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In less than a
month, 16 of Europe’s finest soccer teams will converge in Austria and
Switzerland to compete for the title of European champions. To begin the
countdown for this website, let’s take a trip down memory lane and have a look
at one of the more significant moments in New Zealand’s soccer history.
Cast your mind
back – not to 1982. No, that golden period in our history has been well talked
about and publicised. Well, what else is there, you might be asking. The 2-2
draw by our under-strength All Whites team against Wales. The then world record
13-0 drubbing of Fiji in 1981. The 3-1 victory away at Georgia. All great
results, but we won’t take a look at a result here, rather a moment.
The date was June
20, 2003. Lyon was the venue, Colombia the opposition, and the FIFA
Confederations Cup was the tournament our All Whites were contesting. Having
gone down 3-0 to Japan in the tournament opener, a win was essential for the All
Whites to keep any chance of progressing alive. With players such as Nelsen,
Killen, Vicelich, Coveny, Elliott and Hickey in the team, there was an air of
belief.
As we all know,
the All Whites went on to lose the match 3-1; that one goal, however, remains
vividly in the memory. With the scores even after the first quarter, up stepped
Football Kingz midfielder Raf de Gregorio. A clearance from the Colombian
defence didn’t go as far as they would have liked, and instead fell to the feet
of de Gregorio, about 35 yards out. He feigned a shot with his left foot and
beat an oncoming defender, and then from around 25 yards, hit the ball with the
outside of his right foot and curled it into the top right corner of the goal.
The goalkeeper was unmoved and looked in awe as the ball sailed into his goal.
The 22,000-odd
people who were at Stade Gerland that day had received their money’s worth with
that strike, and been left with a lifelong memory. This famous stadium has seen
many sporting events that will live long in the memory – Dynamo Kiev’s stunning
3-0 victory in the final of the 1986 Cup Winner’s Cup over Atletico Madrid, the
tragic collapsing and subsequent death of Cameroon footballer Marc-Vivien Foe,
and more recently the 47-3 thrashing the All Blacks handed their French
counterparts a little under two years ago. However, as a one off moment, de
Gregorio’s goal would be hard to top.
Not only has the
goal gone down in soccer folklore as arguably the greatest scored in
Confederations Cup history, but it holds a special spot in the history of New
Zealand sport too. People often talk about how they explicitly remember what
they were doing when significant events have occurred. The heroics of Bert
Sutcliffe and Bob Blair against South Africa in 1953, the shock gold medal run
from Greek Konstantinos Kenteris in the 200m at Sydney 2000, and Scott Sattler’s
tackle on Todd Byrne in the 2003 NRL grand final immediately spring to mind.
Raf de Gregorio’s
goal is held in a similar light. Me personally, I vividly remember waking up
that Saturday morning to watch the game, and literally knocking over my
breakfast as my jaw dropped and I cheered excitedly at what I had seen. I knew
then that I would take this memory to the grave with me. Where were you when
this happened? Feel free to discuss not only this goal, but any others as well
on the forum as the build up to Euro ’08 starts.
Will we see a goal
like this at the upcoming tournament? Well, we’ll have to wait and see, but even
if there is a goal half as stunning as de Gregorio’s, you will not want to miss
it. Who knows, in years to come, we might be talking about a great goal scored
in these championships. No doubt that de Gregorio’s goal inspired many people,
and the world now waits to see if this can be reproduced in a month’s time.
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