Spændende nyt bekendskab, vel at mærke indtil de blev kørt ud på r.. og albuer af de senere verdensmestre, med mener jeg 0-6 !!Ja det er vist en offenlig hemmelighed at Argentina havde betalt for den sejr...
http://www.dailymail.co.…enator.htmlIn the second round, Group B was made up of Brazil, Poland, Peru and Argentina. In their first matches Brazil beat Peru 3-0 and Argentina beat Poland 2-0. Brazil and Argentina then drew their match 0-0.
On the final day of round two Brazil beat Poland 3-1. There is more controversy here as Argentina didn’t play their final game until the evening and had the advantage of knowing by what margin they had to win. They knew they had to beat Peru by four goals to get to the final. At halftime it was 2-0 but in the second half Peru totally collapsed and Argentina won with ease by six goals to nil.
Many believe the game was fixed. Peruvian player Jose Velasquez claims the team and the management were pressured to lose by the Peruvian government. Despite being a pivotal player in the Peru team, Velasquez was substituted ten minutes into the second half. The Peruvian captain Hector Chumpitaz and other players tell of an even more unbelievable incident. Moments before the game General Videla went waltzing into the Peruvian dressing room with none other than Henry Kissinger on his arm. The two buddies explained how much anticipation of victory there was amongst the Argentine public and the Peruvian team was left feeling shocked. Kissinger doesn’t deny this but says he has ‘no recollection of ever being in that dressing room.’
After Peru collapsed to the 6-0 defeat so dramatically, allegations spread that Videla had agreed a large shipment of grain to Peru and the unfreezing of a Peruvian bank account in Argentina in return for victory. But now a former Peruvian senator has come forward claiming he has proof that there was a definite fix in play and it involved the torture and abduction of thirteen Peruvian left-wing dissidents.
Genaro Ledesma was a trades union organiser in Peru at the time of the World Cup and claims that he and other left-wingers opposed to the government of Peru’s Military President Bermudez were abducted by the Argentine junta. He says that a deal was struck between Videla and Bermudez and that the former agreed to receive, imprison and torture the dissidents in exchange for Peru losing the match by more than four goals. This far more reprehensible possibility fits in with the scandalous Condor Plan, the agreement between South American dictatorships whereby political opponents were shipped between nations to help cover up the repression that was taking place.
http://argen-times.blogs…-fixed.html