Watch: The Hurricane storms Brazil to the final

See highlights of Brazil’s Jairzinho destroying Uruguay in the 1970 FIFA World Cup semi-finals, and read stats and trivia on the performance.

Brazil v UruguayBrazil v Uruguay

Mexico 1970 | Semi-finals Estadio Jalisco, Guadalajara Attendance: 51,261


Going into the game Going into the game

The Seleção were hellbent on revenge. The Celeste had made them the victims of a horror story in their only previous FIFA World Cup™ collision in 1950. Getting it wouldn’t be easy. “Uruguay are very, very strong,” warned Pele.

1970 FIFA World Cup Semi-Finals, Guadalajara, Mexico, 17th June 1970, Brazil 3 v Uruguay 1, The Uruguay team line up before their 1970 FIFA world Cup semi-final match with Brazil at Estadio Jalisco in Guadalajara, Mexico on 17th June 1970. (Photo by Rolls Press/Popperfoto via Getty Images)

Juan Hohberg’s side, largely thanks to the rapid reflexes of Ladislao Mazurkiewicz, had kept clean sheets in nine of their last 13 matches, boasted the outstanding Luis Cubilla, and knew one another inside out, with 10 of their 11 starters coming from Montevideo titans Nacional or Penarol. Brazil also had cause for confidence. They had netted 12 goals in four games to reach the final four, in the process overcoming a Gordon Banks miracle and England in ‘The final that never was’. Furthermore, while Mario Zagallo had been ridiculed for attempting to cram five No10s into his side, Gerson, Jairzinho, Rivellino, Pele and Tostao had made a Mexican mockery of positional logic. Jairzinho, in particular, had been uncontrollable, netting in every appearance and being nicknamed ‘The Hurricane’.

Brazilian professional footballer and midfielder / winger with the Brazil national football team, Jairzinho in 1970. Jairzinho would go on to play for the victorious Brazil national team in the 1970 FIFA World Cup finals in Mexico. (Photo by Rolls Press/Popperfoto via Getty Images/Getty Images)

The gameThe game

Jairzinho’s electricity zapped his opponents from the outset, forcing them into desperate fouls, but it was Uruguay who drew first blood thanks to Cubilla. Clodoaldo, following a glorious clip round the back of the defence from Tostao, slashed home the equaliser on the break’s brink. ‘The Hurricane’ turned Category 5 after the restart, devastating Uruguay with sprinter’s speed and rock climber’s upper-body strength. After stylishly setting up a Pele chance, Jairzinho powered Brazil ahead. The 25-year-old started the move by bursting from deep inside his own half and, after charging on to a Tostao through-ball, rolled the adidas Telstar into the bottom corner.

Rivellino’s thunderous left boot sealed a 3-1 victory late on, but it indubitably belonged to another force of nature: ‘Hurricane Jair’.


QuotesQuotes

“In the group stage, everyone was worried about Pele and it gave me more space. But by the knockout phase, I’d scored in every game and a Brazilian commentator had nicknamed me ‘The Hurricane’ after my performance against Czechoslovakia. Everyone was talking about me, opponents were aware of me. Uruguay marked me really tightly, sometimes I would have two men on me, but fortunately that game almost everything came off. I also scored a beautiful goal that gave us the lead, so it’s a game I’ll remember fondly forever.” Jairzinho

“Jairzinho played amazingly in that game. When he was in that form, the only way you could stop him was by fouling. Uruguay tried but he was so fast, so strong that sometimes they couldn’t even manage that! Jairzinho would strike fear into defenders when he ran at them.” Pele “There were few players in history as terrifying for defenders as Jairzinho running at speed.” Ladislao Mazurkiewicz


TriviaTrivia

  • There were only 11 seconds between Jairzinho winning possession, 73 metres from goal, and netting from inside the Uruguay area.

  • Jairzinho incredibly completed 13 dribbles against Uruguay. It ranks joint-second on the list of most successful take-ons in a World Cup game, alongside Paul Gascoigne for England against Cameroon in 1990 and behind Jay-Jay Okocha’s 15 for Nigeria against Italy in 1994. It helped Jairzinho complete the second-most dribbles in one edition of the tournament (47), with only Diego Maradona in 1986 registered more (53).

  • Jairzinho’s goal against Uruguay made him only the seventh player to score in five successive World Cup appearances after Leonidas da Silva, Gyorgy Sarosi, Helmut Rahn, Lajos Tichy, Just Fontaine and Eusebio. Thanks to the Botafogo legend’s effort against Italy in the final, he and Fontaine remain the only men to have scored in six straight run-outs in the competition.

1970 World Cup Final, Azteca Stadium, Mexico, 21st June, 1970, Brazil 4 v Italy 1, Brazil's Jairzinho celebrates after walking the ball into the net for his side's third goal, making him the first player to score a goal in every game  (Photo by Rolls Press/Popperfoto via Getty Images/Getty Images)