• 2 months ago
In 1993, England's World Cup qualification hopes hung by a thread. Their only hope was to inflict a crushing defeat on a team of amateurs and hope other results went their way.

But less than 9 seconds into the game, they suffered their most embarrassing moment in their history. This is the true story of that goal, as told by the man who scored it...

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Transcript
00:00There's no picture of the goal I scored against England in 1993. Everything happened
00:08in only 8.3 seconds. So fast that I surprised not just David Seaman, but all the photographers
00:14too. Our stadium in San Marino displays images of various players and goals, though none
00:19of our most famous strike. Unfortunately, all that exists is a still of television footage.
00:25Too fuzzy to be hung on a wall, but those 8.3 seconds changed my life. People still
00:30know me, and that goal, against England.
00:33Oh, hello everyone. Adam Monk here, and this is the incredible story of David Galtieri.
00:42The man who inflicted arguably the most embarrassing moment the England national team ever, ever,
00:47ever suffered. A goal for San Marino just 8.3 seconds into the match. The tale of this
00:54goal is a fascinating one, and he's told us all about it in the latest edition of 442.
01:00Look at that. Available now in all good retailers. Anyway, for the purposes of this video though,
01:07the role of David Galtieri will be told by me, Adam Monk. Just in case you were wondering
01:13why a 52-year-old bloke from San Marino sounds like a 24-year-old lad from Stockholm. Anyway,
01:20nonetheless, enjoy.
01:21In November 1993, English football was still plagued by hooliganism. Because of that, when
01:27we were scheduled to host England in the last qualifier for the 1994 World Cup, it was impossible
01:32for the match to be held at our normal home, the Stadio Olimpico di Saravelli in San Marino.
01:38Maybe 600 or 700 visitors arrived from England. Some stayed in Rimini, about 15 miles away
01:43from San Marino, and they caused quite a bit of trouble. It was all over the news for many,
01:47many days. As police units flooded in from everywhere to tackle them, that's why the
01:51match was switched to an alternative ground, to make crowd control much easier.
01:55The game was on a Wednesday evening, so on the Tuesday we travelled 65 miles north-west
02:00to Bologna, and headed straight to the Stadio Renato dell'Aro for our final training session.
02:06Massimo Benini was amongst our squad. He was the best player in the team. He was our point
02:10of reference on the pitch, who'd always push us up the field and drive us forward. He made
02:15us feel secure. He'd played for Juventus and Bologna, so he invited two of his friends,
02:20Ivano Benetti and Marco Di Marchi, to join us at training. They both played for Bologna
02:25as well. At the end of the session, we practised free kicks and you could see the difference
02:28between them and us. They had a pub together in the city, which we popped to afterwards.
02:33We walked around town and it was quite emotional. Everyone was looking at us in our smart San
02:37Marino tracksuits. We were a group of friends, and we'd joke with each other, simply to play
02:42against top internationals, guys we'd normally see on TV. It was already the prize for us.
02:47All we could do was give 100%. It was unthinkable to ever keep up with the major nations, so
02:52whenever possible we tried to keep the ball and use up some minutes, really. We suffered
02:56heavy defeats. No one wanted to lose, but it was inevitable. Football belongs to everyone,
03:01not only the big teams and the great players. On the night of the match against England,
03:05I was nervous. I was 22 and it was my first time in the starting 11 for the national team.
03:10It was an important game for England. They were still fighting with the Netherlands for
03:13a spot at the World Cup. England had to beat us by a 7-goal margin and hope that the Dutch
03:18lost in Poland. When the match kicked off, though, it all went so quickly. Bacchiocchi
03:22to Bernini, then to Monzaroli, back to Bacchiocchi, who immediately just tried to play it on to
03:27me. As I darted in from the right flank, his pass was way too powerful. But Stuart Pearce
03:32tried to tap the ball towards Seaman and it fell short, and I was there. I accepted his
03:37gift, slipping past Pearce and nudging the ball beyond Seaman with the tip of my foot
03:41to put us 1-0 up. At first, I didn't really appreciate what had happened. I was pretty
03:46nippy then, a winger who could go one-on-one, but I never would have expected anything like
03:50that. Against England. On my first start for San Marino. How can you imagine running 50
03:54metres and then scoring like that? Okay, Usain Bolt needed 9.58 seconds to dash twice as
03:59far but it's not quite the same thing. It wasn't until long after the final whistle
04:03when I left our changing room and several reporters were waiting outside for me that
04:07I found out I'd known I'd broken a record for the fastest goal in a World Cup qualifier.
04:12Paul Ince struck in the equaliser, but that goal should have been ruled out. They'd been
04:15a clear foul beforehand. After they scored, it became harder and harder to match their
04:19intensity and they were twice as strong as us and twice as fast. Those who represent
04:24San Marino these days are fitter than we were. We probably needed a drip feed to keep up
04:28with our rivals. I made a few tackles in that match that would have shattered any of my
04:32teammates but I don't think England even felt a scratch. Pearce lifted me up a couple
04:36of times as if to say, move out the way please, we're playing for real here.
04:40Luka Gabi was meant to be man marking Les Ferdinand but despite stepping on his foot
04:44to stop him from jumping, Luka was lifted into the air when Ferdinand decided he had
04:49to leap for a header. Davide, he makes me jump with him, Luka exclaimed to me at the
04:53end of the game. We eventually lost the match 7-1 which was a pity that night. I was upset
04:57about the 7 goals we conceded rather than happy about the one that I scored. But there
05:02was a giant gulf between the teams and we couldn't do much to hide it.
05:05Thankfully the Dutch did win 3-1 in Poland to progress behind Norway. If they'd slipped
05:10up and my goal had stopped England going to the World Cup, it would have created a huge
05:14fuss, even bigger than the one it did. I hope it wasn't my goal that forced Graham Taylor
05:18to step down as manager but rather the fact that they actually missed out on qualification.
05:23As it was, my goal was somehow accepted and almost welcomed back in England. I was on
05:27the front page of the next morning's Daily Mirror alongside the headline,
05:31END OF THE WORLD. My parents had friends over in the UK and they sent me a copy.
05:35I had it framed and I still guard it jealously. I'm on Wikipedia and I've had a conversation
05:40with FIFA president Gianni Infantino who knows of my story. I became a hero in Scotland too.
05:46During qualifying for Euro 96, we were down in the same group as them. I was injured ahead
05:51of the away game so couldn't make the trip to Glasgow but many supporters that day wore
05:54t-shirts saying, GALTIERI, 8 seconds. I'd love to have got one. My teammates said the
06:00Scotland fans couldn't wait to see me play and that I was their idol because of what I'd done
06:04against England. My brother is a doctor and two years later he participated in a football
06:09tournament for European Hospitals, which was actually in Scotland. When people heard that
06:13he was my brother, he enjoyed free food and drinks for two days. These days I'm a computer
06:18salesman with a small company and a shop. Things turned out well and many of my teammates from
06:22that England game are doing fine. Our goalkeeper, Pierluigi Benedettini, has a bus company. He was
06:28at the wheel in 1993. He drove from San Marino to Bologna and back. Nicola Bacchiacci has a hardware
06:34store with his brother. Mirko Giannari works in the pharmaceutical industry and Loris Zanotti
06:39has a construction company. Mauro Valentini is an accountant. Massimo Benini is an estate agent
06:45and Claudio Conti works at San Marino Mail. And Pierre Domenico Della Valle is employed by the
06:51San Marino State Electrical Company. William Guerrero is a painter, while Pierangelo Manzaroli
06:57is the manager of a local football academy. I also coach San Giovanni, a small futsal club here.
07:02There are 30,000 people in San Marino and even now, 30 years on, everyone remembers me and my goal.
07:08I did something unique, a feat that the locals directly associate with their country. My pals
07:13and I still talk about it when we go out for dinner. They show me pictures of me 30 years ago
07:17when I still had all my hair. They joke, eight seconds, that's exactly how long you last in bed
07:22and that that watch must have been damaged. Months ago, a few English guys living in Romini would
07:27walk into my shop and ask to take pictures with me. A young Japanese director did a documentary
07:31on San Marino and came to gather footage. I also hosted producers and cameramen of an English TV
07:36production company based near Buckingham Palace. In 2020, a British TV channel made a series
07:42reuniting England icons. It was called Harry's Heroes and they set up a few friendly matches
07:47around Europe. They played a game against Germany and another here in San Marino. Their manager,
07:51Harry Redknapp, came to my shop with John Barnes, who was as crazy as a horse. He was also a very
07:56funny guy. The show wasn't entirely about me, but I had an important role to play due to what had
08:01happened in Bologna. At the beginning of our rematch against England legends, it was all about
08:06whether I could score again after eight seconds. Obviously, I couldn't. Matt Letizia was in their
08:11team and still an excellent player. The nicest part of it all was finally meeting David Seaman
08:15and talking to him. I'd been longing for that to happen. We drank a beer together after the game
08:19and discussed life. He's massive, like a wardrobe. I still can't believe I scored against him. He
08:25says he loves to go fishing and he's enjoying retirement. We swapped shirts and took photos
08:29together. He was really gentle and friendly with me. However, with all due respect to him and
08:34Gibraltar, scoring against England isn't the same as doing it against them. That's the way it is
08:38though. Records were always there to be broken and one day his record will fall too. Especially now
08:42that you don't have kickoff by touching the ball forward, you can save up half a second really.
08:46I'm more than happy about how my career panned out. I also played against the Dutch,
08:50taking to the pitch alongside Frank Rijkaard, Frank de Boer, Mark Overmaars and Dennis Bergkamp
08:55as well, who was a superstar at Inter with Aaron Winter. For the under-21s, I earned the chance to
09:00line up against Robert Prozinecki and Vladimir Djugovic, two champions from the old Yugoslavia.
09:06And then came that moment, my one amazing moment, followed by the end of the world
09:10headline and my chat with David Seaman many years later. To come full circle, I'd love to
09:14meet Stuart Pearce as well one day. I'm sorry that people still associate him with that mistake,
09:18but I'm not sure he cares now. We swapped shirts at the end of the match but never spoke about
09:22what happened or how we felt really, either on that night or at any time since. We've not had
09:27the opportunity to talk again, although I'd like to. I owe him a favour. One beer, perhaps even
09:32two or three if he wants. They'll be on me.

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