total of twelve cities throughout the central and southern parts of Sweden hosted the tournament. FIFA regulations required at least six stadiums to have a capacity of at least 20,000.[8] If Denmark had qualified, the organisers had planned to use the Idrætsparken in Copenhagen for Denmark's group matches.[8] The Idrætsparken was renovated in 1956 with this in mind, but Denmark lost out to England in qualification.[8] When doubts arose about whether funding would be forthcoming for rebuilding the Ullevi and Malmö Stadion, the organisers considered stadiums in Copenhagen and Oslo as contingency measures.[9]


The Rasunda Stadium was expanded from 38,000 for the World Cup by building end stands.[10] Organising committee chairman Holger Bergérus mortgaged his house to pay for this.[10] The new Malmö Stadion was built for the World Cup, replacing the 1896 Malmö Stadion at a new site[11] The Idrottsparken had 4,709 seats added for the World Cup. The Social Democratic municipal government refused to pay for this until the organisers threatened to select Folkungavallen in Linköping instead.[12] At the Rimnersvallen, a stand from the smaller Oddevallen stadium was moved to Rimnersvallen for the World Cup. The crowd at Brazil v. Austria was estimated at 21,000, with more looking in from the adjoining hillside.[10] The most used stadium was the Rasunda Stadium in Stockholm, which hosted 8 matches including the final, followed by the Ullevi Stadium in Gothenburg (the biggest stadium used during the tournament), which hosted 7 matches.





















































































Gothenburg

Solna (Stockholm)


1958 FIFA World Cup is located in Southern Sweden

Borås

Borås



Eskilstuna

Eskilstuna



Gothenburg

Gothenburg



Halmstad

Halmstad



Helsingborg

Helsingborg



Malmö

Malmö



Norrköping

Norrköping



Örebro

Örebro



Sandviken

Sandviken



Solna

Solna



Uddevalla

Uddevalla



Västerås

Västerås




Ullevi Stadium

Råsunda Stadium
Capacity: 53,500
Capacity: 52,400

Aerial photo of Gothenburg 2013-10-27 225.jpg

Råsunda February 2013 01.jpg

Malmö

Helsingborg

Malmö Stadion

Olympia
Capacity: 30,000
Capacity: 27,000

South Stand, Malmö Stadion.jpg

Olympia Helsingborg.jpg

Eskilstuna

Norrköping

Sandviken

Uddevalla

Tunavallen

Idrottsparken

Jernvallen

Rimnersvallen
Capacity: 20,000
Capacity: 20,000
Capacity: 20,000
Capacity: 17,778

Tunavallen 2011.jpg

Nyaparken.jpg

Jernvallen.jpg

Rimnersvallen.jpg

Borås

Halmstad

Örebro

Västerås

Ryavallen

Örjans Vall

Eyravallen

Arosvallen
Capacity: 15,000
Capacity: 15,000
Capacity: 13,000
Capacity: 10,000

Ryavallen, main stand, january 2008.JPG

Örjan.JPG

Behrn Arena 2008.JPG



Match officials


22 match officials were assigned to the tournament to serve as referees and assistant referees.



Europe



  • Austria Fritz Seipelt


  • Belgium Lucien van Nuffel


  • Czechoslovakia Martin Macko


  • Denmark Carl Jørgensen


  • England Arthur Ellis


  • England Reginald Leafe


  • Finland Arne Eriksson


  • France Maurice Guigue


  • Hungary István Zsolt


  • Italy Vincenzo Orlandini


  • Netherlands Jan Bronkhorst


  • Portugal Joaquim Campos


  • Scotland Jack Mowat


  • Spain Juan Gardeazábal Garay


  • Sweden Sten Ahlner


  • Switzerland Raymond Wyssling


  • Soviet Union Nikolai Latyshev


  • Wales Mervyn Griffiths


  • West Germany Albert Dusch


  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Leo Lemešić


South America



  • Argentina Juan Brozzi


  • Uruguay José María Codesal




Seeding















Western European Pot
Eastern European Pot
British Pot
Americas Pot


  •  Sweden

  •  West Germany

  •  Austria

  •  France




  •  Czechoslovakia

  •  Hungary

  •  Soviet Union

  •  Yugoslavia




  •  England

  •  Northern Ireland

  •  Scotland

  •  Wales




  •  Argentina

  •  Brazil

  •  Mexico

  •  Paraguay



The geographical basis of the seeding attracted criticism, especially from Austria, who were drawn against the teams considered strongest in each of the other three pots.[13]



Squads


For a list of all squads that appeared in the final tournament, see 1958 FIFA World Cup squads.


The team of the tournament voted by journalists was as follows:[14]



  • Goalkeeper: Harry Gregg

  • Defenders: Djalma Santos, Hilderaldo Bellini, Nílton Santos

  • Midfielders: Yuriy Voynov, Horst Szymaniak

  • Forwards: Garrincha, Didi, Raymond Kopa, Pelé, Lennart Skoglund


Although Just Fontaine got more votes than any other forward, they were split between the left and right inside forward positions.[14]



Group stage



Group 1



The West Germans, surprise world champions four years before, were still very strong, and fielded an exciting young forward in Uwe Seeler. But this time the Germans had to contend with a real powerhouse in Argentina's team, competing for the first time since 1934. In fact, some experts[who?] thought Argentina had a very realistic chance of reaching the semi finals or even winning the World Cup this time.


Czechoslovakia was a fairly strong team with a rich football tradition, and was considered to be no walk-over for the West Germans or the Argentinians, but nobody expected much from tiny newcomers Northern Ireland. But the Northern Irish had already shown that they could be a danger to anyone, by knocking out double world champions Italy in the qualifying tournament for the World Cup.


In the end, the Northern Irish did pull off one of the biggest upsets in World Cup Finals history by qualifying for the quarter-finals, beating Czechoslovakia in a play-off. Finishing last in the group with a −5 goal differential was a horrible blow for Argentina, and on the way home the Argentinian team met the wrath of several thousand angry football fans at Ezeiza Airport in Buenos Aires.[15]


























































Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GAv

Pts

 West Germany
3 1 2 0 7 5 1.40
4

 Northern Ireland
3 1 1 1 4 5 0.80
3

 Czechoslovakia
3 1 1 1 8 4 2.00
3

 Argentina
3 1 0 2 5 10 0.50
2

  • Northern Ireland finished ahead of Czechoslovakia by winning a play-off

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8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Argentina  1–3  West Germany

Corbatta Goal 3'
Report
Rahn Goal 32'79'
Seeler Goal 42'


Malmö Stadion, Malmö

Attendance: 31,156

Referee: Reginald Leafe (England)





8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Northern Ireland  1–0  Czechoslovakia

Cush Goal 21'
Report


Örjans Vall, Halmstad

Attendance: 10,647

Referee: Fritz Seipelt (Austria)







11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












West Germany  2–2  Czechoslovakia

Schäfer Goal 60'
Rahn Goal 71'
Report
Dvořák Goal 24' (pen.)
Zikán Goal 42'


Olympiastadion, Helsingborg

Attendance: 25,000

Referee: Arthur Edward Ellis (England)





11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Argentina  3–1  Northern Ireland

Corbatta Goal 37' (pen.)
Menéndez Goal 56'
Avio Goal 60'
Report
McParland Goal 4'


Örjans Vall, Halmstad

Attendance: 14,174

Referee: Sten Ahlner (Sweden)







15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












West Germany  2–2  Northern Ireland

Rahn Goal 20'
Seeler Goal 78'
Report
McParland Goal 18'60'


Malmö Stadion, Malmö

Attendance: 21,990

Referee: Joaquim Campos (Portugal)





15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Czechoslovakia  6–1  Argentina

Dvořák Goal 8'
Zikán Goal 17'39'
Feureisl Goal 68'
Hovorka Goal 81'89'
Report
Corbatta Goal 64' (pen.)


Olympiastadion, Helsingborg

Attendance: 16,418

Referee: Arthur Edward Ellis (England)




Play-off




17 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Northern Ireland  2–1 (a.e.t.)  Czechoslovakia

McParland Goal 44'97'
Report
Zikán Goal 18'


Malmö Stadion, Malmö

Attendance: 6,196

Referee: Maurice Guigue (France)




Group 2



The second group saw the largest number of goals scored in a single group in the 1958 World Cup with 31 goals in total (~5.16 goals per game). Just Fontaine of France scored 6 of his 13 goals in the tournament, making him the tournament's top scorer going into the quarter-finals.


None of the teams in this group had been particularly successful at previous World Cups. France, despite having hosted the 1938 event, had not achieved any real World Cup success, Yugoslavia had not been able to replicate their semi-final success of 1930 and Paraguay and Scotland were considered underdogs during the tournament.


France won the group ahead of Yugoslavia and would go on to finish third.


























































Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GAv

Pts

 France
3 2 0 1 11 7 1.57
4

 Yugoslavia
3 1 2 0 7 6 1.17
4

 Paraguay
3 1 1 1 9 12 0.75
3

 Scotland
3 0 1 2 4 6 0.67
1

  • France finished ahead of Yugoslavia on goal average



8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












France  7–3  Paraguay

Fontaine Goal 24'30'67'
Piantoni Goal 52'
Wisnieski Goal 61'
Kopa Goal 70'
Vincent Goal 83'
Report
Amarilla Goal 20'44' (pen.)
Romero Goal 50'


Idrottsparken, Norrköping

Attendance: 16,518

Referee: Juan Gardeazábal Garay (Spain)





8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Yugoslavia  1–1  Scotland

Petaković Goal 6'
Report
Murray Goal 49'


Arosvallen, Västerås

Attendance: 9,591

Referee: Raymond Wyssling (Switzerland)







11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Yugoslavia  3–2  France

Petaković Goal 16'
Veselinović Goal 63'88'
Report
Fontaine Goal 4'85'


Arosvallen, Västerås

Attendance: 12,217

Referee: Benjamin Griffiths (Wales)





11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Paraguay  3–2  Scotland

Agüero Goal 4'
Goal 45'
Parodi Goal 73'
Report
Mudie Goal 24'
Collins Goal 74'


Idrottsparken, Norrköping

Attendance: 11,665

Referee: Vincenzo Orlandini (Italy)







15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












France  2–1  Scotland

Kopa Goal 22'
Fontaine Goal 44'
Report
Baird Goal 58'


Eyravallen, Örebro

Attendance: 13,554

Referee: Juan Brozzi (Argentina)





15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Paraguay  3–3  Yugoslavia

Parodi Goal 20'
Agüero Goal 52'
Romero Goal 80'
Report
Ognjanović Goal 18'
Veselinović Goal 21'
Rajkov Goal 73'


Tunavallen, Eskilstuna

Attendance: 13,103

Referee: Martin Macko (Czechoslovakia)




Group 3



The Swedish hosts could count themselves lucky in ending up in a rather weak group which they proceeded to win fairly easily with their powerful workmanlike football. The group included Hungary which had been considered by far the best team in the world some years ago – although the Hungarians could not beat West Germany in the final of the World Cup in 1954. But the Hungarian team had been dealt a blow by the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 after which star players like Sándor Kocsis and Ferenc Puskás left their homeland. Striker Nándor Hidegkuti was still playing, but he was by now 36 years old and nowhere near his previous form.


In spite of Hungary's recent travails, they were still considered a strong side and everyone expected the Hungarian players to advance from their group. The success of Wales therefore was a great surprise but the Welsh managed to draw all the group games and then beat the once-mighty Hungarians in a play-off match to decide which nation should follow Sweden into the knock-out stage. Had goal difference been the decider, Hungary would have gone through as the Hungarians had a goal ratio of 6–3 compared to 2–2 of Wales. As it was, Wales had the honour of meeting Brazil in the quarterfinals and becoming the recipient of young Pelé's first World Cup goal. The 1–1 draw between Wales and Mexico was the first point scored by Mexico in a World Cup.


The match between Hungary and Wales in Sandviken became the northern-most World Cup match in history.


























































Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GAv

Pts

 Sweden
3 2 1 0 5 1 5.00
5

 Wales
3 0 3 0 2 2 1.00
3

 Hungary
3 1 1 1 6 3 2.00
3

 Mexico
3 0 1 2 1 8 0.13
1

  • Wales finished ahead of Hungary by winning a play-off



8 June 1958

14:00 (CET)












Sweden  3–0  Mexico

Simonsson Goal 17'64'
Liedholm Goal 57' (pen.)
Report


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 34,107

Referee: Nikolay Latyshev (Soviet Union)





8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Hungary  1–1  Wales

Bozsik Goal 5'
Report
J. Charles Goal 27'


Jernvallen, Sandviken

Attendance: 15,343

Referee: José María Codesal (Uruguay)







11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Mexico  1–1  Wales

Belmonte Goal 89'
Report
I. Allchurch Goal 32'


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 15,150

Referee: Leo Lemesic (Yugoslavia)





12 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Sweden  2–1  Hungary

Hamrin Goal 34'55'
Report
Tichy Goal 77'


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 38,850

Referee: Jack Mowat (Scotland)







15 June 1958

14:00 (CET)












Sweden  0–0  Wales
Report


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 30,287

Referee: Lucien van Nuffel (Belgium)





15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Hungary  4–0  Mexico

Tichy Goal 19'46'
Sándor Goal 54'
Bencsics Goal 69'
Report


Jernvallen, Sandviken

Attendance: 13,300

Referee: Arne Eriksson (Finland)




Play-off




17 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Wales  2–1  Hungary

I. Allchurch Goal 55'
Medwin Goal 76'
Report
Tichy Goal 33'


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 2,823

Referee: Nikolay Latyshev (Soviet Union)




Group 4



Notwithstanding the disappointments of the previous tournaments, Brazil were considered extremely powerful, as would indeed prove to be the case. The Soviet Union were the reigning Olympic champion and Austria had won the bronze medal in the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland, four years earlier. And although England, weakened by the loss of several players at the Munich air disaster, were not considered at their very best, they were still always a formidable team.


In the end, this group had the highest average attendance, even higher than Group 3 with the host nation, Sweden.


The quality of the football in this group did not quite live up to expectations, however. Only 15 goals were scored in the whole group, fewer than in any of the other groups. And when England and Brazil drew 0–0, it was the first time in World Cup history that a game ended with no goals.


Brazil won the group without conceding a single goal. The teenage Pelé played Brazil's last game against the Soviet Union. He did not score but drew wild reviews for his play. The Soviet Union, in their first World Cup, took second place.


























































Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GAv

Pts

 Brazil
3 2 1 0 5 0
5

 Soviet Union
3 1 1 1 4 4 1.00
3

 England
3 0 3 0 4 4 1.00
3

 Austria
3 0 1 2 2 7 0.29
1

  • The Soviet Union finished ahead of England by winning a play-off



8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Brazil  3–0  Austria

Altafini Goal 37'85'
Nílton Santos Goal 50'
Report


Rimnersvallen, Uddevalla

Attendance: 17,778

Referee: Maurice Guigue (France)





8 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Soviet Union  2–2  England

Simonyan Goal 13'
A. Ivanov Goal 56'
Report
Kevan Goal 66'
Finney Goal 85' (pen.)


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 49,348

Referee: István Zsolt (Hungary)







11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Brazil  0–0  England
Report


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 40,895

Referee: Albert Dusch (West Germany)





11 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Soviet Union  2–0  Austria

Ilyin Goal 15'
V. Ivanov Goal 62'
Report


Ryavallen, Borås

Attendance: 21,239

Referee: Carl Jørgensen (Denmark)







15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












England  2–2  Austria

Haynes Goal 56'
Kevan Goal 74'
Report
Koller Goal 15'
Körner Goal 71'


Ryavallen, Borås

Attendance: 15,872

Referee: Jan Bronkhorst (Netherlands)





15 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Brazil  2–0  Soviet Union

Vavá Goal 3'77'
Report


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 50,928

Referee: Maurice Guigue (France)




Play-off




17 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Soviet Union  1–0  England

Ilyin Goal 69'
Report


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 23,182

Referee: Albert Dusch (West Germany)




Knockout stage




Bracket
































































































































































 
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
 
                   
 
19 June – Gothenburg
 
 
 Brazil 1
 
24 June – Solna
 
 Wales 0
 
 Brazil 5
 
19 June – Norrköping
 
 France 2
 
 France 4
 
29 June – Solna
 
 Northern Ireland 0
 
 Brazil 5
 
19 June – Solna
 
 Sweden 2
 
 Sweden 2
 
24 June – Gothenburg
 
 Soviet Union 0
 
 Sweden 3
 
19 June – Malmö
 
 West Germany 1
Third place
 
 West Germany 1
 
28 June – Gothenburg
 
 Yugoslavia 0
 
 France 6
 
 
 West Germany 3
 


Quarter-finals




19 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Brazil  1–0  Wales

Pelé Goal 66'
Report


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 25,923

Referee: Fritz Seipelt (Austria)







19 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












France  4–0  Northern Ireland

Wisnieski Goal 44'
Fontaine Goal 55'63'
Piantoni Goal 68'
Report


Idrottsparken, Norrköping

Attendance: 11,800

Referee: Juan Gardeazábal Garay (Spain)







19 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Sweden  2–0  Soviet Union

Hamrin Goal 49'
Simonsson Goal 88'
Report


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 31,900

Referee: Reginald Leafe (England)







19 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












West Germany  1–0  Yugoslavia

Rahn Goal 12'
Report


Malmö Stadion, Malmö

Attendance: 20,055

Referee: Raymond Wyssling (Switzerland)




Semi-finals




24 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Brazil  5–2  France

Vavá Goal 2'
Didi Goal 39'
Pelé Goal 52'64'75'
Report
Fontaine Goal 9'
Piantoni Goal 83'


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 27,100

Referee: Benjamin Griffiths (Wales)







24 June 1958

19:00 (CET)












Sweden  3–1  West Germany

Skoglund Goal 32'
Gren Goal 81'
Hamrin Goal 88'
Report
Schäfer Goal 24'


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 49,471

Referee: István Zsolt (Hungary)




Third place play-off




28 June 1958

17:00 (CET)












France  6–3  West Germany

Fontaine Goal 16'36'78'89'
Kopa Goal 27' (pen.)
Douis Goal 50'
Report
Cieslarczyk Goal 18'
Rahn Goal 52'
Schäfer Goal 84'


Ullevi, Gothenburg

Attendance: 32,483

Referee: Juan Brozzi (Argentina)




Final





29 June 1958

15:00 (CET)












Brazil  5–2  Sweden

Vavá Goal 9'32'
Pelé Goal 55'90'
Zagallo Goal 68'
Report
Liedholm Goal 4'
Simonsson Goal 80'


Råsunda Stadium, Solna

Attendance: 49,737

Referee: Maurice Guigue (France)




Goalscorers


With 13 goals, Just Fontaine was the top scorer in the tournament. As of 2018[update], no player has ever scored more goals in a single FIFA World Cup Final stage. In total, 126 goals were scored by 60 players, with none of them credited as own goal.[16]


13 goals






6 goals






5 goals






4 goals










3 goals










2 goals










1 goal











FIFA retrospective ranking


In 1986, FIFA published a report that ranked all teams in each World Cup up to and including 1986, based on progress in the competition, overall results and quality of the opposition.[17][18] The rankings for the 1958 tournament were as follows:



































































































































































































































R
Team

G

P

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts.
1  Brazil 4 6 5 1 0 16 4 +12 11
2  Sweden 3 6 4 1 1 12 7 +5 9
3  France 2 6 4 0 2 23 15 +8 8
4  West Germany 1 6 2 2 2 12 14 −2 6

Eliminated in the quarter-finals
5  Wales 3 5 1 3 1 4 4 0 5
6  Soviet Union 4 5 2 1 2 5 6 −1 5
7  Northern Ireland 1 5 2 1 2 6 10 −4 5
8  Yugoslavia 2 4 1 2 1 7 7 0 4

Eliminated in the group stage
9  Czechoslovakia 1 4 1 1 2 9 6 +3 3
10  Hungary 3 4 1 1 2 7 5 +2 3
11  England 4 4 0 3 1 4 5 -1 3
12  Paraguay 2 3 1 1 1 9 12 −3 3
13  Argentina 1 3 1 0 2 5 10 −5 2
14  Scotland 2 3 0 1 2 4 6 −2 1
15  Austria 4 3 0 1 2 2 7 −5 1
16  Mexico 3 3 0 1 2 1 8 −7 1


See also



  • Conspiracy 58, a mockumentary conspiracy theory film claiming the 1958 World Cup never happened.


References



  • Norlin, Arne (2008). 1958: När Folkhemmet Fick Fotbolls-VM (in Swedish). Malmö: Ross & Tegner. ISBN 978-91-976144-8-1..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}




  1. ^ "World Cup Best Players (Golden Ball)". Topend Sports. Retrieved 23 June 2018.


  2. ^ ab Norlin, pp.24–25


  3. ^ "FIFA World Cup: host announcement decision" (PDF). FIFA. 12 March 2009. Retrieved 2 October 2011.


  4. ^ "History of the World Cup Final Draw" (PDF). Retrieved 2 March 2012.


  5. ^ ab Norlin, p.117


  6. ^ Norlin, pp.130–6


  7. ^ "Top Star 1958". balones-oficiales.com. Retrieved 17 September 2011.


  8. ^ abc Norlin, p.23


  9. ^ Norlin, p.32


  10. ^ abc Norlin, p.27


  11. ^ Norlin, p.30


  12. ^ Norlin, p.28


  13. ^ Norlin, p.8


  14. ^ ab Norlin, p.273


  15. ^ Mundo Deportivo, 23 June 1958; El Grafico, 27 June 1958.


  16. ^ "Players - Top goals". FIFA.


  17. ^ "page 45" (PDF). Retrieved 2 March 2012.


  18. ^ "FIFA World Cup: Milestones, facts & figures. Statistical Kit 7" (PDF). FIFA. 26 March 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 May 2013.




External links








  • 1958 FIFA World Cup Sweden ™, FIFA.com

  • Details at RSSSF












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