For this interview, I start
a new project as I look back at the history of the Uruguay National, season by
season starting with the 1980/81 season.
This will be a semi-regular
and continuous series.
The Interviewee is:
Uruguay Futbol Historian
Historian, Mr. Santiago Rodriguez.
Mr.
Rodriguez’s contact info:
On
Twitter: @ArchivoCeleste
On
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/archivoceleste
Soccernostalgia
Question: In the beginning
of 1980/81 season, the Mundialito in the new year, would have been the main
talking point and objective. What was the atmosphere of the National Team at
this time?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: On a football
level, without a doubt. The team came from a very painful elimination from the
World Cup in Argentina '78, at the hands of Bolivia and Venezuela, which were
among the weakest teams on the continent at that time, and from an elimination
from the Copa América '79 at the hands of Paraguay. So having a good
performance in this tournament became very important thinking about the
upcoming Qualifiers for the 1982 World Cup in Spain.
Soccernostalgia
Question: How had the
failure to qualify for the 1978 World Cup impacted the National Team set-up?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: At the time it
affected a lot, since it was a very good generation, which had made a fairly
extensive preparation and that the World Cup was played in Argentina. But
already in the year 80 it was a new process fully focused on the Mundialito and
the World Cup Qualifiers, so personally I don't think it had much influence.
Soccernostalgia
Question: Howe did the
press and public view the Uruguay Manager Roque Maspoli. Did they clamor for
other names?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: I couldn't get
this information. I talk with some historians who did not remember or haven’t
documents about the specific topic. And newspaper archives remain restricted by
Covid.
Photo From: Onze, Issue 62, February 1981
(January 10, 1981,
Mundialito, Uruguay 2-Brazil 1) |
Soccernostalgia
Question: For the first few
matches of the season, Uruguay had trouble scoring in the friendlies, but then
picked up steam and scored many goals going into December. What really changed
in terms of tactics that enabled that?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: Since the early
1980s, the coach and many of the players were the same ones who ended up
winning the Mundialito. I believe that there weren't really so many tactical
changes, but that the many friendly matches played and the knowledge among the
players themselves were what made them improve in that aspect and many others.
Soccernostalgia
Question: Given the high
scoring matches, was there confidence going into the Mundialito or was there
apprehension facing all the quality teams?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: There was
confidence in the team, but the quality of the teams that were going to play
the Mundialito, Italy, Brazil, Holland with their top figures, and World
Champion Argentina with the addition of Maradona, was not overlooked . There
was not such a clear feeling that the team could win the championship.
Photo From: Onze, Issue 62, February 1981
(Hugo De Leon with the
Mundialito trophy, January 10, 1981, Mundialito, Uruguay 2-Brazil 1) |
Soccernostalgia
Question: There was much
hype on Ruben Paz, referred as ‘Uruguay’s Maradona’. It was reported that
Gianni Rivera had travelled to Mundialito to scout Paz for AC Milan. What can
you tell about Paz at this moment?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: Ruben Paz had
made his debut in the first division with Peñarol only in 1977 and in just
three years he became one of the best players and without a doubt the future
jewel of Uruguayan football. At just 21 years old, he had already been a South
American youth champion twice, participated in two World Cups in that category
and had already won two Uruguayan Championships as a figure. Undoubtedly much
was expected of him at that time.
Soccernostalgia
Question: Uruguay would win
the Tournament defeating Holland, Italy and Tele Santana’s Brazil along the
way. Can you describe the atmosphere after the Victory? Was it comparable to
1930?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: It is very
difficult to know if it was comparable or not. If it was lived very intensely
by the Uruguayan people in general because due to the current military
dictatorship there were not many possibilities to have that type of popular
demonstrations at that time, so the victory of the Mundialito was a great
popular demonstration remembered until today for those who lived it.
Unfortunately, that same dictatorship and the non-recognition of the tournament
by FIFA mean that today this title does not have the relevance it deserves.
Something similar to what happened with the World Cup title in Argentina in
1978.
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 11, February 1981
(January 10, 1981,
Mundialito, Uruguay 2-Brazil 1) |
Soccernostalgia
Question: In addition to
Paz, Uruguay’s stand-outs included goalkeeper and Captain Rodolfo Rodriguez,
Hugo De Leon, Venancio Ramos, Waldemar Victorino. What can you say about these
players?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: Rodolfo Rodríguez
was a great goalkeeper in his time, for a reason he held the record of the
goalkeeper with the most appearances in the Uruguayan team until 2016, when Muslera
surpassed him. In addition, beyond the Mundialito, he won many titles at the
club level.
Hugo
de León is currently still an idol of Nacional, champion of everything. In the
national team, he had periods of absence, but when he was there he also achieved
important things such as the Mundialito and qualifying for the Italia'90 World
Cup.
Venancio
Ramos was a typical Uruguayan striker, who unfortunately with time and tactical
modernizations have disappeared. Very fast, with great overflow and good definition.
He became Champion of America with Uruguay in 1983 and played in the 1986 World
Cup.
Waldemar
Victorino was a great center forward and goalscorer. That he was already a
member of the national team since the Qualifiers'77 and that he had his dream
year in 1981, scoring several goals in the Mundialito, including one in the
final against Brazil, and a few days later he would define the Intercontinental
final of his National team with his goal, against Nottingham of England.
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 11, February 1981
(Rodolfo Rodriguez with the
Mundialito trophy, January 10, 1981, Mundialito, Uruguay 2-Brazil 1) |
Soccernostalgia
Question: In the euphoria
of the Post-Mundialito, the 1982 World Cup qualification appeared to be a
formality. Is that how the public and press view it?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: I think thats how
public and press saw it. It was understood that an armed and champion team was
enough and one of the best Peruvian teams in history was underestimated. To the
point that both the coach and the press in general forgot about the great
center forward that Uruguayan football had at that time, Fernando Morena, and
he was not called up, despite the fact that at that time he was already back in
Peñarol.
Soccernostalgia
Question: In closing, how
is this season viewed in the annals of Uruguay Futbol History?
Santiago Rodriguez Response: From a historical
point of view, this season was totally overshadowed by the Mundialito, because
of what this title meant for the time and because the elimination from the
World Cup Spain’82 happened in the following season 81/ 82. Always clarifying
that here in South America the seasons are measured with the calendar year and
not in the European way.
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 11, February 1981
(Uruguay squad, January 10,
1981, Mundialito, Uruguay 2-Brazil 1) |
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