10 days to the World Cup: When the own goals kept coming in 2018
· Yahoo Sports
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There was something in the air in Russia in 2018. As the 32 teams made their way through an otherwise competitive tournament, the own goals kept coming.
Across nearly 170 goals scored in the 2018 World Cup, there were a whopping 12 own goals in 2018, in games from the group stage all the way to the final. The number destroyed the previous World Cup record of five, set in 1998. In total, those 12 own goals mark more than a fifth of World Cup own goals all time.
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The baffling trend kicked off with Moroccan forward Aziz Bouhaddouz’s header ending up in the net of an Iran set piece. That goal, which came in stoppage time, ended up being the game-winner for Iran. It also kicked off a group stage with nine own goals across the first 48 matches.
Heartbreak for Morocco!
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 15, 2018
Bouhaddouz heads it into his own net in stoppage time to give Iran the lead. pic.twitter.com/7FA7Migvk5
Bouhaddouz wasn’t alone in his anguish, either: Of the 12 own goals in the tournament, five ended up being game-winners or otherwise deciding goals in a loss or draw.
That also included the quarterfinals, when Brazilian midfielder Fernandinho had a bad hit of his own off a header that gave Belgium an early lead. Belgium would go on to win 2-1 to advance, with Fernandinho’s blunder as the decider.
#MundialTelemundo ¡Sorpresa en la Arena Kazan! #BEL ya le gana a #BRA con fortuna. Así lo narró 🎙 @AndresCantorGOLpic.twitter.com/dqcRoPgZXX
— Telemundo Deportes (@TelemundoSports) July 6, 2018
All of the own-goal nonsense led to the final, where France defeated Croatia 4-2, thanks in part to a Mario Mandžukić own goal early in the game. Mandžukić hit an ill-timed header off an Antoine Griezmann set piece in the 18th minute to open the scoring.
A Mandzukic own goal gives France the early 1-0 lead in the #WorldCupFinal.
— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) July 15, 2018
🎥: @FOXSoccerpic.twitter.com/8eLgT5LoyZ
With the unlucky hit, Mandžukić became the first and only player to score an own goal in a World Cup final. In some ways, it was the only fitting end to the 2018 World Cup.
Things returned back to normal in 2022, where there were only two own goals scored. And while it’s likely that this summer won’t see the same kind of action, well, you never know.