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The Biggest World Cup Wins

Every national team wants to play at the FIFA World Cup, but some will have been questioning that desire when on the end of a hammering at the biggest tournament in international football. Here, we run through the biggest World Cup wins of all time.

The Biggest World Cup Wins

Hungary 10-1 El Salvador: World Cup 1982Hungary 9-0 South Korea: World Cup 1954Yugoslavia 9-0 Zaire: World Cup 1974Sweden 8-0 Cuba: World Cup 1938Uruguay 8-0 Bolivia: World Cup 1950Germany 8-0 Saudi Arabia: World Cup 2002

    Hungary 10-1 El Salvador

    World Cup 1982

    In their first match of the 1982 World Cup in Spain, Hungary became the only side to score 10+ goals in a single men’s World Cup game, while the eventual winning margin of nine goals became and remains a joint World Cup record.

    But, after losing to reigning champions Argentina in their next match – a game in which, somehow, Argentina were allowed to take both the first-half and second-half kick-offs – Hungary faced Belgium. A 1-1 draw in that final game saw them eliminated at the group stage, despite registering that historic victory.

    In their gigantic win over El Salvador, it was substitute László Kiss who stole the show. Coming off the bench in the second-half, Kiss scored a hat-trick. Not only is his treble the only World Cup hat-trick by a substitute, but it’s the fastest ever hat-trick in a World Cup, grabbing his three goals in the space of just seven minutes.

    Teammate Laszlo Fazekas also bagged himself a brace as Kalaman Meszoely’s side put El Salvador to the sword, even if it was ultimately for nothing.

    Hungary 9-0 South Korea

    World Cup 1954

    The Hungarians had been no strangers to huge World Cup wins, dishing another one out 28 years earlier against South Korea. This one came courtesy of Hungary’s Golden Team of the 1950s, built around a core of six key players: Ferenc Puskás, Sándor Kocsis, Nándor Hidegkuti, Zoltán Czibor, József Bozsik and Gyula Grosics.

    Gusztav Sebes’ side were huge favourites to win the tournament in Switzerland, and they opened the competition is superb style, smashing South Korea 9-0.

    Puskas – a year after his dissection of England at Wembley – netted twice, but it was Kocsis who exploded out the blocks. He scored a hat-trick in this game and then went on to bag four in Hungary’s 8-3 group-stage win over West Germany to become the first player to score multiple hat-tricks in a single World Cup.

    With two more goals in each of Hungary’s quarter-final and semi-final wins, Kocsis took his tournament tally to 11 – at that time a record for the highest number of goals scored in a single tournament.

    But despite coming up against a West Germany side in the final whom they had beaten 8-3 during the group stage, the Magical Magyars lost the reverse fixture 3-2 in what became known as the Miracle of Bern.

    Hungary’s 1954 World Cup performance is record-breaking. They hold the record for the most goals in a single edition (27), the highest aggregate goal difference (+17), and the highest goals per game rate (5.4). The only thing they didn’t win was the trophy…

    Yugoslavia 9-0 Zaire

    World Cup 1974

    Group 2 of the 1974 FIFA World Cup was a strange one. The pool comprised of defending champions Brazil, alongside Scotland and Yugoslavia, as well as first-time qualifiers Zaire.

    Brazil, Scotland and Yugoslavia drew their games against each other, so the key to qualification rested on goal difference. Basically, how much could each of them beat Zaire by.

    Scotland managed a 2-0 victory while Brazil beat them 3-0, but Yugoslavia’s 9-0 win saw them top the group table with a huge +9 goal difference.

    Yugoslavia raced into a three-goal lead in the first 20 minutes. In response, Zaire’s manager Blagoje Vidinić – a former Yugoslav international himself – decided to substitute his goalkeeper. Off came Kazadi Muamba and on came 5-foot-4 Dimbi Tubilandu.

    Within a minute, it was 4-0. Tubilandu would have to pick the ball out of his net a further five times that evening.

    The Yugoslavs were six goals to the good at half-time – the most goals scored by one team in the first half of a World Cup game in history – and Dušan Bajević helped himself to a treble.

    However, despite topping their group in the first round, Yugoslavia lost all three of their matches in the second group phase, scoring just two goals in the process.

    With the average age of their starting XI just 25 years and 351 days old against Zaire, the 1974 Yugoslavia side are also the youngest team to appear on our list.

    Sweden 8-0 Cuba

    World Cup 1938

    This quarter-final between Sweden and Cuba is technically the biggest World Cup win to take place outside the group stage, but in fairness, there was no group stage in 1938.

    The Swedes progressed through their last-16 tie with Austria thanks to a walkover, while Cuba beat Romania following a replay.

    A 7,000-strong crowd in Antibes watched Sweden put eight goals passed Cuba. Gustav Wetterström and Harry Andersson helped themselves to a hat-trick each. This fixture remains the only one in World Cup history where two players from the same team scored a hat-trick in the same game.

    The Sweden squad ravelling in some style in 1938 (Photo by STAFF/AFP via Getty Images)

    Uruguay 8-0 Bolivia

    World Cup 1950

    Argentina had to play seven matches to win the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. In 1950, Uruguay only had to play four on the way to securing their second World Cup win. In fact, their first triumph in 1930 only required four games as well. Both tournaments are the fewest matches required for a team to lift the Jules Rimet trophy.

    Uruguay’s first and only group game in 1950 came against Bolivia. France were meant to join the pair in Group 4, but withdrew after the draw, citing the amount of travel that would be required to play their group matches.

    So, while the likes of Brazil, Yugoslavia, Spain and England needed to battle it out in four-team groups, where only the top team went through, Uruguay had a one-off game against Bolivia.

    It ended up being a very routine victory. With four goals in either half, Juan Lopez’s side were comfortable 8-0 winners. Óscar Miguez scored a hat-trick, one of only three Uruguayan players to achieve this feat at a World Cup.

    1950 was the only World Cup not decided by a one-match final, with Uruguay winning a final group stage against Brazil, Sweden and Spain.

    Germany 8-0 Saudi Arabia

    World Cup 2002

    Germany’s 8-0 victory at the 2002 World Cup against Saudi Arabia is the biggest World Cup win in the 21st Century.

    After 20 minutes, Miroslav Klose opened the scoring on his World Cup debut, stooping low to head in a skidding cross from the left.

    It was his first World Cup goal, and it wouldn’t be his last. Just five minutes later he’d added a second with a trademark bullet header. The World Cup’s leading goalscorer completed his hat-trick and Germany’s fifth midway through the second half, with his third header, turning in Bernd Schneider’s cross.

    Klose is only the second player in World Cup history to score a hat-trick of headers in a single World Cup game, after Tomas Skuhravy did it for Czechoslovakia against Costa Rica in World Cup ’90. He’s one of 13 players to score a hat-trick on their World Cup debut, but no player has managed to do it since Klose in June 2002.

    Not only has Klose scored more World Cup goals than any other player (16), he’s also scored more headers than anyone else as well (7), ahead of compatriot Gerd Müller (5).

    Across his career, Klose scored 16 times in 24 appearances across four separate tournaments. The only other players to score in as many as four World Cup tournaments are compatriot Uwe Seeler, Portuguese Cristiano Ronaldo and Pelé.

    Less than 12 months after their 5-1 humbling by England in Munich, Germany would reach the World Cup final in South Korea and Japan, where they would finish runners-up to Ronaldo’s Brazil 2-0 in the final.

    Bonus Biggest Wins

    The Next Biggest World Cup Victories:

    There are four teams who have won by a seven-goal margin —

    Uruguay 7-0 Scotland: World Cup 1954

    Turkey 7-0 Korea Republic: World Cup 1954

    Poland 7-0 Haiti: World Cup 1974

    Portugal 7-0 DPR Korea: World Cup 2010

    Spain 7-0 Costa Rica: World Cup 2022

    Biggest Win in a World Cup Final:

    Brazil 5-2 Sweden: World Cup 1958

    Brazil 4-1 Italy: World Cup 1970

    France 3-0 Brazil: World Cup 1998

    Biggest Win in a Third-Place Playoff:

    Sweden 4-0 Bulgaria: World Cup 1994

    Biggest Win by a Host Nation:

    Uruguay 6-1 Yugoslavia: World Cup 1930

    Biggest Win Against the Eventual Champions:

    Hungary 8-3 West Germany: 1954

    Biggest Win Against Reigning Champions:

    Netherlands 5-1 Spain: World Cup 2014

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