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Football at the 1924 Summer Olympics

Football at the 1924 Summer Olympics was the sixth edition of the football tournament at the Summer Olympic Games held in Paris.

The tournament expanded to 22 countries from four confederations for the first time, with African side Egypt (as was the case in the previous edition), Turkey which is partly in Asia, Uruguay representing South America and the United States representing North America.

Uruguay made a memorable debut, going undefeated and winning the gold medal. This earned them the first of the four stars above their crest.[1][2][3]

Venues

Amateur status

In 1921, the Belgium Football Association first allowed for payments to players for time lost from work; in the months that followed four other Associations (Switzerland and Italy amongst them) permitted similar subsidies. The Football Association, perhaps, with foresight considered their statement of 1884 to be one which FIFA should hereafter follow. They had stated: "Any player registered with this Association ... receiving remuneration ... of any sort above ... necessary expenses actually paid, shall be considered to be a professional."[4]

In 1923 the four British Associations sought an assurance that FIFA accept this definition; the four FIFA representatives on the International Football Association Board refused and, consequently, both the United Kingdom and Denmark withdrew their footballers from representing their nations at the 1924 Olympic Games.[5]

Entries

In Association Football (1960), Bernard Joy wrote about the 1912 Games that the authorities in Sweden "had debated for a long time whether to include football ... because its popularity was not yet world wide". Twelve years later, in Paris, football had become so important to the Games that a 1/3 of the income generated came from football. In terms of international development these Games signalled the first participation in a major Championship of a team from South America, a continent which would provide the main competition to Europe from that moment on.

The Uruguay team had won the Sudamericano one year before the Games

In Paris, Uruguay, who had paid their third class passage to Paris and gone on a successful tour of Spain beforehand,[6] would join as many as 18 European teams; the United States, Turkey and Egypt.

The Uruguayans had won the 1923 Sudamericano by maximum points in the December of the previous year to qualify for the tournament as their continent's sole participants; defeating rivals Argentina 2–0 in the final game in which Pedro Petrone scored halfway through the first half. Joy wrote: "A doctor and a physical expert were as important elements of the staff as the coach himself. They saw to it that their charges reached perfect physical condition. They were kept that way by staying away from the attractions of Paris at a villa in the quiet village of Argenteuil". In Paris Jose Leandro Andrade would be dubbed La Merveille Noire.[6] Despite this little was known about them; they had never played outside South America and their international experience had mainly been spent travelling across the harbour from Buenos Aires to Montevideo.[7]

Italy, having remained unbeaten since 1922, found themselves beaten 4–0 by an early incantation of Hugo Meisl's Wunderteam (who would absent themselves from the Games).[8]With just six weeks to go before the Games Italy had been walloped 7–1 by Hungary).[9] Other than dropping Giampiero Combi, Vittorio Pozzo would not make major changes; Italy would not prevail.[9] The same policy was adopted by Kingdom of SCS. Rather than considering dropping players, they had sacked their manager Veljko Ugrinić instead (following a 4–1 defeat by those Austrians in Zagreb) but would find his replacement Todor Sekulić just as hapless.[10]

The Hungarians had just come off a good run of results in the previous year, but had been beaten by the Swiss in the days leading up to the Games; Max Abegglen, who had only been playing international football for two years, scoring his 7th international goal that day for the Swiss.[11] The Swiss had been on the verge of withdrawing from the Games due to their continued success. The team's train ticket was valid for only 10 days and their money had run out. An appeal by a newspaper, Sport, brought in the needed funds.[12]

Entering for the second time Egypt caused a surprise defeat in their opening game.[13] Both finalists from the previous Games were present; Belgium being afforded a bye into the first round; the Czechs drawn against Turkey in the preliminary round.

Final tournament

The Kingdom of SCS side had a poor showing

The Games competition was assisted by a Preliminary Round which featured the silver-medallists from the 1920 Games, Spain in a game with Italy. Since that time Spain had only lost once and that by a single goal away to Belgium and had drawn 0–0 with the Italians in March 1924.[14] There was hardly anything between themselves and Italy when they met, this time, at the Colombes Stadium; Pedro Vallana's own goal handing victory to Italy.

Hungary put five past Poland, the Swiss sent Lithuania on their way, 9–0. The Uruguayans played first-rate football, combining speed, skill and perfect ball-control. By marrying short passing to intelligent positional play, they made the ball do all the work, and so kept their opponents on the run wrote Joy. The Uruguayans sailed past Kingdom of SCS by seven clear goals, then overcame the United States by three goals to nil.

The French squad, eliminated by Uruguay

In the first round Czechoslovakia (following their decision to walk off the field in 1920) faced Switzerland and the game went into extra-time. One Czech was sent off, and the Norwegian referee had to call for order during a break. For the replay, Abegllen took the captain's duties and all was different; Switzerland winning by the single goal. Otherwise there were two surprises, the first went Egypt's way; 3–0 to the good against Hungary. The second saw Sweden defeat the reigning gold-medallists, Belgium 8–1. Oscar Verbeeck's own goal set the Swedes on their way; Sven Rydell's hat-trick the feature of the match. The Swedish outside-left Rudolf Kock (who would become chairman of the selectors in 1948 working alongside George Raynor), would have another fine game against Egypt where Sweden won 5–0. France and Holland had been similarly dominant in the first round, but Uruguay beat France 5–1 to claim a semi-final place.

The Netherlands were defeated by Uruguay at the semifinal stage

In another quarter-final Italy went out to Switzerland disputing a winner by Max Abegglen, who converted a break-away goal. The Italians protested that he had been off-side. The referee Johannes Mutters, refused to alter the decision of his linesman; a jury upheld the judgement. There was further dispute in the semi-final where Holland (coached by the former Blackburn Rovers' player William Townley) took a first half lead against Uruguay through Feyenoord's Kees Pijl. With twenty minutes to go Pedro Cea scored an equaliser and with less than ten Georges Vallat, the French referee, awarded Uruguay a penalty. FIFA reported that "the Netherlands protested the ruling of a penalty kick that turned out to be the winning goal but then Uruguay protested against the Olympic Committee's selection of a Dutch referee for the final. To appease the South Americans, the committee pulled the name of a final referee out of a hat and picked out a Frenchman, Marcel Slawick".[15] In the other semi-final between Switzerland and Sweden the Swiss prevailed.

In the final the Swiss were defeated by the Uruguayans whose two goals in the second half put paid to their opponent's ambitions, Uruguay eventually prevailing 3–0. Interest in the final had been considerable, such was the draw of the Uruguayan side; 60,000 watched and 10,000 were locked out.[16]

First round

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 18,991
Referee: Marcel Slawik (FRA)

Stade Bergeyre, Paris
Attendance: 4,344
Referee: P. Chr. Andersen (NOR)

Stade Pershing, Vincennes
Attendance: 8,110
Referee: Antonio Scamoni (ITA)

Stade Pershing, Vincennes
Attendance: 8,110
Referee: Paul Putz (BEL)

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 3,025
Referee: Georges Vallat (FRA)

Stade Bergeyre, Paris
Attendance: 3,578
Referee: Johannes Mutters (NED)

Second round

Stade de Paris
Attendance: 5,145
Referee: Henri Christophe (BEL)

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 1,840
Referee: Felix Herren (SUI)

Stade Bergeyre
Attendance: 9,157
Referee: P. Chr. Andersen (NOR)
Stade Bergeyre
Attendance: 5,673
Referee: Marcel Slawik (FRA)

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 1,659
Referee: Henri Henriot (FRA)

Stade Pershing
Attendance: 4,254
Referee: Olivier De Ricard (FRA)

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 8,532
Referee: Heinrich Retschury (AUT)

Stade de Paris
Attendance: 4,371
Referee: Luis Colina (ESP)

Stade Bergeyre
Attendance: 10,455
Referee: Charles Barette (BEL)

Quarter-finals

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 30,868
Referee: P. Chr. Andersen (NOR)

Stade Pershing
Attendance: 6,484
Referee: Henri Christophe (BEL)

Stade Bergeyre
Attendance: 8,359
Referee: Johannes Mutters (NED)

Stade de Paris
Attendance: 1,506
Referee: Heinrich Retschury (AUT)

Semi-finals

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 7,448
Referee: Mihaly Ivancsics (HUN)

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 7,088
Referee: Georges Vallat (FRA)

Bronze medal match

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 9,915
Referee: Heinrich Retschury (AUT)

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 40,522
Referee: Youssuf Mohamed (EGY)

Gold medal match

Stade Olympique, Colombes
Attendance: 40,522
Referee: Marcel Slawik (France)

Bracket

Final ranking

As per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.

Source: [citation needed]

Medalists

The Uruguayan team that won its first Gold Medal

Goalscorers

Uruguayan Pedro Petrone, topscorer with 7 goals
7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Own goals

Trivia

References

  1. ^ Olympic football tournament - Paris on FIFA.com
  2. ^ "60,000 SEE URUGUAY WIN IN SOCCER FINAL - Record Olympic Crowd Present as South Americans Beat Switzerland, 3 to 0. THOUSANDS TURNED AWAY Colombes Stadium Filled to Capacity and Women Famt in Crush Outside of Gates. CONTEST IS HARD FOUGHT Swiss Play Courageously, but Defense Breaks In Second Half Before Brilliant Attack". The New York Times. 10 June 1924. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
  3. ^ "Football at the 1924 Paris Summer Games". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  4. ^ Ruegg, Alfred Henry; Knocker, Douglas (1915). Butterworth's Workmen's Compensation Cases: New series. Butterworth. pp. 54–55 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Michael Lewis. "Henry Farrell, the man who helped the US soccer team make Olympic history | Football". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
  6. ^ a b "Uruguay 1930 | Four Four Two | BIG READ". Archived from the original on 19 August 2007. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  7. ^ Tabeira, Martin, "Uruguay - International Results", RSSSF, retrieved 25 May 2008
  8. ^ Kutschera, Ambrosius, Länderspiele Österreich 1920-1929 (in German), austriasoccer.at, retrieved 25 May 2008
  9. ^ a b Mariani, Maurizio, "Italy - International Matches 1920-1929", RSSSF, retrieved 25 May 2008
  10. ^ Miladinovich, Misha, "Yugoslavia National Team List of Results 1920-1929", RSSSF, retrieved 25 May 2008
  11. ^ Garin, Erik, "Switzerland - International Matches since 1905", RSSSF, retrieved 25 May 2008
  12. ^ Paris, 1924, fifa.com, archived from the original on 15 June 2010, retrieved 25 May 2008
  13. ^ Said, Tarek, Egyptian International First Team Results Since 1920, egyptianfootball.net, archived from the original on 3 October 1999, retrieved 25 May 2008
  14. ^ Tejedor Carnicero, José Vicente; Torre, Raúl; Di Maggio, Roberto, "Spain - List of Results National Team", RSSSF, retrieved 18 June 2008
  15. ^ Paris, 1924, fifa.com, archived from the original on 15 June 2010, retrieved 18 June 2008
  16. ^ "Olympics | Rio 2016 Schedule, Medals, Results & News". Olympic.org. Retrieved 18 August 2016.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ World Football Elo Ratings: Biggest Upsets, eloratings.net, archived from the original on 24 June 2008, retrieved 18 June 2008