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hibsbollah
05-05-2010, 10:39 PM
Courtesy of soccerphile.com

http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/news/comebacks.html (http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/news/comebacks.html)

I think Bayer Uerdingen beating Dresden in 1986 7-5 after being 5-1 down tops tonight (only just.) That was an aggregate game over 2 legs.

However, we have probably just witnessed the 2nd or 3rd biggest embarassing collapse in world football history.:boo hoo::boo hoo::boo hoo::boo hoo:


Top 20 Greatest Comebacks

1. Bayer Uerdingen - Dynamo Dresden 0:2 and 7:3 (1986)

Dresden were hot favourites ever since the draw paired them with lowly Bayer Uerdingen, which had upset Bayern Munich in the German Cup a year earlier. A team of numerous East German stars (Hans-Jürgen Dorner, Ulf Kirsten, Mathias Sammer, Reinhard Hafner, Ralf Minge, Torsten Gütschow and others) built a 2-0 lead in the first leg at home and then ran away with a solid 3-1 lead at half time, seemingly clinching the tie in the return game at Krefeld.
5-1 ahead on aggregate, Dynamo could afford to concede four goals and still progress to the semifinals, but what did anybody know of what was going to happen in the second half. Deep into the second half, to be precise. The 1-3 scoreline on the night still stood after 57 minutes and no-one alive could have imagined the shocking turn of events to come in the rest of the game.
2. Liverpool - Milan 3-3, 3-2 on penalties (2005)

The absolute classic of European club cup football. Milan, a higher quality side, had 3-0 lead until the 54th minute, but irrational faith and inspiration led Liverpool to a feat that will never be forgotten. Such a beautiful game it was that Silvio Berlusconi himself refused to criticise of punish his squad. Dudek's saves from the spot were both controversial and illegal, but that does not take away from the significance of the phenomenal comeback Liverpool achieved in the 90 minutes.
3. Bochum - Bayern 5-6 (1976)

The craziest game the Bundesliga has ever seen. Bochum were 3-0 up by the half-time whistle and 4-0 in 53th minute. In the next 20 minutes, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Gerd Muller took Bayern to an unbelievable 5-4 lead.
Kaczor put Bochum level on 5-5 in the 80th minute and that seemed to be it, but with a minute to go Uli Höness scored his second and Bayern's sixth for their most amazing win ever.
4. Real Madrid - Borussia Mönchengladbach 1-5 and 4-0 (1985)

UEFA Cup (http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/uefa-cup/index.html) third round. Borussia had run riot in the first leg and Real, the holders, were nearly dead. But, as their hothead striker Juanito said, "90 minutes at Santiago Bernabeu last very long." Half the job was done by half time, but 95,000 people had to wait for the rest until very late. In the final 10 minutes, Jorge Valdano and Carlos Santillana took Real Madrid to a most unlikely win, which the fans consider the greatest in their proud European history.
5. West Germany - England 3-2 (1970)

World Cup quarterfinals. England, reigning champions, lead 2-0 but Alf Ramsey took off Bobby Charlton in order to "rest" him for the semifinals. And indeed Charlton was fully rested for the semifinals, only England was not there. The Germans typically fought on and Gerd Muller, "The Bomber", culminated their effort with a wonderful aerial volley.
6. Metz - Barcelona 2-4 and 4-1 (1984)

Cup Winners' Cup first round. A first-class Barca (later that season league champions) with Schuster, Archibald, Carrasco and Marcos had defeated little Metz by 4-2 in France. Two weeks later, at Nou Camp, Barca extended the lead with another goal by Carrasco. Then the French flooded the pitch and the Yugoslav born Zvonko Kurbos scored three of Metz's four goals which stunned the soccer world.
7. Werder Bremen- Anderlecht 5-3 (1994)

Champions' League (http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/champions-league/index.html) group stage. The comeback specialists (Werder) against the chronic loser (Anderlecht). The Belgians held on to 3-0 until the 66th minute and a win should have been a matter of routine, but the Germans for reasons unknown kept on coming forward. The Kiwi Rufer twice, Hobsch, Bratseth and Bode in the following 23 minutes explained the meaning of the phrase "German spirit". Werder also overturned Spartak Moscow's 1-4 with a 6-2 win in 1987, Dynamo Berlin's 0-3 with a 5-0 in 1988 and Lyon's 0-3 with a 4-0 in 1999. True "never-say-die" stuff.
8. USSR - Yugoslavia 5:5 (1952)

Olympic Games second round in Helsinki. Yugoslavia were 5-1 up during the second half and 5-2 with 15 minutes to go, but it was not enough. After a series of corner kicks, Bobrov staged an amazing five-all draw. In the repeated game, however, Yugoslavia confirmed their superiority, winning by 3-1.
9. Barcelona - Anderlecht 0-3, 3-0 and 4-1 on penalties (1978)

Cup Winners' Cup second round. The phenomenal Anderlecht was a superior side, but the Belgians also "loved" to be on the wrong end of comebacks. A minute before normal time the Argentinian Zuviria scored the third goal to level the tie, turning Camp Nou into a volcano. After a quiet extra-time, Barca won by a convincing 4-1 in the penalty shootout. Barca also came from 0-3 down against Ipswich in 1977 and Goteborg in 1986.
10. Deportivo - Milan 1-4 and 4-0 (2004)

Champions League quarterfinals. The European champions Milan came to La Coruna leading 4-1 from the first leg against the same Deportivo who had been slaughtered 8-3 to Monaco four months before. The same Deportivo!? Or was it a different Milan from the one everybody knew? Never, never were Milan so impotent and never so thoroughly beaten than on that night at the Riazor.
11. West Germany - Hungary 3-2 (1954)

Everyone knew Hungary was the best side in the world. Everyone remembered how they beat Germany 8-3 in the group stage, when the Germans rested several regulars for a more important fixture against Turkey. Who could forget how they injured skipper Puskas, who returned half fit in the finals? Still, 2-0 in the first eight minutes should have been enough for Hungary. But, it wasn't because Helmuth Rahn was omnipotent in the finals, taking Germany to their first world title.
12. Partizan Belgrade - Queens Park Rangers 2-6 and 4-0 (1984)

UEFA Cup second round. In London, it was a cat and mouse game. QPR pushed the Partizans into the box and kicked them into the net together with the ball. Six times. Only once before had a team come back from four goals down in Europe and that was in the early sixties. QPR was very vulnerable away from home and Partizan knew it. Mance, Kalicanin, Jesic and Zivkovic created a miracle before 55,000 fans who never stopped believing.
13. Bayern - Inter 0-2 and 3-1 (1988)

UEFA Cup third round. In the 1988/89 season an invincible Inter won their last championship with a record 26 wins in 34 rounds. This Inter thrashed Bayern 2-0 at their Olympische Stadium and hoped for an easy passage in the return game at San Siro. Everything went as planned, save for a seven minute spell late in the second half, in which the Bavarians scored three quick ones before Inter knew what was going on.
14. Portugal vs. North Korea 5-3 (1966)

World Cup quarterfinals. The Koreans had kicked out the mighty Italy by a single goal and then built a 3-0 lead against the ambitious Portuguese. Dictator Kim Il Sung must have been delighted. But, Eusebio played superbly, scoring four times in 30 minutes to avoid another crazy upset. The Panther finished the tournament with 9 goals to his credit, winning the golden boot.
15. Bayer Leverkusen - Espanyol 0-3, 3-0 and 3-2 on penalties (1988)

UEFA Cup final. At Barcelona's Sarriá stadium, 3-0 for the Catalans was a compliment for Bayer Leverkusen. In the return game, it was 0-0 after an hour and the trophy was virtually in the hands of Javier Clemente's side. Heaven know how the Germans pulled three goals back and reached the penalty stage. Amazingly, even there Espanyol took a 2-0 lead, but that was not enough either. Bayer scored three goals in the row from the spot and snatched the Cup that shouldn't have been theirs.
16. Switzerland - Austria 5-7 (1954)

The World Cup quarterfinals in Switzerland saw more goals than any World Cup tie ever before. The hosts reached the threshold of a miracle leading by 3-0 midway through the first half and 4-2 at half-time. A far better team, in the second part Austria got serious and strolled on to the famous win in Lausanne.
17. Ajax - Benfica 1-3, 3-1 and 3-0 (1969)

European Cup quarterfinals. To wipe out a two goal disadvantage against Eusebio's Benfica could not have been simple, especially if you lost the first leg at home and had to do the job at Da Luz. But, a young, Cruyff-led Ajax hit back at Benfica with an identical 3-1. By then prevailing rules, an aggregate draw had to be decided by a playoff game, which Ajax won 3-0, eventually reaching their first finals.
18. Barcelona - Atletico Madrid 5-4 (1997)

19. Red Star - Dynamo Berlin 2-5 and 4-1 (1978)

20. Real Madrid - Anderlecht 0:3 and 6:1 (1984)

noseyhibby
05-05-2010, 11:15 PM
Courtesy of soccerphile.com

http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/news/comebacks.html (http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/news/comebacks.html)

I think Bayer Uerdingen beating Dresden in 1986 7-5 after being 5-1 down tops tonight (only just.) That was an aggregate game over 2 legs.

However, we have probably just witnessed the 2nd or 3rd biggest embarassing collapse in world football history.:boo hoo::boo hoo::boo hoo::boo hoo:


Top 20 Greatest Comebacks

1. Bayer Uerdingen - Dynamo Dresden 0:2 and 7:3 (1986)

Dresden were hot favourites ever since the draw paired them with lowly Bayer Uerdingen, which had upset Bayern Munich in the German Cup a year earlier. A team of numerous East German stars (Hans-Jürgen Dorner, Ulf Kirsten, Mathias Sammer, Reinhard Hafner, Ralf Minge, Torsten Gütschow and others) built a 2-0 lead in the first leg at home and then ran away with a solid 3-1 lead at half time, seemingly clinching the tie in the return game at Krefeld.
5-1 ahead on aggregate, Dynamo could afford to concede four goals and still progress to the semifinals, but what did anybody know of what was going to happen in the second half. Deep into the second half, to be precise. The 1-3 scoreline on the night still stood after 57 minutes and no-one alive could have imagined the shocking turn of events to come in the rest of the game.
2. Liverpool - Milan 3-3, 3-2 on penalties (2005)

The absolute classic of European club cup football. Milan, a higher quality side, had 3-0 lead until the 54th minute, but irrational faith and inspiration led Liverpool to a feat that will never be forgotten. Such a beautiful game it was that Silvio Berlusconi himself refused to criticise of punish his squad. Dudek's saves from the spot were both controversial and illegal, but that does not take away from the significance of the phenomenal comeback Liverpool achieved in the 90 minutes.
3. Bochum - Bayern 5-6 (1976)

The craziest game the Bundesliga has ever seen. Bochum were 3-0 up by the half-time whistle and 4-0 in 53th minute. In the next 20 minutes, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Gerd Muller took Bayern to an unbelievable 5-4 lead.
Kaczor put Bochum level on 5-5 in the 80th minute and that seemed to be it, but with a minute to go Uli Höness scored his second and Bayern's sixth for their most amazing win ever.
4. Real Madrid - Borussia Mönchengladbach 1-5 and 4-0 (1985)

UEFA Cup (http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/uefa-cup/index.html) third round. Borussia had run riot in the first leg and Real, the holders, were nearly dead. But, as their hothead striker Juanito said, "90 minutes at Santiago Bernabeu last very long." Half the job was done by half time, but 95,000 people had to wait for the rest until very late. In the final 10 minutes, Jorge Valdano and Carlos Santillana took Real Madrid to a most unlikely win, which the fans consider the greatest in their proud European history.
5. West Germany - England 3-2 (1970)

World Cup quarterfinals. England, reigning champions, lead 2-0 but Alf Ramsey took off Bobby Charlton in order to "rest" him for the semifinals. And indeed Charlton was fully rested for the semifinals, only England was not there. The Germans typically fought on and Gerd Muller, "The Bomber", culminated their effort with a wonderful aerial volley.
6. Metz - Barcelona 2-4 and 4-1 (1984)

Cup Winners' Cup first round. A first-class Barca (later that season league champions) with Schuster, Archibald, Carrasco and Marcos had defeated little Metz by 4-2 in France. Two weeks later, at Nou Camp, Barca extended the lead with another goal by Carrasco. Then the French flooded the pitch and the Yugoslav born Zvonko Kurbos scored three of Metz's four goals which stunned the soccer world.
7. Werder Bremen- Anderlecht 5-3 (1994)

Champions' League (http://www.soccerphile.com/soccerphile/champions-league/index.html) group stage. The comeback specialists (Werder) against the chronic loser (Anderlecht). The Belgians held on to 3-0 until the 66th minute and a win should have been a matter of routine, but the Germans for reasons unknown kept on coming forward. The Kiwi Rufer twice, Hobsch, Bratseth and Bode in the following 23 minutes explained the meaning of the phrase "German spirit". Werder also overturned Spartak Moscow's 1-4 with a 6-2 win in 1987, Dynamo Berlin's 0-3 with a 5-0 in 1988 and Lyon's 0-3 with a 4-0 in 1999. True "never-say-die" stuff.
8. USSR - Yugoslavia 5:5 (1952)

Olympic Games second round in Helsinki. Yugoslavia were 5-1 up during the second half and 5-2 with 15 minutes to go, but it was not enough. After a series of corner kicks, Bobrov staged an amazing five-all draw. In the repeated game, however, Yugoslavia confirmed their superiority, winning by 3-1.
9. Barcelona - Anderlecht 0-3, 3-0 and 4-1 on penalties (1978)

Cup Winners' Cup second round. The phenomenal Anderlecht was a superior side, but the Belgians also "loved" to be on the wrong end of comebacks. A minute before normal time the Argentinian Zuviria scored the third goal to level the tie, turning Camp Nou into a volcano. After a quiet extra-time, Barca won by a convincing 4-1 in the penalty shootout. Barca also came from 0-3 down against Ipswich in 1977 and Goteborg in 1986.
10. Deportivo - Milan 1-4 and 4-0 (2004)

Champions League quarterfinals. The European champions Milan came to La Coruna leading 4-1 from the first leg against the same Deportivo who had been slaughtered 8-3 to Monaco four months before. The same Deportivo!? Or was it a different Milan from the one everybody knew? Never, never were Milan so impotent and never so thoroughly beaten than on that night at the Riazor.
11. West Germany - Hungary 3-2 (1954)

Everyone knew Hungary was the best side in the world. Everyone remembered how they beat Germany 8-3 in the group stage, when the Germans rested several regulars for a more important fixture against Turkey. Who could forget how they injured skipper Puskas, who returned half fit in the finals? Still, 2-0 in the first eight minutes should have been enough for Hungary. But, it wasn't because Helmuth Rahn was omnipotent in the finals, taking Germany to their first world title.
12. Partizan Belgrade - Queens Park Rangers 2-6 and 4-0 (1984)

UEFA Cup second round. In London, it was a cat and mouse game. QPR pushed the Partizans into the box and kicked them into the net together with the ball. Six times. Only once before had a team come back from four goals down in Europe and that was in the early sixties. QPR was very vulnerable away from home and Partizan knew it. Mance, Kalicanin, Jesic and Zivkovic created a miracle before 55,000 fans who never stopped believing.
13. Bayern - Inter 0-2 and 3-1 (1988)

UEFA Cup third round. In the 1988/89 season an invincible Inter won their last championship with a record 26 wins in 34 rounds. This Inter thrashed Bayern 2-0 at their Olympische Stadium and hoped for an easy passage in the return game at San Siro. Everything went as planned, save for a seven minute spell late in the second half, in which the Bavarians scored three quick ones before Inter knew what was going on.
14. Portugal vs. North Korea 5-3 (1966)

World Cup quarterfinals. The Koreans had kicked out the mighty Italy by a single goal and then built a 3-0 lead against the ambitious Portuguese. Dictator Kim Il Sung must have been delighted. But, Eusebio played superbly, scoring four times in 30 minutes to avoid another crazy upset. The Panther finished the tournament with 9 goals to his credit, winning the golden boot.
15. Bayer Leverkusen - Espanyol 0-3, 3-0 and 3-2 on penalties (1988)

UEFA Cup final. At Barcelona's Sarriá stadium, 3-0 for the Catalans was a compliment for Bayer Leverkusen. In the return game, it was 0-0 after an hour and the trophy was virtually in the hands of Javier Clemente's side. Heaven know how the Germans pulled three goals back and reached the penalty stage. Amazingly, even there Espanyol took a 2-0 lead, but that was not enough either. Bayer scored three goals in the row from the spot and snatched the Cup that shouldn't have been theirs.
16. Switzerland - Austria 5-7 (1954)

The World Cup quarterfinals in Switzerland saw more goals than any World Cup tie ever before. The hosts reached the threshold of a miracle leading by 3-0 midway through the first half and 4-2 at half-time. A far better team, in the second part Austria got serious and strolled on to the famous win in Lausanne.
17. Ajax - Benfica 1-3, 3-1 and 3-0 (1969)

European Cup quarterfinals. To wipe out a two goal disadvantage against Eusebio's Benfica could not have been simple, especially if you lost the first leg at home and had to do the job at Da Luz. But, a young, Cruyff-led Ajax hit back at Benfica with an identical 3-1. By then prevailing rules, an aggregate draw had to be decided by a playoff game, which Ajax won 3-0, eventually reaching their first finals.
18. Barcelona - Atletico Madrid 5-4 (1997)

19. Red Star - Dynamo Berlin 2-5 and 4-1 (1978)

20. Real Madrid - Anderlecht 0:3 and 6:1 (1984)

Nice to see we hibbies creating records!!!

monktonharp
05-05-2010, 11:27 PM
nae mention of hibs napoli ?

MGmick
06-05-2010, 06:34 AM
I was at game 2 and at the first leg of game 4. A major factor in Real turning Gladbach over was an injury to the sweeper, Hans ****her Bruns, possibly one of the best players I've ever had the pleasure of watching. I think that result kind of cemented my opinion that following Gladbach was pretty much the same as being a Hibby but helped out by tasty bratties and the anaesthetising properties of beer in the ground.

The_Sauz
06-05-2010, 10:12 AM
Hibs v Napoli (67/68) Fairs Cup 1-4 / 5-0 (6-4):thumbsup:

Stevie Reid
06-05-2010, 10:26 AM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jan/10/africa-cup-nations-angola-mali (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jan/10/africa-cup-nations-angola-mali)

Mustapha Yatabaré slid in a dramatic equaliser deep into stoppage time to help Mali (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/mali) complete an astonishing comeback in the opening match of the Africa Cup of Nations (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/africannationscup) against the hosts, Angola (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/angola), in Luanda.
Trailing 4-0 with 11 minutes remaining, after a brace from Flávio Amado and penalties from Gilberto and Manucho had put Angola firmly in command, Seydou Keita gave the Eagles hope when he scrambled the ball in after an error by the goalkeeper Carlos Fernandes.
Frédéric Kanouté glanced home a fine header to halve the deficit in the 87th minute, before a second from Keita in time added on and Yatabaré's effort completed a sensational turnaround which stunned the home fans at the Estadio 11 de Novembro.

hibsbollah
06-05-2010, 10:29 AM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jan/10/africa-cup-nations-angola-mali (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jan/10/africa-cup-nations-angola-mali)

Mustapha Yatabaré slid in a dramatic equaliser deep into stoppage time to help Mali (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/mali) complete an astonishing comeback in the opening match of the Africa Cup of Nations (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/africannationscup) against the hosts, Angola (http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/angola), in Luanda.
Trailing 4-0 with 11 minutes remaining, after a brace from Flávio Amado and penalties from Gilberto and Manucho had put Angola firmly in command, Seydou Keita gave the Eagles hope when he scrambled the ball in after an error by the goalkeeper Carlos Fernandes.
Frédéric Kanouté glanced home a fine header to halve the deficit in the 87th minute, before a second from Keita in time added on and Yatabaré's effort completed a sensational turnaround which stunned the home fans at the Estadio 11 de Novembro.

:bitchy:I forgot about that one, i actually watched it on TV just a few months ago as well:rolleyes:

Geo_1875
06-05-2010, 10:37 AM
I think getting beat counts a bigger collapse than Hibs escaping with a draw last night. Is there a sister site which reports these games as the biggest comebacks in football?