Hungary's finest ever player and one of the greatest
footballers to grace the FIFA World Cup™, FerencPuskas was the
figurehead of the groundbreaking 'Magical Magyars' team
that dominated world football in the early 1950s. Alas, the supreme
distinction of being world champion eluded this magnificent forward
after Hungary suffered a historic 3-2 loss to West Germany in the
1954 FIFA World Cup Final in Berne.
Puskas was born in 1927 in Budapest and started playing for
Kispest's junior side from an early age. By the time he was 16,
Puskas was a first-team regular, his ambition and iron will already
evident despite his tender years. He made his international debut
at the age of 18 against Austria in only Hungary's second
fixture after the end of the Second World War, starting as he meant
to carry on by finding the net in a 5-2 win.
An unlikely footballer in many respects, Puskas was short and
stocky, not particularly strong in the air and almost exclusively
left-footed. But his gifts were undeniable, as the statistics show.
In 84 appearances for Hungary, Puskas scored 83 goals - a strike
rate that remained unsurpassed in international football until
Iran's Ali Daei rewrote the record books in November 2003.
He was also inspirational for Kispest, who in 1949 became
the army team and were renamed Honved. Puskas, their star striker,
earned the sobriquet of the 'Galloping Major' in
recognition of his army rank, and he went on to captain the team to
five league titles.
Wembley wizard
Hungary were the dominant national team of the early
1950s. In 1952, Puskas captained his country to Olympic gold in
Helsinki and Gusztav Sebes' side arrived at the 1954 FIFA World
Cup™ undefeated in four years. Their most resounding victory came
on 25 November 1953 at the 'home of football', the historic
Wembley Stadium, where England had never lost to a team from
outside of the British Isles. Hungary emerged emphatic 6-3 victors
in a contest that would go down in history as one of the matches of
the century, Puskas helping himself to two of their goals and his
attacking cohort Nandor Hidegkuti netting a treble.
Puskas and company gave a master class of wonderfully varied short and long passing in front of 100,000 supporters, outclassing their hosts. This Hungarian team, built around Puskas, played a brand of attacking football the English had not seen before. Where England were still set up in the old WM formation, Hungary operated in a 4-2-4 with Sandor Kocsis and Puskas attacking from the inside-right and left positions respectively, and central striker NandorHidegkuti dropping deep. And in just one game they destroyed the myth of supremacy England had enjoyed in world football.
"Wright went past him like a fire engine going to the wrong
fire" was how The Times newspaper described Puskas'
wrong-footing of England captain Billy Wright prior to scoring one
of his two goals. The humiliation did not end there as less than
six months later, England received their second lesson when Hungary
won the return fixture 7-1 on home soil.
It is no wonder Hungary were the undeniable favourites for
the 1954 FIFA World Cup™. They had the strongest forward line in
the world and were quick to demonstrate their firepower at the
tournament in Switzerland. They overwhelmed Korea Republic 9-0 in
their opening game - where Puskas scored the first and final goals
- before sweeping aside a second-string West Germany side 8-3, with
their talismanic skipper again on target.
However, that latter success came at a great cost as Puskas
injured his knee in a tackle with opponent Werner Liebrich and was
forced to sit out the quarter-final and semi-final. He could only
watch from the stands as his team-mates recorded succesive 4-2
victories over Brazil and two-time world champions Uruguay in the
semi-final.
Final heartbreak
All eyes were on the Hungary captain going into the
1954 Final. Was he completely over his injury? Not wanting to miss
the match, the pinnacle of his career to date, Puskas played
despite suggestions that he was not fully fit. The Magical Magyars
enjoyed a perfect start, Puskas seemingly silencing all the
doubters by opening the scoring in just the sixth minute.
Two minutes later it was 2-0 but in the pouring rain in
Berne, West Germany responded. By the break it was 2-2, and with
three minutes remaining Helmut Rahn struck the Germans' third
goal. There was still time for Puskas to find the net but his
effort was disallowed for offside. After 31 matches undefeated,
Hungary were beaten.
Following the Final, that great Hungary team gradually
disintegrated and Puskas' own life was soon to change
dramatically. In 1956, he travelled with Honved to Spain for a UEFA
European Cup fixture against Athletic Bilbao that coincided with a
period of national uprising in Hungary. Puskas and a number of his
team-mates never returned home, taking sanctuary in the West. After
a 15-month suspension from football, the now 31-year-old's
friend Emil Oestreicher, Honved's financial secretary during
his latter years at the club who had scored a job as Real
Madrid's technical director, persuaded his new employers to
recruit Puskas.
There he embarked on the next hugely successful chapter of
his career. Forging one of the game's most famous strike
partnerships alongside the great Alfredo Di Stefano, Puskas helped
Real Madrid to five league crowns, establishing them as one of the
most dominant forces in Europe. His finest hour came in the 1960
UEFA European Cup final in front of 130,000 fans at Glasgow's
Hampden Park, where
los Merenguesbeat Eintracht Frankfurt 7-3. Di Stefano
scored a hat-trick but the evening belonged to Puskas, who struck
four times in a legendary victory. He ended that season with an
incredible 35 goals in 39 games.
In 1962, Puskas was called up by the Spanish national team
for the FIFA World Cup in Chile. It proved an unhappy campaign,
Spain going home after the group stage with Puskas unable to find
the net. Puskas remained with Madrid until 1967, before retiring
aged 40 having recorded 324 goals in 372 games for the Spanish
giants. He turned to coaching and led Panathinaikos to the 1971
European Cup final as coach, but his greatest personal triumph came
in 1992, when he returned to his homeland, Hungary, to live at the
age of 65.



