10. Luis Suarez Bites Chiellini (2014)
In a group stage match between Uruguay and Italy, Suarez β already with TWO prior biting incidents β sank his teeth into Giorgio Chiellini's shoulder. The referee missed it entirely. FIFA later banned him for 4 months. The bizarre part? Uruguay went on to win 1-0 and advance. Chiellini called the ban 'excessive' years later. Football is weird.
The Suarez Biting Timeline
- 2010: Bit Otman Bakkal (Ajax) β 7-match ban
- 2013: Bit Branislav Ivanovic (Chelsea) β 10-match ban
- 2014: Bit Chiellini (World Cup) β 4-month global ban
9. The Disgrace of Gijon (1982)
West Germany and Austria played a group stage match where both knew a 1-0 German win would send both through β at Algeria's expense. Germany scored early. Then both teams stopped. They passed the ball around for 80 minutes while the crowd booed. Algeria was eliminated. FIFA changed the rules so final group matches now kick off simultaneously. Too late for Algeria.
8. Ronaldo's "Mystery Illness" (1998 Final)
Hours before the 1998 final against France, Brazil's team sheet showed Ronaldo was OUT β replaced by Edmundo. Then, mysteriously, he was back in. Ronaldo played but was a ghost. France won 3-0. Conspiracy theories erupted: Was Nike involved? Did Brazil's federation force him to play? The truth remains murky. Ronaldo himself has never fully explained what happened.
7. Lampard's Ghost Goal (2010)
England vs Germany, World Cup knockout. Frank Lampard's shot hit the crossbar, bounced a full meter over the goal line, and spun back out. Referee Jorge Larrionda waved play on. No goal. Germany won 4-1, but at 2-1 the game was completely different. This moment single-handedly forced FIFA to introduce goal-line technology. It took them until 2014.
6. South Korea's 2002 Run
South Korea reached the semifinals as co-hosts β but the officiating against Italy and Spain was so controversial that people still joke about it. Italy had a perfectly good goal disallowed. Francesco Totti was sent off for diving when replays showed clear contact. Spain had TWO legitimate goals ruled out. FIFA never formally investigated, but the shadow over that run has never lifted.
5. Schumacher's Assault on Battiston (1982)
German goalkeeper Harald Schumacher sprinted out and launched himself β hip-first β into French defender Patrick Battiston's face. Battiston lost teeth, suffered a broken jaw, and fell into a coma. The referee gave a GOAL KICK. No foul. No card. Schumacher later casually offered to 'pay for the dental work.' France lost on penalties. Decades later, it remains the most violent non-call in World Cup history.
4. Zidane's Headbutt (2006 Final)
The final image of Zinedine Zidane's career β headbutting Marco Materazzi in the chest during extra time of the World Cup final. Red card. France lost on penalties. What did Materazzi say? He admitted he insulted Zidane's sister. The moment became a cultural phenomenon β an opera was written about it. A statue was erected. Zidane has never apologized.
"I would rather die than apologize. What Materazzi said was about my mother and my sister. I'd do it again." β Zidane, 2011
3. The Hand of God (1986)
Argentina vs England, World Cup quarterfinal. Diego Maradona jumped for a ball alongside Peter Shilton, punched it into the net with his left hand, and wheeled away celebrating. The referee gave the goal. Minutes later, Maradona scored the Goal of the Century β the greatest individual goal ever. One match. One handball. One masterpiece. One legend born. Maradona later said it was scored 'a little with the head of Maradona and a little with the hand of God.'
2. The Battle of Nuremberg (2006)
Portugal vs Netherlands. 16 yellow cards. 4 red cards. It became known as a war, not a football match. Players from both sides were fighting constantly. The referee, Valentin Ivanov, completely lost control. It's the most carded match in World Cup history. Both teams finished with 9 men. Portugal advanced β barely β but the reputation damage to both nations was enormous.
1. The 1978 Argentina-Peru "Fix"
Argentina needed to beat Peru by 4 goals to reach the final β and won 6-0. Peru played like they'd never seen a football before. Argentina's military junta was in power. Peru's goalkeeper was Argentine-born. Argentina had recently 'donated' grain shipments and unfrozen Peruvian bank accounts. Did Argentina buy the result? FIFA has never investigated. But ask any Brazilian β they know what happened. The 1978 World Cup remains the most politically tainted tournament in history.