The Battle of Montevideo – Defeat in Uruguay but a sad 90 minutes of football

4 November 1967 was the date of the infamous ‘The Battle of Montevideo’. Celtic faced Racing Club in the Play-off for the Intercontinental Cup after Jock Stein’s won in Glasgow 1-0 and the Argentinians won 2-1 in Buenos Aires. The tie stood 2-2 after two games taking a playoff to separate the teams. Instead of a different continent, neighbouring Uruguay were elected to host the game making it virtually impossible for Celtic fans to attend what was a Club World Cup Final (as it is now).

The European Cup winners were the better team but somehow left with a defeat in a game that will live long in the memory as one of the dirtiest games in Celtic’s history. Before kick-off, Ronnie Simpson was hit from an object thrown from the stands and had to be replaced. Celtic were under siege from before the whistle had even sounded.

The game is shrouded in controversy due to poor refereeing and unsportsmanlike conduct from the Argentines.

Jim Craig reflected on the match in The Celtic Star a few years ago.

“We had the chance to become Champions of the Football World. We knew it would be tough. The odds were against us but we had come through some equally big challenges in the past. Unfortunately, though, on this particular occasion, we blew it!

“There were around 65,000 fans crammed into the Stadio Centenario in Montevideo on this day in 1967, with the teams tied on two points a-piece in the league system which would eventually produce the World Club Champion. The Celtic team was Simpson, Craig, Gemmell, Murdoch, McNeill, Clark, Johnstone, Wallace, Hughes, Lennox and Auld; the Racing side comprised Cejas, Perfumo, Chabay, Martin, Basile, Rulli, Maschio, Raffo, Cardoso, Cardenas and Rodriguez; while the referee, who would become probably the most important man on the pitch as the match progressed, was Senor Osario from Paraguay.

“In a book called ‘The Complete Encyclopedia of Football’, published in 1998, in a section dealing the World Club Championship, there is a paragraph which sums up the match neatly and succinctly;- “Cardenas scored the only goal after 56 minutes, but that was a rare moment of football during a sad 90 minutes in which the players appeared more concerned with settling the scores which had built up during the previous two games.

“Paraguayan referee Rodolfo Osorio ordered six players off including Celtic’s Jimmy Johnstone, Bobby Lennox, John Hughes and Bertie Auld – although Auld ignored the order and, since the game was almost over, the referee overlooked the fact that he stayed on the pitch”.

“It was indeed ‘a sad 90 minutes’. We had our chance to be top of the world and we blew it!”

Unfortunately for Celtic it wasn’t to be, the game was a rammy and the card-happy referee sealed the result that the Argentines craved so much. Hardly a

About Author

Born just as Celtic were stopping the Ten, Lubo98 follows Celtic home and away and helps run his local Celtic Supporters Club. He goes to all the games and is a Law Graduate. Has a particular fondness for Tom Rogic among the current Celts and both Lubo and Henrik form his earliest Celtic memories.

3 Comments

  1. George Theodorou on

    Clearly remember a melee and the game had stopped with players milling around and the referee confused and trying to keep order. Tommy Gemmell calmly stepped up to one of the Racing players and gave him a strong left boot to the goolies !

  2. I once was lucky enough to read some of the Argentinian newspaper reports of the game. No indication that it was a dirty game! It just seemed to be the norm in Argentina! For me, it simply wasn’t football at all, and we would have been better off not going to South America after what we saw at Hampden in the first leg!

    • Ronnie Simpson was felled by a missile prior to the previous game in Argentina and was replaced by John Fallon, who also played in the play off in Montevideo.