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June 15, 1982. Elche, Spain. ЧМ group stage. Hungary vs El Salvador. Nobody cared about this match before kickoff—Hungary was an Eastern European team in

Опубликовано: June 6, 2026

Десять-Один: День, Когда Сломалось Табло
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# 10-1: The Only Time in World Cup History the Scoreboard Broke

June 15, 1982. Elche, Spain. World Cup group stage. Hungary vs El Salvador. Nobody cared about this match before kickoff—Hungary was an Eastern European team in decline, the once "Mighty Magyars" reduced to a name and a few black-and-white photos. El Salvador was a small Central American nation torn apart by civil war, with a population of 4.5 million. Their qualification alone was a miracle that shouldn't have happened. No one predicted this match would become the only double-digit rout in World Cup history.

The scoreboard read: 10-1.

I once found the full footage of this match on YouTube. Ninety minutes, the quality so blurry it felt like watching history through yellowed plastic wrap. Hungary's first goal came in the 4th minute—a corner kick, defender Nyilasi leaped, headed the ball over the Salvadoran goalkeeper's head. 1-0. Second goal: 10th minute. Third goal: 37th minute. At halftime, the score was 3-0. Honestly—3-0 isn't that outrageous in a World Cup. Salvadoran fans were probably thinking, "Okay, losing by three isn't too shameful. We're World Cup rookies. We're learning."

Then the second half arrived.

50th minute. 4-0. 55th minute. 5-0. By this point, Hungary's coach Kálmán Mészöly made a decision—he brought on substitute forward László Kiss. Kiss sat on the bench, chewing gum, probably wondering where to grab dinner later. He had no idea the next seven minutes would etch his name into World Cup history forever. 69th minute. Kiss scored. 6-0. 72nd minute. Kiss scored again. 7-0. 76th minute. Kiss scored once more. 8-0. In seven minutes, a substitute forward completed the fastest hat-trick in World Cup history. He jogged to the sideline—no elaborate celebration, just raised his hands and got a few pats on the head from teammates. No one realized what had just happened. It wasn't until after the match, when statisticians compiled the data, that they discovered Kiss's three goals were separated by just seven minutes. The fastest hat-trick in World Cup history. Not Ronaldo. Not Mbappé. Not Pelé. Not any star whose jersey number you'd get printed. A Hungarian substitute you've probably never heard of. That record has stood for over forty years, unbroken.

89th minute. Hungary scored their 10th goal. Salvadoran goalkeeper Luis Guevara Mora knelt on the goal line. He wasn't praying. He was too exhausted to stand. His white jersey was covered in grass stains and mud. His gloves—the ones his mother had washed clean for him before the match—were worn through. He knelt there, head down, like a fisherman waiting for a storm to pass.

Then—the most memorable moment of the entire match.

90th minute. El Salvador got a chance. Luis Ramírez—a young man who played in El Salvador's domestic league and had never been abroad for a match before the World Cup—poked the ball into Hungary's net amidst the chaos. 1-10. He didn't celebrate. Didn't run to the corner flag. Didn't dance. He just picked the ball out of the net—from a goal that had been breached 10 times—ran back to the center circle, and placed it on the kickoff spot. The match wasn't over yet. He had to keep playing.

The crowd in Elche—neutral Spaniards—all stood and applauded Ramírez's goal. Not sarcastically. Not out of pity. Genuinely, paying tribute to someone fighting on despite being down 10-0. El Salvador's commentator shouted in Spanish over the radio: "¡Gol! ¡Gol de El Salvador! ¡Gol de la dignidad!"—"Goal of dignity!"

That goal didn't change the match result. But it changed how the match would be remembered. 10-1 isn't a joke. 10-1 is a nation struggling through civil war, using football as its only solace, then being treated most cruelly by history on the World Cup stage—and still scoring a goal, picking up the ball, running back to the center circle, and placing it on the kickoff spot. Because the match wasn't over. Because as long as the referee hadn't blown the whistle—you keep playing. Because that's the simplest, and hardest, thing football teaches us.

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