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  1. Inglaterra en la Copa Mundial de Fútbol de 1970. Inglaterra fue una de las 16 selecciones participantes en la Copa Mundial de Fútbol de México 1970, la que es su sexta participación consecutiva en un mundial.

  2. 1974 →. The 1970 FIFA World Cup final was held on Sunday, 21 June, in the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, to determine the winner of the 1970 FIFA World Cup. This final, between Brazil and Italy, marked the first time that two former world champions met in a final; Italy had previously won the World Cup in 1934 and 1938, while Brazil won in ...

  3. La selección de Uruguay fue una de las 16 participantes de la Copa Mundial de Fútbol de 1970, realizada en México. Indumentaria [ editar ] Por primera vez en la historia de la competición, Uruguay utiliza números en negro a la espalda, además del debut histórico de la camiseta de alternativa blanca contra Italia, en fase de grupos.

  4. The 1970 London-Mexico World Cup Rally was the first of two World Cup Rallies to be held and the second of four marathon rallies to be held in a nine-year period beginning with the 1968 London-Sydney Marathon. The motor rally started at Wembley Stadium in London on 19 April 1970 and finished in Mexico City on 27 May 1970, covering approximately ...

  5. The 1970 FIFA World Cup was a football sporting event that was held in Mexico in 1970. 16 teams took part from many countries. Brazil won the trophy after beating Italy in the final. Djibouti did not participate, as it was not yet a country. Participants. The following ...

  6. 1970 FIFA World Cup Group 2. Group 2 of the 1970 FIFA World Cup was contested in the Estadio Cuauhtémoc and Estadio Nemesio Díez between 2 and 11 June 1970. Italy won the group, and advanced to the quarter-finals, along with Uruguay, who finished second by virtue of goal difference. Sweden and Israel failed to advance.

  7. The 1971 Women's World Cup (Spanish: 1971 Campeonato de Fútbol Femenil) was an association football tournament for women's national teams organised by the Federation of Independent European Female Football (FIEFF) in Mexico in August–September 1971. Held in Mexico City and Guadalajara, it is the second known tournament to be named as a women's football World Cup after the 1970 edition in ...