Argentine footballer Antonio Rattín dies at age 84 or 89, depending on the outlet
Antonio Rattín, a former Boca Juniors and Argentine national team midfielder, died in Buenos Aires. He was known for his dismissal during the 1966 World Cup quarterfinal against England, an incident that contributed to the introduction of yellow and red cards in football. The Argentine Football Association confirmed his death.
17
Divergence score
3 outlets covered it, splitting into 3 framing camps across 2 bias groups.
3 camps
2 bias groups
The spectrum · how 3 outlets placed this story
LeftCenterRight
AP News
Globe and Mail
Reuters
Supportive of action
Neutral
Dismissive
Critical
Alarmist
International angle
The split, in one line
All outlets agree on the core story but split on a key biographical fact: AP News reports Rattín was 84 years old at death, while Globe and Mail and Reuters both report 89 years old.
How each outlet covered it
No left-right split here
Coverage clusters in the center and international press. Here is each take as it stands.
Center & international coverage
“Argentine Antonio Rattín, whose dismissal in the 1966 World Cup prompted a rules change, dies at 84”
“Argentine player Antonio Rattín, whose defiance led to introduction of yellow and red cards, dies at 89”
“Former Argentina World Cup captain Rattin dies aged 89”
5 tracked claims across 3 outlets
Fact ledger
All5Disputed1Corroborated4
2/3
Disputed
Rattín was 89 years old at the time of his death
Corroborated
Disputed
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