Argentina vs England: Why 1966 Is Still Called "The Robbery of the Century"

Before the Falklands War, before Maradona's Hand of God, there was 1966 — the Argentina vs England World Cup quarterfinal that Argentina still calls "El Robo del Siglo," the robbery of the century. This is the real story of Antonio Rattín's sending-off, the ten minutes a World Cup match simply stopped at Wembley, and the single word England's own manager used afterward that Argentina has never forgiven. July 23rd, 1966. Wembley Stadium, London. Argentina's captain Antonio Rattín is sent off by a German referee, Rudolf Kreitlein, who doesn't share a word of language with him. Rattín refuses to leave the pitch for close to ten minutes, sitting near the red carpet reserved for the Queen, before finally walking off escorted by police. England win 1-0 through a Geoff Hurst header — but the real story starts after the final whistle, when England manager Alf Ramsey refuses to let his players swap shirts and tells reporters his team's best football is still to come "against the right type of opposition… not act as animals." This video breaks down exactly what happened in 1966, why that one word mattered more than the scoreline, and why this single match became the first brick in one of football's deepest rivalries — a rivalry that's back in the headlines this week with Argentina vs England meeting again at the 2026 World Cup. Inside this video: – The full story of the 1966 World Cup quarterfinal: Argentina vs England at Wembley – Antonio Rattín's sending-off and the ten-minute standoff that followed – Alf Ramsey's "animals" quote and why it outlasted the result – Why Argentina still calls this match "El Robo del Siglo" (the robbery of the century) – How 1966 quietly set up everything that came later — the Falklands War, the Hand of God, and the rivalry still alive today – The psychology behind why a single insult can outlive a scoreline for 60 years Chapters: 0:00 The match that refused to continue 0:53 England hosts the 1966 World Cup 1:16 Meet Antonio Rattín, Argentina's captain 1:58 A referee who didn't speak Spanish 2:16 The sending-off nobody could explain 3:03 Ten minutes the match simply stopped 4:07 Argentina down to ten men 4:50 The word "animals" 6:43 Why an insult outlasts a scoreline 8:15 Two countries, two different matches 9:21 Villain or symbol? 9:57 Why this still matters this Wednesday This channel explores the history and psychology hiding underneath the small, everyday things we take for granted — a game, a habit, a single choice. If that's the kind of story you're into, follow along so you don't miss the next one. #ArgentinaVsEngland #WorldCup1966 #WorldCup2026 #FootballHistory #Wembley1966 #LostHour