Yes, although it was more ITV who were doing that, as I recall. I couldn't stand that Oyreland side, it pissed me off no end when they beat Italy in NY.I remember that there were no home nations present and the Beeb more or less told us we should all start supporting Ireland FFS...
Plus in the group stages Norway v Republic of Ireland was possibly the worst game I can ever remember seeing.
Great memories though, it was the summer I left secondary school and we were chasing after foreign language students. As well as that Romania v Argentina game, highlights were:
Diana Ross's penalty miss.
Alan Hansen's verdict on Andreas Escobar's defending.
Spain drawing with South Korea.
Saudi Arabia beating Belgium with a wonder goal.
Italy somehow beating Nigeria in the 2nd round.
Holland v Brazil in the quarters.
But best of all, Letchkov's winner against Germany.
Or any after 98 ,sorryWhat is this 'World Cup 1994' of which you speak?
The final was awful. Memorable only for Baggio who was magnificent ballooning his penalty to the moon. I have no recollection of how Sweden did, sorry. But lets be honest, the thing that that world cup will be most remembered for (apart from the horror show penalties bookending it) is that goal by Bergkamp. Probably my all time favourite (non Albion/England) goal.
Watch this, [MENTION=38333]Swansman[/MENTION]. It is a hugely entertaining documentary showing Taylor and his right hand yes-man, Phil Neal at their incompetent and tragic worst.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLBA8ivsrt8
That's the third place parade, where the team went round Stockholm in cars.Great photo! Who is that next to Henke?
Malmo or Stockholm? Pretty sure its not Goteborg.
Poor old Graham Taylor. Such a great manager at Watford, but utterly out of his depth with the national team. It defies belief when you look at some of the players who "earned" caps whilst he was manager.
England were utterly inept at Euro '92 (where the aforementioned Brolin tore us a new one), and the qualification tournament for USA 94 was a disaster (albeit helped by Koeman's non dismissal and subsequent goal).
I hated watching England during the Taylor years, and thoroughly enjoyed the World Cup - perhaps because we weren't there - there was nothing to anger me.
Watch this, [MENTION=38333]Swansman[/MENTION]. It is a hugely entertaining documentary showing Taylor and his right hand yes-man, Phil Neal at their incompetent and tragic worst.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLBA8ivsrt8
In twenty years I think the World Cup 1994 will be remembered (by connaisseurs only since its lacking Mardona/Wembley goal/Total football/Zidane madness level of events)for: the 90k+ stadiums and awakening football interest in the US, Baggios miss, Andres Escobar getting killed because of his own goal and Romario/Bebeto scoring for fun (and the Bebeto goal gesture). Maybe also Dunga changing the defensive midfield position forever.
The kids of today, eh?
Incidentally [MENTION=38333]Swansman[/MENTION], what is all this about Brolin? He was a big fat lump within weeks of arriving at Leeds. What did the saintly ex-Albion star, Howard Wilkinson do to upset Brolin apart from confiscate all the pies?
Oh yeah, Escobar. I had somehow forgotten about him. Certainly him and Baggio were the two big stories. That and Bergkamps goal!
I'm wondering which Bergkamp goal you mean? Yea he scored three in WC 94, but his most famous WC goal is the "bearcum" goal against Argentina in 98.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsZkCFoqSBs
I dont remember everything in detail but Wilkinson (and more so George Graham) treated him poorly: first of all, when Brolin signed Wilkinson asked "how much money do you want?" and Brolin said he didnt care, he only wanted to know his position. Wilkinson told him he would play as AMC behind Yeboah, but was immediatly placed as a left midfielder, a position Brolin said he didnt have the qualities (he was fat and lazy) to play in.
That was bad of course. Sure, any really professional player would have dealt with it, but Brolin was a cry-baby. If you wanted his brilliance, it was his way or no-ones. I'm not blaming Wilkinson for making those decisions but it did in fact kill off any motivation Brolin had to return as a top player.
George Graham however... Brolin returned a day late for pre-season training because of a car accident, and Graham responded by locking his passport in a safe and completely froze him out of the team. He even had to pay to watch Leeds games. That was the nail in the coffin.
I think Brolin had a chance to get back as a good player, but he needed to be treated with baby gloves since he is a baby. He himself is definitely 98% to blame for his own demise though. He was a world class player from 90-94 but ****ed it up, and the only thing I blame Wilkinson/Graham for is not even trying to un**** it.
After his career as a player, he had a similarly bizarre career as a businessman (running a restaurant known for letting underage people in, and selling some kind of mouthpiece for vacuum cleaners).
The last time he was in the public eye, apart for some interviews, was in a very odd and """"cringe"""" (I hate this word) music video featuring the weird but internationally moderately successful rapper Dr Alban, former tennis pro Björn Borg and some dude they used to drink with at celebrity bars. They called themselves "Friends In Need"...
... worth watching for the completely unashamed and today 100% impossible exploatation of some nice, plastic Swedish babes.
Well this turned out to be something of an essay about Brolin... not sure how that happened since I could probably have summarised my response as "he was and is dumb as a rock but could maybe have turned out ok for Leeds with different managers".
Yes, although it was more ITV who were doing that, as I recall. I couldn't stand that Oyreland side, it pissed me off no end when they beat Italy in NY.
It was a great tournament though - gutted we weren't there but it was refreshing to see a tournament without the threat of crowd trouble and rioting. By contrast, 1990 had been absolute shite. We only remember it because we went deep into the tournament.