Franz Beckenbauer: The Legendary German football Icon

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Franz Beckenbauer, who has died aged 78, stands comparison with any of football’s legendary figures, both as player and manager.

‘Der Kaiser’, a contemporary, friend and rival of England’s 1966 World Cup-winning duo Bobby Moore and Sir Bobby Charlton as well as Brazil’s Pele, was part of a golden group of world-class players – including the great Netherlands star Johan Cruyff – who bestrode the game in the 1960s and 1970s.

Beckenbauer captained West Germany to World Cup victory in his home country in 1974 when the Netherlands were beaten in the final in Munich.

He replicated the feat as manager when Argentina were overcome in the 1990 final in Rome’s Stadio Olimpico, making up for the disappointment of losing to a Diego Maradona-inspired side in the final in Mexico four years earlier.

It made him one of only three men, along with France’s Didier Deschamps and Brazil’s Mario Zagallo – who
died last week
– to win the World Cup as player and manager.

A superb player who made the transition from outstanding midfielder to visionary defensive sweeper with ease, Beckenbauer was also captain of the Bayern Munich team that won the European Cup three seasons in succession in 1974, 1975 – when Leeds United were controversially beaten in Paris – and 1976.

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