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Football at the 1920 Summer Olympics – final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Football match
1920 Summer Olympic Final
Olympisch Stadion inAntwerp hosted the final
EventFootball at the 1920 Summer Olympics
BelgiumCzechoslovakia
BelgiumCzechoslovakia
20
Awarded
Date2 September 1920 (1920-09-02)
VenueOlympisch Stadion,Antwerp
RefereeJohn Lewis (England)
Attendance35,000
1912
1924

The1920 Summer Olympic football gold medal match was a football match to determine the gold medal winners of men's football tournament at the1920 Summer Olympics. The match was the third final of the men's football tournament at the Olympics, a quadrennial tournament contested by the men's national teams of the member associations ofFIFA to decide the Olympic champions.

The final sawBelgium, the tournament's hosting team, playCzechoslovakia at theOlympisch Stadion inAntwerp, Belgium, on 2 September 1920.

The match is infamous for being abandoned in the 39th minute when Czechoslovakia walked off to protest the officiating after left-backKarel Steiner was sent off by English refereeJohn Lewis for assaulting Belgian strikerRobert Coppée.[1] Belgium were declared Olympic champions, and Czechoslovakia were ejected from the competition.[1]

Background

[edit]

The 1920 Olympic Games in general symbolised the return to peace after Belgium was under German occupation for four years during theFirst World War.[2] The 1920 Games held the first Olympiads to be played since1912 inStockholm, as the1916 edition scheduled forBerlin was cancelled due to the war.[2] Antwerp was awarded the Olympics unanimously in April 1919 inLausanne, as it was the emblem of Belgian resistance during theGerman invasion of the country in 1914.[2]

The defeated powers of the First World War -Germany,Austria,Hungary, theOttoman Empire andBulgaria - were all barred from attending the Games.[2]

Route to the final

[edit]
BelgiumRoundCzechoslovakia
OpponentResultMain tournamentOpponentResult
ByeFirst round Kingdom of SCS7–0
 Spain3–5Quarter-finals Norway4–0
 Netherlands3–0Semifinals France4–1

Belgium received a bye in the first round. In the quarter-finals, they defeatedSpain 3–1 with aRobert Coppée hat-trick.[1] In the semifinals, Belgium beat archrivals theNetherlands 3–0 with goals fromHenri Larnoe,Louis Van Hege andMathieu Bragard.

Czechoslovkia had to play the first round, in which they vanquished 7–0 theKingdom of SCS, and in the quarter-finals beatNorway 4–0.[1] In the semi-finals, courtesy of three goals in the last 15 minutes of the match, they defeated France 4–1.[1]

Match

[edit]
Belgium 2–0
Awarded
 Czechoslovakia
Coppée 6' (pen.)
Larnoe 30'
Report
Attendance: 35,000
Referee:John Lewis (GBR)
Belgium
Czechoslovakia
GKJean De Bie
RBArmand Swartenbroeks
LBOscar Verbeeck
RHJoseph Musch
CHEmile Hanse (c)
LHAndre Fierens
ORLouis Van Hege
IRRobert Coppée
CFMathieu Bragard
ILHenri Larnoe
OLDesire Bastin
GKRudolf Klapka
RBAntonin Hojer
LBKarel Steiner
RHFrantišek Kolenatý
CHKarel Pesek (c)
LHEmil Seifert
ORJosef Sedláček
IRAntonin Janda
CFVáclav Pilát
ILJan Vaník
OLOtakar Mazal

Belgian strikerRobert Coppée opens the scoring of the final, with a penalty kick against goalkeeperRudolf Klapka

The match between the two finalists was played on 2 September 1920 and was seen by 35,000 people.[1] L'Auto's report of the following day read: "The stadium was full to bursting an hour before the match. The ticket desks were closed and a very large crowd waited in vain outside the gates" and estimated an attendance of 50,000 spectators at the Olympisch Stadion.[1] As the stadium was overfull, its gates had to be shut down, and thousands of people could not access.[3] The environment with which the match began was described as "boiling".[4] Belgium resisted to the first Czechoslovaks attacks and at the sixth minute of play, the referee awarded a penalty to the Belgians for handball;Robert Coppée gave Belgium the lead.[1] The decision of 65-year old English refereeJohn Lewis to assign the penalty followed a strong protest by the Czechoslovaks because of an earlier foul on goalkeeperRudolf Klapka.[3] The game saw many fouls committed and the referee was described as "not up to the game."[3] In the 30th minute,Henri Larnoe made it 2–0.[1]

In the 39th minute, Czechoslovakia left backKarel Steiner was sent off by Lewis for assaulting Coppèe.[4] Czech captainKarel Pešek promptly followed Steiner off the pitch in disgust, which led the other nine Czech players to walk off as well.[3]

Aftermath

[edit]

After the match was abandoned, celebrating Belgian spectators invaded the pitch and mocked the Czech players: the Belgian military situated inside the stadium barely managed to get the Czechs out safely.[3] The Czechs requested the match be called off,[1] but Belgium were declared winners, and Czechoslovkia were ejected from the competition.[1]

The Czechoslovaks' behaviour was condemned by theInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) as unsporting.[1] ThreeFIFA investigators were sent to report on what had happened, but the IOC's decision was confirmed.[3]

To assign the silver and bronze medals, the IOC had decided that a knockout tournament would be played between the four teams beaten in the quarter-finals, and the winner of that tournament would play off in the semi-finals with the teams beaten in the main tournament by the gold medalists (Belgium), with the winners of these matches playing off for the medals.[3] However, as Czechoslovakia had been ejected from the competition and Belgium had a first-round bye, the semi-finals were scratched, withSpain (the winner of the beaten quarter-finalists tournament) and theNetherlands (who had been beaten by Belgium in their semi-final) playing off for the silver and bronze medals.[3][4]

Spain prevailed 3–1 over the Netherlands to win the silver medal, while theOranje won their third consecutive bronze medal.[1]

As of 2024, Belgium's 1920 Olympic gold medal still remains their only major trophy.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklm"The "Red Devils" at the top of world football at Antwerp 1920".International Olympic Committee. 30 March 2021. Retrieved23 June 2023.
  2. ^abcdTrouillard, Stéphanie (18 August 2020)."JO-1920 : à Anvers, les Jeux olympiques de la paix".France 24 (in French). Retrieved22 June 2023.
  3. ^abcdefghi"IFFHS (Fußball Historie & Statistiken)".IFFHS (in English, Spanish, German, and French). 2020-04-10. Archived fromthe original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved23 June 2023.
  4. ^abcAudureau, William (8 July 2018)."Quand la Belgique remportait l'ancêtre de la Coupe du monde".Le Monde. Archived from the original on 23 December 2020. Retrieved25 June 2023.
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