Post World Cup and General (continued)
-Leonidas’
success led to ‘Lacta’ chocolate to create the
‘Diamante Negro’ (Black Diamond) chocolate with Leonidas.
Leonidas
had received many nicknames from Journalists. One of them was ‘Homme Gomme’
(Rubber Man).
The
nickname ‘Black Diamond’ was given by Uruguayans in Penarol in 1932. He in fact
did not have the legal property of the name. Even after receiving a large sum
from ‘Lacta’ Chocolate, he had no share in the profits in the following
decades.
Apparently,
Pele had been wary of this situation and had his nickname trademarked at age of
20.
Photo
From: Historias Sudamericanas en la Copa del Mundo 1930-2006
(Leonidas) |
-The
Brazilian Elba de Pádua Lima, Tim, would manage Peru in the 1982 World Cup in
Spain.
As
a player he missed out on playing vs. Poland and Italy in the 1938 World Cup,
but as Manager he played against both team sin the 1982 World Cup.
The
44 years between the World Cups, is the longest interval ever
between an individual's World Cup participations, and the longest World Cup
career overall.
-Brazil’s
matches were followed home live by Radio. Leonardo Gagliano Netto (1911-1974)
narrated the matches.
He
was from the Byington network - formed by the PRA-3 and Cruzeiro do Sul PRD-2
radio stations (both from Rio), plus its subsidiaries Cosmos PRE-7 and Cruzeiro
do Sul PRB-6 from Sao Paulo). The Santos PRB-4 radio club entered as an associated
broadcaster and, as the National Team progressed in the World Cup, other
Stations were integrated into the group. In the main cities, loudspeakers were
installed in open locations so that fans could listen.
The
voice arrived in Brazil by short waves (the antennas had to be manually
directed to capture them) and the sponsor was the Urea Casino in Rio. The cost
of each transmission (intercontinental telephone line rental) was: 100 Millions
of Reis.
-Brazil
Manager Adhemar Pinto would be criticized for not being up to date with modern
tactics. Most nations had adapted the WM tactical formation, while Pimenta was
still experimenting with the out-dated
Pyramid System.
This
system was defensively unsound and deemed unsophisticated in the new landscape
of World Football.
In
terms of Organization, unlike the chaos associated with the 1930 and 1934
Tournaments, Brazil were more organized this time around.
The
consensus was they had learned from their past mistakes and had planned better
even in training, organizing the trip, etc.
-Brazil’s
Domingos Da Guia was reported to be the highest paid Football player at the
time.
He
was Champion in Uruguay with Nacional Montevideo in 1933 and Champion of Rio de
Janeiro State League with Vasco Da Gama in 1934.
He
became Champions with Argentina’s Boca Juniors in 1935. Thus becoming Champions
in three different Nations.
Photo
From: L'Auto, Issue 13665, May 20, 1938
(Domingos
Da Guia)
|
-The
Brazil National team returned home on the ‘Almanzora’ ship amid much fanfare.
The
‘Almanzora’ made stops at Recife and Salvador. In Bahia a fan removed Leonidas'
shoe to take it as a souvenir. On July 2nd, 1938 at Rio, at 3:30
PM, ‘Almanzora’ began to dock at the
port, and the police had difficulty maintaining the cordon of isolation that
prevented the public from approaching the pier.
The
players paraded in open cars along Rio Branco Avenue. Leonidas was driven into
a Marine Corps troop carrier, heavily guarded by an entire brigade of the
military. There were so many people that "the police had to use energy
means to break the mass," (something lost in translation..) according to
the newspaper Estado de S. Paulo.
-Brazil’s
next match vs. a European opponent would be during the 1950 World Cup vs.
Switzerland on home soil.
Brazil’s
next match on European soil would be in 1954.
-German Manager Josef
'Sepp' Herberger would lead West Germany to World Cup triumph during the 1954
World Cup.
This 1938 World Cup would be the only time that a
Pre-War (Pozzo) and Post-War (Herberger) World Cup winning managers took part.
-German
backup goalkeeper Fritz Buchloch would become the Manager of the Iceland
National Team in 1948.
He
would be the first German Sportsman to go abroad after World War II.
-The
German (actually Austrian) Wilhelm Hahnemann was also employed by the Sports
Department of the City of Vienna.
In
1949 in the Turkish Capital Ankara, he was condemned to six months in prison
for smuggling. Upon his release in August 1949, it was discovered that he was
actually innocent and may have taken the blame for his friends.
Photo
From: Deutschlands Fussball Landerspiele, Eine Dokumentation von 1908-1989
(Wilhelm
Hahnemann)
|
-Germany’s
Paul Janes was in the German Navy during the War. He became the record holder
as Captain on November 22nd, 1942 (Germany 5-Slovakia 2) by
bypassing Fritz Szepan (Janes’ 31st match as Captain).
He
was Germany’s record holder of Caps (71) until Uwe Seeler overtook him in the early
1970s.
Photo
From: Deutschlands Fussball Nationalspieler, Das Lexicon, Author Jurgen Bitter
(Paul
Janes)
|
-Germany’s
Andreas Kupfer was the only player to have played Germany’s last International
match before the end of World War II, as well as the first match after the War
in 1950. He was Germany’s Captain for that match in 1950 vs. Switzerland.
Photo
From: Deutschlands Fussball Nationalspieler, Das Lexicon, Author Jurgen Bitter
(Andreas
Kupfer)
|
-France’s
Raoul Diagne was the son of a Senegalese Deputy who was studying in France.
He
was the first player of color to play for France (February 15th,
1931 vs. Czechoslovakia).
-France’s
Hector Cazenave was born in Montevideo, Uruguay. He was naturalized in 1937.
Photo
From: Coupe Du Monde 1938-La Coupe du Monde Oubliee, Author Victor Sinet
(Hector
Cazenave)
|
-France’s
Auguste ‘Gusti’ Jordan was Austrian-born (born in Linz).
He
arrived in France in 1933 and was naturalized in 1935.
He
was jailed by the Germans during the War, because he had played for France as
an Austrian.
Photo
From: Coupe Du Monde 1938-La Coupe du Monde Oubliee, Author Victor Sinet
(Gusti
Jordan)
|
-France’s
Oscar Heisserer became the very first Manager in the history of Olympique
Lyonnais.
Photo
From: Coupe Du Monde 1938-La Coupe du Monde Oubliee, Author Victor Sinet
(Oscar
Heisserer)
|
-During
the World Cup, French goalkeeper Laurent Di Lorto superstitiously kept with him
a Virgin Mary Medallion given to him by a fan.
French
captain Etienne Mattler similarly kept with him a horseshoe given to him by a
group of fans at Chantilly.
Photo
From: Coupe Du Monde 1938-La Coupe du Monde Oubliee, Author Victor Sinet
(Etienne Mattler) |
Photo
From: L'Auto, Issue 13688, June 12, 1938
(A
carton of Laurent Di Lorto)
|
-Hungary’s Ferenc Sas (March 15 (or August 16),
1915- September
3, 1988) went to Argentina after the World Cup and joined Boca Juniors. He
would be named Francisco Sohn.
Photo
From: L'Auto, Issue 13688, June 12, 1938
(A
cartoon of Ferenc Sas)
|
-Sweden’s Torre Keller had been present in the 1924 Olympics
in Paris.
Photo
From: L'Auto, Issue 13692, June 16, 1938
(Jozsef
Nagy and Tore Keller)
|
-Holland
had the youngest (Bertus de Harder, 18 years old), as well as the oldest (Wim
Anderiesen, 34 years old) players in the World Cup.
Photo
From: de Internationals, de Historie van Oranje, Authors Matty Verkamman, Henri
van der Steen, John Volkers
(Bertus
de Harder)
|
Photo
From: de Internationals, de Historie van Oranje, Authors Matty Verkamman, Henri
van der Steen, John Volkers
(Wim
Anderiesen)
|
-Belgium’s Jean Petit (February 25, 1914-June 5,
1944), who was also a doctor, was killed on June 5th, 1944 while
riding his bicycle visiting a patient during a bombing raid in Liege.
He was the brother of Roger Petit, Standard Liege
player and later General Secretary of the Club who would be implicated in the
Standard-Waterschei scandal of 1984.
-Norway Coach Asbjorn Halvorsen (December 3, 1898-January 16,
1955) was responsible for the sports boycott in Norway during the Nazi
occupation.
He
was arrested and placed in various Concentration Camps during the occupation.
Photo
From: IFFHS-Norge (1908-1940), Suomi
(1911-1940)-Essti (1920-1940)
(Norway
Manager Asbjorn Halvorsen)
|
-Norway’s Odd Frantzen
(Janaury 20, 1913-October 2, 1977) was beaten to death in his home during a
home intrusion in 1977. The assailant was convicted of manslaughter.
-Norway’s
Reidar Kvammen (July 23,
1914-October 27, 1998) was a Police Officer. During the war, he was sent to
various Concentration Camps until the end of the war.
At the time of the World Cup, It had been reported that Arsenal had shown an
interest in him.
Photo
From: Landslaget, Det Norske Fotballandslagets Historie, authors
Egil Olsen, Arne Scheie,Per Jorsett, Otto Ulseth, 1997
(Reidar Kvammen) |
-Norway’s
Kristian Henriksen (March 3, 1911-February 8, 2004) became the National Team Manager
of Norway (1958-1959). He was the last surviving member of Norway’s 1938 World
Cup squad.
-Switzerland’s
Erwin Ballabio
would be appointed as National Team Manager on May 24th, 1967. He
replaced the Italian Alfredo Foni, one of Italy’s starters in this 1938 World
Cup.
-The
Swiss returned home on June 14 and received an enthusiastic reception.
In
Basel the players were welcomed in the presence of a large crowd from the
Social Democratic Party President.
In
Zurich, a delegation from the city government invited the team to lunch at
which Emil Kloti, the Social Democratic Party City President, gave a speech. In
Geneva, Servette players were welcomed in their hometown by a government
delegation.
A
member of the Grasshopper Club donated the sum of 1,000 Swiss Francs for the
players.
The
squad were now called the "heathen of Paris".
A
week later, in Berne, before the Grasshoppers' match against Servette, Federal
Minister Rudolf Minger gave them "the greetings of the state government
and of the entire people".
No
other sporting event has experienced such a reception in Switzerland as the
victory against "Great Germany".
It
has also been referenced in Swiss Literary works such as Otto F. Walter ‘s
"Zeit des Fasans" (1988) and Ticino Giovanni Orelli’s "Il sogno
di Walaschek" (1991).
The
German Matti Lieske made the game the backdrop of a short story.
In
Walther Kauer's “Schachteltraum” (1974), the game of Paris is merged with a
friendly game against Germany from Apri1, 1941 to a fictitious game in the
middle of the 1930's.
Many
other figures within Swiss culture (living at the time), remember exactly what
they were doing when the match was played.
-Juan
Tuñas (February 1, 1917-April 4, 2011) was the last surviving member of Cuba’s
squad.
He
had moved to Mexico after the World Cup and remained in Mexico City after
retirement.
-Dutch East Indies’ Frans Alfred Meeng (January 18,
1910-September 18, 1944) was killed when the Japanese Cargo ship Jun’yo Maru
was torpedoed by the British submarine HMS Tradewind.
-Poland’s
Jerzy (Wilhelm) Piec (January 7 (or November 2), 1915-April 4, 1954) and
Ryszard Leon Piec (August 17, 1913-January 24, 1979) were brothers.
Switzerland’s
Georges Aeby
(September 21, 1913-December 15, 1999) and Paul Aeby (September 10, 1910-unknown) were brothers.
-After
the war, Poland’s Ernest Willimowski was regarded as a traitor by the new
Polish Communist Government. He was not allowed to visit Poland afterwards. He
would eventually settle in Karlsruhe.
During
the 1974 World Cup in West Germany, Willimowski had wanted to visit the Polish
squad but was refused permission by Polish Officials.
He
did however meet Poland’s manager Kazimierz Gorski in a hotel at Murrhardt
where Poland were based.
However,
Gorski was forced to greet him in a cold manner as he was being observed by a
Polish security agent.
Photo
From: IFFHS-Russia (1912-1920), Soviet Union (1923-1940),Polska (1921-1940),
Lietuva(1923-1940)
(Ernst Willimowski) |
-The
lives of many of Poland’s National Team were affected by the Second World War.
Gerard
Wodarz (August
10, 1913- November 8, 1982) signed the German Nationality List (Volksliste)
after the German Invasion and Occupation in 1939.
He
was mobilized by the German Army in 1941. He was captured in 1944 by the
American Army. He was transferred to the Polish Forces of the West.
Jan
Karol Wasiewicz (January 6, 1911-November 9, 1976) fought for Poland after the
German Invasion in 1939. He escaped to Hungary and eventually made his way to
England. He joined Poland’s Western Forces and fought later in the ‘1st Polish Infantry
Battalion’. He would move to England after the war and in 1949 to Argentina for
the rest of his life.
Fryderyk
Egon Scherfke (Szerfke) (September 7, 1909-September 15, 1983), as an ethnic
German, was mobilized by the German Army in 1940.
He was sent to the Eastern Front in 1943 and then to Yugoslavia,
where he was wounded in January 1945. He was captured by the British and then
released on July 25th, 1945. He settled in West Germany after his
release.
Leonard
Franciszek Piatek (Piontek) (October 3, 1913-July 1, 1967), as an ethnic German signed the German
Nationality List (Volksliste).
After
the war he changed his name to the Polish Piątek and returned to Poland.
Antoni
Andrzej Lyko (May 27, 1907-June 3, 1941) was arrested by the Gestapo and taken
to Auschwitz where he would be executed on June 3rd, 1941.
Erwin
Ginter (Edward Piotr) Nyc (May 24, 1914-May 1, 1988), as an ethnic German, was mobilized by the
German Army.
After
the War he returned to Poland. He was initially regarded as a traitor but many
players vouched for him that he had helped the Polish underground during the
War.
Poland
goalkeeper Edward
Madejski
(August 11, 1914-February 15, 1996) was not registered to any club during the
World Cup. He was banned by the Polish League due to a scandal related to his
transfer from Wisla Krakow to Gerbarnia Krakow.
During
the War he was involved in a number of illegal Soccer tournaments that had been
banned by the Germans. He was arrested by the Gestapo and was actually on death
row for some time.
In
1956, the Polish Communist Government would arrest him for espionage and sabotage.
He would be imprisoned for three years. After many years he would be
exonerated.
Józef
Franciszek Korbas (November 11, 1914-October 2, 1981) was arrested by the
Germans in 1942 and sent to Auschwitz and then to Sachsenhausen Concentration
Camp. He survived and then returned to Poland.
Boleslaw
Józef Habowski (September 13, 1914-May 21, 1979) was captured by the Soviets in
1939 and taken to Siberia. He would join the Polish Army in the Soviet Union in
1942. He would eventually make his way to England and settle there.
Wilhelm
Antoni Góra (January 18, 1916-May 21, 1975), as an ethnic German, signed the
German Nationality List (Volksliste).
He
was mobilized by the German Army and transferred to Italy, where he was
captured by the Allied Army. He would join the 2nd Corps of the
Polish Army.
He
remained in West Germany after the War.
Edmund
Giemza (Giemsa) (October 16, 1912-September 30, 1994) was mobilized by the
German Army. He deserted and fought for the French Resistance and eventually
joined the Polish Army. He settled in Britain after the War.
Photo
From: IFFHS-Russia (1912-1920), Soviet Union (1923-1940),Polska (1921-1940),
Lietuva(1923-1940)
(Edmund
Giemsa)
|
Edward
Dytko (October
18, 1914-June 13, 1993), as an ethnic German signed the German Nationality List (Volksliste). He
was mobilized by the German Army in 1942. He was captured by the American Army
in 1944. He returned to Poland after the War, but was initially regarded as a
traitor by the new Polish Communist Government.
He
was cleared after signing the declaration of loyalty to the Polish state.
Antoni
Gałecki (June
4, 1906-December 14, 1958) was captured by the Germans in the beginning of the
War. He escaped and made his way to Palestine and joined the Polish 2nd
Corps. He would fight in the war and afterwards return to Poland.
Photo
From: IFFHS-Russia (1912-1920), Soviet Union (1923-1940),Polska (1921-1940),
Lietuva(1923-1940)
(Antoni
Galecki)
|
-The
following players were also present during the 1930 World Cup:
Belgium: Arnold
Badjou, Bernard
Voorhoof
France: Etienne Mattler, Edmond Delfour,
Emile Veinante
Romania: Rudolf Burger, Nicolae Kovaci (aka Nicolae Kovacs), Ladislau Raffinsky
-The
following Managers were present in the 1934 Edition as well:
France: Gaston Barreau (Coach,
part of Technical Commission in 1934)
Holland: Robert
Glendenning
Italy: Vittorio Pozzo
Sweden: Manager Jozsef Nagy
-The following players appeared in the 1936 Berlin Olympics:
Germany: Fritz Buchloh, Josef
Gauchel, Ludwig Goldbrunner, Hans Jakob, Ernst Lehner, Reinhold Munzenberg,
Otto Siffling (on Stand by: Rudolf Gellesch, Paul Janes, Fritz Szepan)
Italy: Sergio Bertoni, Pietro
Rava, Alfredo Foni, Ugo Locatelli, Manager Vittorio Pozzo
Norway: Henry Johansen, Nils
Eriksen, Øivind Holmsen, Jorgen Juve, Rolf Holmberg, Sverre Hansen, Frithjof Ulleberg, Arne
Brustad, Odd Frantzen, Magnar Isaksen, Reidar Kvammen, Alf Martinsen and
Manager Asbjorn Halvorsen (on Stand by: Kristian Henriksen, Arne
Ileby)
Poland: Antoni Gałecki, Władysław
Szczepaniak, Edward Dytko, Wilhelm Antoni Góra, Jan
Karol Wasiewicz, Fryderyk Egon Scherfke (Szerfke), Gerard Wodarz and FA Captain: Józef Kałuża (on Stand by: Edward Dominik Jerzy Madejski, Jerzy (Wilhelm) Piec)
Sweden: Gustav Sjöberg, Karl-Erik Grahnm, Sven
Jonasson and Erik Persson (on Stand by: Erik Almgren)
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