Out of the shadow of war, the game became beautiful. A miracle in the rain, a 17-year-old who changed everything, and — at the end — the greatest team the sport has ever seen.
Hungary's "Mighty Magyars" — Puskás, Kocsis, Hidegkuti — were the finest team on earth, unbeaten for years, and had already thrashed West Germany 8–3 in the group stage. In the final at Bern, in pouring rain, they raced to a 2–0 lead inside eight minutes. It looked over.
Then a West German side of semi-professionals, rebuilding from the wreckage of the war, struck back. Helmut Rahn scored the winner in a stunning 3–2 comeback. For a country still defined by its 1945 defeat, Das Wunder von Bern — the Miracle of Bern — became a moment of national rebirth, and the first chapter of Germany's rise as a soccer power.
This was the tournament the sport met its first global superstar: a 17-year-old named Edson Arantes do Nascimento — Pelé.
Pelé scored a hat-trick in the semifinal and two more goals in the final as Brazil beat the hosts 5–2 — becoming the youngest player ever to score at a World Cup. Brazil won its first title playing a fluid, joyful style the world had never seen. The beautiful game had a face.
Pelé was injured early in the tournament — and a different genius stepped forward. Garrincha, the "Little Bird," whose impossible dribbling and free spirit lit up Chile, dragged Brazil to a 3–1 win over Czechoslovakia in the final and a second straight title. Back-to-back champions: confirmation that Brazil was now the beating heart of world soccer.
On home soil at Wembley, England won its first and only World Cup, beating West Germany 4–2 after extra time.
Geoff Hurst became the only player in history to score a hat-trick in a World Cup final. One of his goals — a shot that smashed the underside of the bar and bounced down — was ruled to have crossed the line by the officials, a call Germans dispute to this day. Bobby Moore lifted the Jules Rimet trophy as the commentary rang out: "they think it's all over… it is now."
At the Estadio Azteca — and beamed around the world in color for the first time — Brazil produced what many still call the finest team in the sport's history: Pelé, Jairzinho, Gerson, Tostão, and captain Carlos Alberto.
Brazil beat Italy 4–1, sealed by Carlos Alberto's thunderous strike at the end of one of the greatest team moves ever scored. It was Brazil's third title in twelve years — and under the rules of the time, that earned them permanent possession of the Jules Rimet trophy. An era that began in the rubble of war ended in pure beauty.