REWIND 1990published at 14:24 British Summer Time 4 June 2014
Gazza. Penalties. Tears. Waddle. Pavarotti.
1990. World Cup. Turin.
England. West Germany.
Saturday, 15:00 BST.
Full-time: Argentina 2-1 England
England are knocked out of the World Cup
Maradona scores sublime solo goal and controversial handball
Lineker gets England goal on 81 minutes
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Watch again on BBC Red Button Tuesday 10 June, 23:35 BST
Tom Rostance
Gazza. Penalties. Tears. Waddle. Pavarotti.
1990. World Cup. Turin.
England. West Germany.
Saturday, 15:00 BST.
So England are out, but the future is bright. John Barnes showed that in his brief cameo from the bench.
In four years' time England will be in Italy and Barnes and co could be back at it again...
Former England manager Terry Venables
"I had 20 years with the BBC and ITV doing punditry - a great period of time.
"Working with Des Lynam was great. They were fantastic people, I had such a good time working with him and Jimmy Hill.
"Jimmy was very ahead of his time. He was always pushing the boundaries, he was talking about things like goalline technology 30 years ago.
"I've got a photo at home of myself and Jimmy in the gardens of a London hotel. We are both roaring with laughter and that is how I remember that period of time."
A handful of English fans hurled stones and bottles at some of the Argentina supporters outside the stadium after the match, causing a brief street battle which was broken up by a police charge. There were no serious injuries.
A small number of fans from both sides were treated for cuts and bruises by ambulance crews and about a dozen were briefly detained.
Mr Richard Tracey, the Sports Minister, described the result as a moral draw for England.
"Nobody who saw the game on TV, as I did, could be in any doubt that the Argentinian first goal was helped into the net with a hand."
Many British newspapers, including the Daily Express, led with the controversial defeat to Argentina on their front page the next day.
The Times reports horn-blowing, flag-waving supporters packed into cars and headed for the centre of Buenos Aires minutes after the match. They chanted: "If you don't jump you're an Englishman".
England manager Bobby Robson criticised the Tunisian referee after Diego Maradona had apparently punched home the first goal.
"That is a bad decision in a very big match," Robson said. "We don't expect decisions like that at World Cup level. I haven't seen it on television yet, but it was hand ball, wasn't it? I saw Maradona and Shilton going for it with Shilton being favourite. Maradona handled the ball into the goal."
There can only be one winner of the man of the match trophy today. His first goal was a scandal, but the second was sublime.
All rise to Diego Maradona.
World Cup Grandstand presenter Des Lynam
"One way or another, a man called Maradona has put us out of the World Cup. Cheerio."
Bobby Robson
England manager
"We have been so near yet so far. The players did all they could do. One is dubious goal, one is a miracle.
"We have lost to a very good team. We lost the supply to the front player and you have to hand that to the Argentinians. How Gary Lineker has missed that chance, I don't know. If it had gone in, who knows?
"At this stage in the World Cup, you would rather lose 3-0, than 2-1.
"We can hold our heads up high. They were a good unit."
Emlyn Hughes
Former England defender on World Cup Grandstand
"Everyone's disappointed. Nobody is more sick than I am but you always get the feeling that we could have done more.
"We played for 10 minutes at the end of the game."
Sam Heaton:, external I know my parents ain't met, it's 8 years till I'm born, but I have a feeling the controversy over the goal will last all my life.
Come on, come on, it shouldn't have been a goal Diego...
Diego Maradona talking to BBC Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker in 2006:
"It was my hand. I don't mean any disrespect to English fans but this is something that happens. I scored goals before in Argentina with my hands. It was a goal that I couldn't reach, Peter Shilton was already there, I couldn't head it so I moved my head back [and used my hand].
"I started running and Shilton didn't see what I had done. The sweeper told him as he is the one who saw my hand. When I saw the linesman running, I shouted 'goal' and I look behind to see whether the referee had taken the bait and he had so that was it. Come on, come on, it was a goal!"
Brian Stokes:, external On basis of needing a dodgy goal to win against an average England team, there's surely no way Argentina will win this World Cup.
Jay Gatsby:, external Maradona definitely the star of the tournament ... wonder if there'll be any Argentine quite like him in the next 20 odd years.
Emlyn Hughes
Former England defender on World Cup Grandstand
"Maradona has ran from inside his own half for the second goal. Incredible."
Quotes just in from Diego Maradona - that's a cheeky one. He puts that first goal down to the 'hand of God.'
James Hanley:, external Not sure there's been a better commentating team than Barry Davies and Jimmy Hill.
Blake Connolly:, external Genuinely really looking forward to seeing what Des and the pundits have to say after this.
Emlyn Hughes
Former England defender on World Cup Grandstand
"I thought Maradona headed the ball, looking at the replay, it is clear handball. It doesn't touch his head at all."
Barcelona manager Terry Venables on BBC World Cup Grandstand
"For the first goal, Peter Shilton should have come out and clattered the man and the ball. He was slow off his line.
"You can't blame the linesman as I thought Diego Maradona headed the ball. His hand was up but it looked like a header."
Kenny Sansom
Former England defender
"Nobody talked to Diego Maradona after the game - we wouldn't go near him. Steve Hodge got his shirt after the game and when he came into the dressing room we gave him loads of abuse about it.
"Now it's worth £250,000 so I wish I got it!
"But there was a lot of anger in the dressing room. Three or four men from the FA came in and we were asking them to get the game replayed, saying it was a disgrace. They were just as gutted as we were though, there was nothing that they could do."
Injured England man Bryan Robson slopes away from the bench, a huge SLR camera hanging from his neck. The accidental tourist.