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To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Austria score dramatic late equaliser against Algeria as both progress By Alastair Telfer BBC Sport journalist Published 1 hour ago The 'Disgrace of Gijon' - an infamous match at the 1982 World Cup in Spain - has followed Austria and Algeria for 44 years. West Germany beat Austria 1-0 in a final group match that sent both sides through and eliminated Algeria. It became infamous because both teams appeared to go through the motions, knowing the result suited them both. Fast forward to the 2026 World Cup and Algeria and Austria met again in their final Group J encounter, knowing a draw would send them both through at the expense of Iran. A thrilling 3-3 draw on Sunday morning was the outcome, leaving Austria second in the group and Algeria as one of the best third-placed sides. But both sides have strongly denied this was a repeat of the 'Disgrace of Gijon' - even though conspiracy theorists argue the nature of the chaotic finish, which included two injury-time goals, felt scripted. Too good to be true? Or too good to be scripted? What happened in the match? Austria opened the scoring through Marko Arnautovic in the 28th minute Rafik Belghali lashed the ball home to make it 1-1 in the 45th minute Marcel Sabitzer restored Austria's lead in the 55th minute Riyad Mahrez levelled again five minutes later The Algeria skipper then slotted home what looked to be a 93rd-minute winner - a goal that would have sent Austria out and Iran through, following their 1-1 draw with Egypt But with seconds remaining, Sasa Kalajdzic headed in a dramatic 96th-minute equaliser to make it 3-3 and send both sides into the knockout stage What are the conspiracy theories? Many Iranian fans felt cheated by the outcome, calling on Fifa to investigate and highlighting several moments from the game on social media to argue their case. Football followers also discussed theories over how the events had unfolded. Austria's players were accused of "strolling around" until Algeria levelled. Some said "it was a disgrace", and "the most scripted match I've ever seen", while another fan called it "a scandal". The game had started in sedate fashion, with Arnautovic's goal just before the half-hour mark the first shot on target. Clips have since circulated showing both sides at 2-2 appearing to go through the motions rather than pushing for a winner. Following Mahrez's second goal, footage has also circulated of a confrontation between the two benches, with some claiming it showed frustration that the draw had been disrupted. A video also shows Algeria's Aissa Mandi cover his mouth and speak to Mahrez, who looked confused, with a fan tweeting that the forward was told his team would be playing against Spain in the last 32 if they won rather than Switzerland. Austria then forced a dramatic equaliser. 'If Alfred Hitchcock had written such a drama, I'd say he was completely mad' Aus
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