Ponedelnik heads USSR to EURO 1960 final glory against Yugoslavia
Wednesday, October 1, 2003
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USSR 2-1 Yugoslavia (aet)
The Soviet Union came from behind to be crowned inaugural champions thanks to Viktor Ponedelnik's extra-time winner.
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Lev Yashin provided the defiance and Viktor Ponedelnik the extra-time winner as the Soviet Union beat Yugoslavia 2-1 to become the first team to lift the Henri Delaunay Cup.
In the inaugural UEFA European Championship final courtesy of a dramatic 5-4 comeback win against France in the last four, Yugoslavia's flair came to the fore once more in the showpiece. Milan Galić put them ahead in scrappy fashion and thereafter it was only Yashin's heroics in goal which denied them. Slava Metreveli levelled the scores before Ponedelnik wrote his name into Soviet folklore with the decisive second.
Initially, Yugoslavia's touch and tactical intelligence gave them the edge on a slippery pitch, Dragoslav Šekularac and Bora Kostić keeping up their good work of the semi-final. Their opener, however, did not reflect their early style: Galić was given the credit for bundling in Dražan Jerković's cross-shot, although Igor Netto was also in the vicinity. That goal took Galić equal with the world record of scoring in ten consecutive internationals.
Yashin, 30, then started to show his excellence, making a series of fine saves, especially from thunderous Kostić free-kicks, to keep his team in the game. Yugoslavian counterpart Blagoje Vidinić, by contrast, dropped Valentin Bubukin's long shot and allowed Metreveli to equalise.
Valentin Ivanov spurned a fine chance with three minutes left, though Yugoslavia missed a golden opportunity of their own in extra time when Jerković allowed the ball to skid under his foot right on the goal line. It proved decisive as, with seven minutes remaining, Ponedelnik headed his country to glory.
The first player to be called up to the Soviet Union national team while playing for a second division club, Ponedelnik had justified his selection by hitting a hat-trick on his debut in a 7-1 win against Poland in May 1960. Now he was the toast of his country. "There are matches and goals which are really special, sort of a climax of a player's sporting life," he said later.
Reaction
Viktor Ponedelnik, USSR forward: "I always enjoy remembering that final. Having beaten Yugoslavia, the Soviet national team became the first ever European champions. No one can forget such moments of glory, be it the public, football fans or the players themselves. As for myself, the 113th-minute winner was the most important of my whole career. For that goal I must give credit to a superb cross by our left winger Mikheil Meskhi."
Line-ups
USSR: Yashin; Chokheli, Maslyonkin, Krutikov; Voynov, Netto (c); Metreveli, Ivanov, Ponedelnik, Bubukin, Meskhi
Substitutes: none
Coach: Gavriil Kachalin
Yugoslavia: Vidinić; Durković, Jusufi, Miladinović; Žanetić, Perušić; Šekularac, Jerković, Galić, Matuš, Kostić (c)
Substitutes: none
Coach: Ljubomir Lovrić
Referee: Arthur Ellis (England)