The 1987 FIFA U-20 World Cup belonged to Yugoslavia, powered by the
country’s golden generation before its breakup in the mid-1990s.
Key Facts – 1987 Tournament
* Staged from 10 to 25 October 1987, with 16 teams split into four groups.
* Matches were played in Concepción, Antofagasta, Valparaíso and the
capital Santiago.
* Europe’s six representatives included the four semi-finalists from the
1986 UEFA U-18 Championship—winners East Germany, runners-up Italy, West
Germany and Scotland—plus Bulgaria and Yugoslavia, who advanced through the
play-offs by defeating Belgium and Romania respectively.
* Chile 1987 was the last FIFA tournament featuring East Germany, who
ceased to exist following reunification in 1990.
* It was also the last edition won by an Eastern European side until 2015, when Serbia, a successor state of Yugoslavia, claimed its first title.
Yugoslavia Foil The German
Duo
That victory denied the prospect of an all-German final. West and East Germany had not met in an official match since the group stage of the 1974 senior World Cup, and both had appeared on course for a showdown. West Germany cruised through their group with three wins, edged Scotland on penalties in the quarter-finals, and then dismantled the hosts 4-0 in the last four.
The final in Santiago was tense and tight. Zvonimir Boban struck in the 85th minute, only for West Germany’s Marcel Witeczek to equalise two minutes later. Ironically, when the match went to penalties, it was Witeczek who missed the decisive kick. Yugoslavia celebrated a historic triumph, their last as a united footballing nation.
Tournament Highlights
Grup A |
Grup B |
Grup C |
Grup D |
Yugoslavia |
Italy |
East Germany |
West Germany |
Chile |
Brasil |
Scotland |
Bulgaria |
Australia |
Canada |
Colombia |
USA |
Togo |
Nigeria |
Bahrain |
Saudi Arabia |
** = penalties
* = extra time
Quarterfinal:
-
Yugoslavia
vs Brasil 2-1
-
Italy
vs Chile 0-1
-
East
Germany vs Bulgaria 2-0
-
West
Germany vs Scotland 1-1 (4-3)**
Semifinal:
-
Yugoslavia
vs East Germany 2-1
-
Chile
vs West Germany 0-4
Third place Playoff : East
Germany vs Chile 1-1 (3-1)**
MVP: Robert Prosinecki
(Yugoslavia)
From Youth to Stardom
Sammer would later switch allegiance to the unified German national team, eventually becoming a teammate of Möller for both club and country. Together, they were central figures in Germany’s triumph at Euro 1996 and Borussia Dortmund’s Champions League victory in 1997.
Here is a selection of players from the 1987 U-20 World Cup who went on to become key figures at senior level:
PLAYERS |
World Cup
edition (senior) |
Javier Margas
(Chile) |
1998 |
Luis Musrri
(Chile) |
1998 |
Fabian Estay
(Chile) |
1998 |
Branko Brnovic
( |
1998 |
Robert Jarni (Yugoslavia/Croatia) |
1990, 1998,
2002 |
Igor Stimac
(Croatia) |
1998 |
Zvonimir Boban
(Croatia) |
1998 |
Robert
Prosinecki (Yugoslavia/Croatia) |
1990, 1998,
2002 |
Pedrag
Mijatovic ( |
1998 |
Davor Suker
(Croatia) |
1998, 2002 |
Miguel
Guerrero (Colombia) |
1990 |
Wilmer Cabrera
(Colombia) |
1998 |
Wilson Perez
(Colombia) |
1994 |
Oscar Cordoba
(Colombia) |
1994 |
Willy Okpara ( |
1994 |
Bill McKinlay
(Scotland) |
1998 |
Emil
Kostadinov ( |
1994, 1998 |
Illian
Kiriakov ( |
1994 |
Khalid Al Muwalid (Saudi) |
1994, 1998 |
Ahmed Jamil
Madani (Saudi) |
1994, 1998 |
Mathias Sammer
(Germany) |
1994 |
Andreas Moeller
(Germany) |
1990, 1994,
1998 |
Tony Meola
(USA) |
1990, 1994 |
Jeff Agoos
(USA) |
1998, 2002 |
Marcelo Balboa
(USA) |
1994 |
Kasey Keller
(USA) |
1990, 1998,
2002, 2006 |
Bismarck
(Brasil) |
1990 |
Cesar Sampaio
(Brasil) |
1998 |
Andre Cruz
(Brasil) |
1998 |
Thompson Oliha
( |
1994 |
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