GoaACulAndSocHisOfModFoo PDF
GoaACulAndSocHisOfModFoo PDF
l
History of Modern
a !
Football
1| Introduction 1
11 | Conclusion: Autonomy
and Context 295
Bibliography
297
Index
337
v
Preface to the English
Edition
This book was first published in German in 2002, after many of the argu-
ments presented here had been discussed extensively with students in
a course we jointly taught at the University of Zurich during the win-
ter term 19992000. In view of the scholarly and popular reception the
German edition received, we were delighted when the Catholic Univer-
sity of America Press asked if we would be interested in working on an
English translation. The text, however, had to be thoroughly revised and
updated for two reasons: on the one hand, the cultural and social his-
tory of football during the past decade has continued, with many of the
trends we described in the 2002 editionsuch as the commercialization
and the increasing role of the media as well as criticism against ithav-
ing accelerated, while others, such as the tendency toward more gender
equality, are still rather sluggish. On the other hand, academic research
into the history of football, whose limitations we lamented in the 2002
edition, has become a rapidly expanding, legitimate avenue for academic
enquiry. Even outside the United Kingdom, it has become fashionable
for academic historians to work on this topic. This development has
resulted in a number of scholarly conferences and a multitude of new
publications. As a consequence, it is now quite challenging to keep up
with the multifarious ongoing debates in the field. In view of this trend
toward specialization, the need for syntheses appears even more urgent.
Therefore, we are delighted to be able to present our book to an English-
language audience.
vii
1|Introduction
In 1901 a thoughtful observer of city life in Glasgow wrote that the best
thing about football was that it gave workers something to talk about.1
Football is fundamentally about communication. It provides the context
for energetic debates about the proper strategies that the coach of the
home team should pursue, wistful memories of a past golden age, as well
as apocalyptic visions of decline in the next season. However, discus-
sions about football do not take place in a vacuum. Rather, these conver-
sations are deeply imbedded in their societal context. In Glasgow, for ex-
ample, the rivalry between Celtic and the Rangers reflects the religious
and ethnic conflict between Protestants and Irish Catholics. In other
places there are social, regional, or ideological conflicts. Games between
countries can become issues of national honor, as is demonstrated by
the eruption of emotion in the Islamic Republic of Iran following a vic-
tory over the United States of America in the World Cup in 1998. On
the other hand, identity-creating conversations about football can also
paper over societal fault lines because they produce loyalties that are not
based on social conditions or ideological convictions.
In this context, it is not surprising that the French writer and exis-
tentialist philosopher Albert Camus, who was a goalkeeper in his youth
on the team Racing Universitaire dAlger and a lifelong supporter of Rac-
ing Paris,2 would write that everything he knew about human morality
was due to football. This would be reason enough, one would think, for
the historical discipline to investigate the most important pasttime in
the world. British social history has been engaged in this topic for more
than a (scholarly) generation. Since the 1970s, British scholars have in-
1. James Hamilton Muir, Glasgow in 1901 (Glasgow: White Cockade, 2001), 193.
2. See Patrick McCarthy, Camus: A Critical Study of his Life and Work (London: Hamilton,
1982), 17 and 112.
1
Introduction
3. For a synthesis of the scholarship, see Richard Holt, Sport and the British: A Modern His-
tory (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989).
4. See Pascal Delhaye (ed.), Making Sport History: Disciplines, Identities and the Historiogra-
phy of Sport (London: Routledge, 2014).
5. For older scholarship, see An Annotated Bibliography of Latin American Sport: Pre-Conquest
to the Present, ed. Joseph Arbena (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1989). For newer schol-
arship, see, for example, Edoardo P. Archetti, In Search of National Identity: Argentinian Foot-
ball and Europe, International Journal of the History of Sport 12 (1995): 20119; Archetti, Playing
Styles and Masculine Virtues in Argentine Football, in Machos, Mistresses, Madonnas: Contesting
the Power of Latin American Gender Imagery, eds. Marit Melhuus and Anne Stlen (London: Verso,
1996), 3455; Sport and Society in Latin America, ed. Joseph Arbena (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood
Press, 1988); Osvaldo Bayer, Ftbol argentine (Buenos Aires: Editorial Sudamericana, 1990); Leon-
ardo Affonso de Miranda Pereira, Uma historia social do futebol no Rio de Janeiro, 19021938 (Rio
de Janeiro: Nova Fronteira, 2000); and Ronaldo Csar de Oliveira Silva, Uma caixinha de surpre-
sas: Apropriao do futebol pelas classes populares (19001930) (Londrina: Editora UEL, 1998). For
a brief sketch, see William Rowe and Vivian Schelling, Memory and Modernity: Popular Culture in
Latin America (London: Verso, 1991), 13842.
6. See Eva Apraku and Markus Hesselmann, Schwarze Sterne und Pharaonen: Der Aufstieg des
afrikanischen Fussballs (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 1998); Paul Darby, Africa, Football, and FIFA: Politics,
Colonialism, and Resistance (London: Taylor & Francis, 2001); and Peter C. Alegi, Keep Your Eyes on
the Ball: A Social History of Soccer in South Africa, 19101976, PhD diss. Boston University, 2000.
Introduction
7. Clifford Geertz, Dichte Beschreibung: Beitrge zum Verstehen kultureller Systeme (Frank-
furt: Suhrkamp, 1997), 9. A similar definition of culture is found in Jrgen Kocka, Sozialgeschich-
te: Begriff-Entwicklung-Probleme (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1986), 133; Hans Medick,
Missionare im Ruderboot? Ethnologische Erkenntnisweisen als Herausforderung an die Sozial-
geschichte, Geschichte und Gesellschaft 10 (1984): 309; and Umberto Eco, Zeichen: Segno (Milan:
ISEDI, 1973).
8. Dieter Hildebrand, ber die Bundesliga: Die verkaufte Haut oder Ein Leben im Trainingsan-
zug (Frankfurt: Ullstein, 1981), 122.
Introduction
If you ask a couple of thousand people what comes to mind when they think of
Liverpool, is it the Beatles or Kevin Keegan? Is there a wall in Berlin or Hertha
BSC? What came first in Turin, Fiat or Juventus? What does a West German
think of when it comes to the GDR? Honecker, Biermann, Bahro? Or do they fo-
4 | cus on Sparwasser? Sparwasser shot that damned goal against us when the badly
paid football players from the GDR won 10 against the well-paid (fatally high)
football players of the Federal Republic. They stick to Sparwasser. Bonn? Bonn
does not have a team any more, but Cologne is right next door, and Cologne has
already won two national championships.
It was only a small step from identifying with the local club to iden-
tifying with the national team.9 The connection between nationalism
and football is a worldwide success story. The game is well suited to the
confirmation of stereotypes. This is true with regard both to self-image
and to the image of others. What politically correct reader has not been
caught ranting about the will to win of the Germans? Who has not won-
dered at the tackling of the unlucky Scots? On the other hand, the Ital-
ian winger rolls about after a supposed foul like a tenor in a Verdi opera,
while his colleague on defense, like Baldassare Castigliones Hoffmann,
does not show the slightest emotion when he breaks free following a
nutmeg. Do the Brazilian fans not take pleasure in the agility of their
players as contrasted with the blocky Britons? Do the Italians not take
pleasure in the fare bella figura of their favorites?
An important reason for the success of football is its tight integra-
tion into trans-regional competition. Fans quickly recall this or that
noteworthy cup final. Newspapers are quick to report on the sensational
hat trick of the middle forward in the last international match. Certain
football games are actual sites of memory (Pierre Nora). Deeply an-
chored in popular cultural memory, they are enriched with myths and
become legendary and intangible.10 Football can create identities. It is a
religion awaiting its saints and villains, offering a forum for rituals and
ceremonies. A match can take an unbelievable turn, and decades later
fans will still be clapping in rhythm. This is the case, for example, with
9. See also Doppelpsse: Fussball und Politik, ed. Norbert Seitz (Frankfurt: Eichborn, 1997).
10. For a discussion of the concept of sites of memory, see Les lieux de mmoire, ed. Pierre
Nora (7 vols.) (Paris: Gallimard, 198492); and Nora, Das Abenteuer der Lieux de mmoire, in
Nation und Emotion: Deutschland und Frankreich im Vergleich, 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, eds. Etienne
Franois et al. (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1995), 8392.
Introduction
Rapid Vienna and the quarter hour of the turn, the Rapid quarter hour.
A calendar with yearly high points, with preferences for Easter or Whit
Monday, provides for the weekly grind and periodic happiness. Favorites
fall. The ball found its way into the net via the back of a head or rather
the hand of God. After an important victory, the players, just like he- |5
roes, make their way toward the galleries, accompanied by lofty music,
for a victory ceremony. The media played and play an important role in
the development of this knowledge of the past that is quite exceptional,
particularly in comparison to what people know about politics. From a
very early stage, journalists and reporters utilized a quasi-religious lan-
guage: Toni Turek, football god. Television, in particular, recalls previ-
ous glorious moments in football history leading up to the World Cup.
After every tournament, montages comprising ebullient celebrations of
goals and the desolation following missed penalty shots are standard
fare on every television broadcast and every illustrated magazine.
In view of the almost continuously triumphant advance of the sport
of football, it is necessary to explain the spaces that are empty of foot-
ball. From the perspective of football, the most important empty space
is the other half of humanity, that is women. Certainly, in Britain,
womens football did experience rapid growth in the period immediate-
ly after the First World War. Benefit matches with womens and mixed
teams attracted large audiences. However, these games could not escape
the sense of being exotic, and even unserious, and consequently the
Football Association issued a general prohibition on womens football
in 1921. Womens football faced prohibitions, discrimination, hostility,
and condemnation in other nations as well. This situation only began to
change slowly at the end of the twentieth century.
The United States represents a second important empty space. Here,
soccer has had very limited opportunities. The most beloved game in
the world still has not achieved complete breakthrough as a commercial
magnet for the public. The traditional advantage of competitive sports
such as American football, baseball, ice hockey, and basketball played an
important role in its failure. The fact that womens football faced com-
paratively limited opposition in the United States is closely connected to
the fact that other sports provided an outlet for masculine heroic identi-
fication, though there were also other cultural factors in play.
Introduction
11. With regard to the sociological concept of distinction, see Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction:
A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1987).
Introduction
that this account also frequently deals with political matters as well. The
following chapters follow the establishment of modern football from the
adoption of the older and wilder folk game in English elite schools to its
regulation and institutionalization in clubs and federations through its
development as a worldwide game. Concomitantly, we will investigate |7
the conditions that made it possible for football to become the peoples
game and conversely also ask what functions the game fulfilled in the
popular culture of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries after it
had achieved this position. The fourth chapter concerns the commercial-
ization of the game from payment of modest compensation to players
from the working class and the beginning of entry fees in the last quar-
ter of the nineteenth century to the transformation of football clubs
into thoroughly commercialized entertainment companies that thrive
through the marketing of television rights and are traded on stock mar-
kets at the beginning of the third millennium. The fifth chapter is fo-
cused on the emotional side of football through the prism of selected
football personalities. Following upon this, the next four chapters inves-
tigate the extent to which the emotional side of football played a role in
political contexts whether through the more or less incidental interplay
of political and sporting event, to the conscious use of football for pro-
pagandistic purposes. The tenth chapter focuses, finally, on the question
of why football up to the present largely remains the domain of the male
half of humanity.
2|A Game for the
Elite
8
A Game for the Elite
as art for the sake of art of the body. Sport maintained certain pat-
terns of movement from the traditional games but separated them from
their traditional social and religious functions and rationalized them
with a set of rules.
In light of this background, the development of modern football |9
can be understood as exemplary of all of modern sport. This transforma-
tion essentially took place in four steps.3 At the beginning there was the
older, wild folk football, which can be traced back to the high medieval
period on the British isles (as well as in northern France, with the name
soule).4 It is sometimes argued that this folk football is based upon the
Roman ballgame harpastum (which was itself borrowed from the Greeks)
that was supposedly brought to Britain by legionaries. However, this
kind of continuity cannot be proved. The old form of football had very
little in common with modern football. There were no codified rules, and
there was no limitation on the playing field, the number of players, or
the length of the game. Playing fields sometimes comprised the entire
city (with the city gates serving as goals) or fields, meadows, and woods
between two villages. In Ashbourne, in the county of Derbyshire, two
millstones, located many kilometers apart, had to be touched by the ball,
which was an air-filled animal bladder.5 The competitors in these games
often included entire villages, city neighborhoods, or parishes, who used
the games to conduct their neighborly rivalries. As a rule, the competi-
tors in the games were men from the lower classes, such as farmers and
craft apprentices. The games were often played during festivals and
church holidays. Between 500 and 1000, players from the parishes of All
Saints and St. Peters in Derby traditionally faced each other on Shrove
Tuesday. The same day, two city teams faced off in Ashbourne.
There is a legend that in Derby the game dates back to antiquity.
und Sozialgeschichte einer populren Sportart, 1218; Dunning and Norbert Elias, Volkstmliche
Fussballspiele im mittelalterlichen und frhneuzeitlichen England, in Sport im Zivilisationsproz-
ess: Studien zur Figurationssoziologie, ed. Wilhelm Hopf (Mnster: Lit, 1982), 85104; and Fabian
Brndle, Great Inconvenience: Zum traditionellen britischen Volksfussball und dessen Vari-
anten, Sportzeiten 8, no. 3 (2008): 5777.
3. The periodization is adapted from Eric Dunning, The Development of Modern Football,
in The Sociology of Sport: A Selection of Readings, ed. Eric Dunning (London: Cass, 1976), 13351.
4. See Stemmler, Kleine Geschichte, 2831. The oldest source for this game dates from 1137.
5. Desmond Morris, Das Spiel: Faszination und Ritual des Fussballs (Munich-Zurich: Dro-
emer Knaur, 1981), 100.
A Game for the Elite
According to the legend, the game has its origins in a victory of the in-
habitants of Derventio over a Roman military unit in 217 A.D.6 In Corn-
wall, people played the game of hurling, which is related to football, dur-
ing weddings, with the guests on one side and the locals on the other.7
10 | Because of its rough nature, the game continually led to injuries, and in
some cases to fatalities as well. As a consequence, football was banned,
for the first time, by King Edward II in 1314. The fact that a new ban
was issued every few years into the seventeenth century demonstrates
that folk football continued to be played up through the beginning of
the modern period.8 However, by the mid-nineteenth century, the game
was largely nonexistent. The multistage process of enclosure, the fenc-
ing in of waste and common land,9 industrialization and urbanization,
as well as regulatory repression almost caused the rural folk football to
disappear. It is only in the context of folkloric gatherings that the tradi-
tional game has been kept alive in a few preserves. An example of this is
Shrovetide football which is played annually under the name of De Olde
Game on Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday in Ashbourne between
the Upards and the Downards representing those who were born north
and south of the river Henmore, which is part of the playing field. Other
examples include the Wall and Field game in Eton and Bottle Kicking in
Hallaton where the locals are accustomed to measure themselves against
outsiders.10
From about 1750, forms of folk football were adopted by the elite
public schools and practiced in a more or less civilized manner. Between
1840 and 1860, the game received fixed rules, which were written down,
in part, in the various schools. Finally two different sports emerged be-
cause of conflicts about the different sets of rules: Association Football
and Rugby Union Football. Football then spread between 1850 and 1890.
The game swept out of the gates of the elite schools back to the people
6. Philipp Heinecken, Das Fussballspiel: Association und Rugby (Hannover, 1898, reprinted
Hannover: Schfer, 1993), 11.
7. Elias, Fussballspiele, 94100.
8. Ibid., 87.
9. These factors are stressed by Christiane Eisenberg, English sports und deutsche Brger:
Eine Gesellschaftsgeschichte 18001939 (Paderborn: Schningh, 1999), 39.
10. See Hugh Hornby, Uppies and Downies: The Extraordinary Football Games of Britain
(Berkshire: English Heritage, 2008).
A Game for the Elite
11. With regard to the history of the body during the long nineteenth century see, for ex-
ample, Philipp Sarasin, Reizbare Maschinen: Eine Geschichte des Krpers 17651914 (Frankfurt:
Suhrkamp, 2001).
12. The following material is largely derived from Holt, Sport and the British, 8698.
A Game for the Elite
13. See the following books by Herbert SpencerEducation: Intellectual. Moral and Physical
(London, 1861); The Principles of Biology (2 vols.) (London, 186467); The Principles of Psychology
(2 vols.) (London, 187072); The Study of Sociology (London, 1874); First Principles (London, 1875);
The Principles of Sociology (3 vols.) (London: 187696); The Data of Ethics (2 vols.) (London, 1879);
and The Principles of Ethics (London, 189293).
A Game for the Elite
of those that were maladapted. The role of the state, in this conceptual
model, was limited to supporting and securing the process of develop-
ment through appropriate laws. The greatest good for the greatest num-
ber could be achieved through liberal reforms and a policy of laissez-faire
as Adam Smith (172390) had called for in 1776 in his classic work on the |13
national economy, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Nations.14 In his work On the Origin of Species, published in 1859, the nat-
ural scientist Charles Darwin (180982) advanced the so-called theory of
evolution, according to which the principles of evolution played a role in
the types of variation, heredity, and surplus production of progeny.15 This
led from the struggle for existence to survival of the fittest, that is,
to the selection of stronger and more viable individuals and types. This
model was quickly translated to human societies (social Darwinism).
Here too, the idea developed that there was a war of survival among indi-
viduals, nations, and races, in which only the strongest would survive.
The spirit of competition that was taking hold among the elite as a
result of these theories strongly encouraged the development of modern
sports, in general, and of football, in particular. The game seemed to em-
body regulated competition within human society, and therefore an ide-
al means of preparing students in boarding schools for life outside. For
example, one could read in 1893 in the journal The Nineteenth Century:
Surely, whatever tends to quicken the circulation, to raise the spirits, and to pu-
rify the blood is, ipso facto, a moral agent. This is so to all ages, but it is more es-
pecially the case during the age of boyhood. It is an incalculable blessing to this
country that such a sport is so enthusiastically beloved by almost all part of our
boyhood whom Nature has endowed with strong passions and overflowing ener-
gies. Its mere existence and the practical lessons which it preaches are worth all
the books that have been written on youthful purity. I can say for myself that,
under the circumstances of the luxurious and self-indulgent habits in which
boys are increasingly brought up at home, the constant panic lest they should
suffer any pain, the absence of apprehension lest their moral and physical fiber
should become feeble by disuse, and the tendency of the examination system to
make the development of character a secondary consideration, I would not care
14. Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations [1776], eds.
R. H. Campbell and A. S. Skinner (Indianapolis, Ind.: Liberty Fund, 1981).
15. Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species [1859], eds. Paul H. Barret and R. B. Freeman
(London: Freeman, 1988).
A Game for the Elite
to face the responsibility of conducting a school were there not rooted in it, as I
hope, an imperishable tradition, an enthusiastic love of football.16
Public schools, some of which had been founded during the medi-
eval era, originally were established as private institutions to provide
14 |
talented children from the bourgeoisie with a good education. Beginning
in the eighteenth century, however, most of the students were the off-
spring of the higher and lower nobility. From around 1780, they were ex-
clusively upper-class institutions. One result of this transition was that
the authority of the faculty over their students was severely weakened.
As a rule, the teachers were of substantially lower social status than
their students, and were financially dependent on the tuition paid by the
students and their parents. Between 1728 and 1832 there were no fewer
than twenty-two student rebellions in the public schools. The school at
Winchester, alone, witnessed six uprisings between 1770 and 1818. In
1797, it was even necessary to bring troops into the school at Rugby in
order to compel the rebellious students to accept reason.17
In parallel with the hierarchy of students and teachers, there was an
often countervailing system of student self-administration, in which the
older and stronger students exercised domination over the younger and
weaker students, largely through physical violence. In the second half of
the eighteenth century, it was the dominant students who introduced
the game of football, often against the will of the teachers. The game
played an important role in establishing and reinforcing the pecking or-
der among the students. The younger students often played on defense
while the prestigious offensive role remained the preserve of the older
students.18 Around 1800, there were a number of similar games in the
public schools, though they were a long way from being standardized.
The advance of industrialization brought with it a conflict for power
between the old aristocracy and the upwardly mobile, industrial bour-
geoisie. One of the ways in which this conflict manifested itself was in
the struggle to control important social institutions, which included
16. Hely Hutchinson Almond, Football as a Moral Agent, The Nineteenth Century 34
(1893): 902.
17. According to Dunning, Development, 135. Also see James Walvin, The Peoples Game: A
Social History of British Football (London: Allen Lane, 1975), 32.
18. Dunning, Development, 136.
A Game for the Elite
the public schools. It is within this context that the first half of the
nineteenth century saw a series of reforms in the public schools that
strengthened the authority of the teachers and weakened the ability of
the students to govern themselves.19 This process began in the period
1828 to 1842 at Rugby School under the leadership of the theologian, |15
pedagogue, and historian Thomas Arnold (17951842), and resulted in
a comparative decline in the number of students from the aristocracy.
The function of football consequently changed. Rather than a sphere in
which the dominant students manifested their independence, football
was transformed into an instrument of social control and discipline in
the hands of the teachers, as well as a means of building character.
A whole series of schools now set down the rules of the game in
writing. Rugby, which generally served as a pedagogical model, again
took a leading role, publishing a rulebook in 1846, The Law of Football as
Played in Rugby School. In 1848 Cambridge published a very different set
of rules. In 1849 Eton followed with a set of rules that had been used for
football since 1747. At first, school leaders supported football in order to
impart a sense of responsibility to the older students, who were now re-
sponsible for the organization of games that had to follow a specific set
of rules and that also required a high degree of discipline.
Above all, however, the game was seen as a means by which students
could be shaped according to the Victorian concepts of masculinity, not-
ed above. In light of the close connection between body and mind that
was fundamental to nineteenth-century thinking, it was a natural step
to see physical training as inherent to the development of character. And
it was the development of character that was the primary goal of the
reformed public schools. For members of the upper classes in the nine-
teenth century, the lengthy period between the end of childhood and
entry into true adulthood was a time in which students should learn to
accept leadership roles but also to be able to subordinate themselves to
others. They were to learn how to accept danger and defeat with honor,
and to fight with every ounce of their being for their cause, though with-
19. In this context, see T. W. Bamford, Public Schools and Social Class, 18011850, British
Journal of Sociology 12 (1961): 22435, as well as Eric Dunning and Kenneth Sheard, Barbarians,
Gentlemen and Players: A Sociological Study of the Development of Rugby Football (Oxford: Martin
Robertson, 1979), 6578.
A Game for the Elite
out stepping over the boundaries of what was permitted. Students were
supposed to seek out manly contests, but at the same time internalize
the difference between legitimate and illegitimate force. In the second
half of the nineteenth century, the game was seen as the cause for the
16 | rise of the (second) British empire as a world power on every continent.
In 1882, the rector of the Ripon School said in a speech:
Wellington said that the playing fields of Eton won the battle of Waterloo, and
there was no doubt that the training of the English boys in the cricket and football
field enabled them to go to India, and find their way from island to island in the
Pacific, or to undergo fatiguing marches in Egypt. Their football and cricket experi-
ences taught them how to stand up and work, and how to take and give a blow.20
20. Cited in Collin Veitch, Play Up! Play Up! And Win the War!: Football, the Nation and
the First World War 191415, Journal of Contemporary History 20 (1985): 366.
21. Holt, Sports, 8991.
A Game for the Elite
that they had learned in the public schools. It is not known what rules
were employed by the oldest known football club, the Foot-Ball Club,
that existed in Edinburgh from 1824 to 1841. The oldest still-surviving
football club, Sheffield FC, which was founded in October 1857, used the
rules from Harrow. By contrast, the Blackheath club, which was estab- |17
lished in southeast London in 1858, adopted the rules from Rugby. Many
of the other early football clubs used the rules issued by Cambridge in
1848. It was certainly not accidental that the different sets of rules mir-
rored the rivalry for status between the individual schools, and particu-
larly between the progressive school at Rugby and aristocratic Eton.
The first football clubs were thoroughly elite associations. Among
the first 29 founding members of Sheffield FC, there were no fewer than
eleven factory owners, three lawyers, two physicians, a surgeon, a den-
tist, a surveyor, a brewer, a veterinarian, a broker, an architect, a deal-
er in spirits, and a minister.22 A majority of them were alumni of the
Sheffield Collegiate School. Similar to the cricket clubs, the first football
clubs were a place for elite social gatherings. Membership for those in
the upper and middle classes generally entailed an expansion of their
social and business networks. Making these types of connections was
not limited to ones own club. Games against other clubs, which were ac-
companied by social gatherings, often were used for this purpose as well.
However, there also soon were clubs that recruited members from out-
side the circle of school boys. In regions where only a few alumni of the
public schools resided, the school boys had to work hard to find other
players, and drew some of them from the lower classes.
On October 26, 1863, representatives of eleven London clubs estab-
lished the Football Association (FA) in the Freemasons Tavern, a pub.
After this beginning, they held numerous meetings in order to gain a
consensus about a uniform set of rules. The public schools, each of
which wished to keep its own set of rules, took very little part at this ini-
tial stage. When, on December 8, the representatives of the clubs agreed
upon a set of rules that was strongly influenced by those from Har-
row and Eton and that permitted only a minimal use of the hands, the
Blackheath club and others that were oriented toward Rugby departed
22. Tony Mason, Association Football and English Society, 18631915 (Brighton: The Harvest-
er Press, 1980), 23.
A Game for the Elite
the gathering in protest. However, it was not until eight years later that
they established their own association, Rugby Football Union (RFU).23
The eight members of the first RFU executive council were all, with one
exception, alumni of the public school of Rugby. Five of them worked as
18 | lawyers, one was a civil servant, and another was a lecturer at the Mili-
tary College of Richmond.24 The departure of the representatives of the
handling game from the FA sealed the division between the two disci-
plines, namely Association Football (or soccer, for short), and Rugby
Union Football (or rugger, for short).
For a period, other associations existed alongside FA and the RFU
The main competitor of the FA, whose influence at first was largely lim-
ited to London, was the union of Sheffield clubs, which was established
in 1868 and played according to their own set of rules. Other associa-
tions were established in Birmingham (187576), Lancashire (1878), Nor-
folk, Oxfordshire, Essex, Sussex (1882), Berkshire, Buckingham, Walsall,
Kent, Nottinghamshire, Middlesex, Liverpool, Cheshire, Staffordshire,
Derbyshire, and Scarborough (1883).25 The London and Sheffield asso-
ciations merged in 1877. From this point on, the FA became the sole au-
thority for the kicking game across the country. The other associations
modeled their rules on those of the FA and gradually became part of the
latter. In the 1880s, what had been an association of London clubs be-
came a national umbrella organization for regional associations. In 1867,
the FA had only ten member clubs. There were fifty by 1871, one thou-
sand by 1888, and ten thousand by 1905.26
In spite of this, however, the Rugby-inspired handling game was
far more widespread at first in both the public schools and in the clubs
than the kicking game of the FA. Even in Lancashire, where profession-
al football had its origins in the 1880s, there were more rugby than soc-
cer clubs. In Scotland, the game of rugby enjoyed a near monopoly. This
only began to change in 1880s as a series of rugby clubs converted over
to the rules of the FA. An important reason for this was that the FA, in
contrast to the rugby union, organized attractive competitions from an
early date. The most important of these was the FA cup, which was first
contested in the 187172 season. In the first cup final, on March 16, 1872,
the Wanderers defeated the Royal Engineers (10) in front of two thou-
sand spectators. The ranks of the victors included four alumni from Har-
row, three old Etonians, and one old boy each from Westminster and
Charterhouse schools, Oxford, and Cambridge. Playing the FA cup led to |19
a substantial increase in the number of spectators, and the number of
participating clubs also increased at a rapid rate. Only fifteen clubs par-
ticipated in the first competition, all of which, with one exception, came
from the greater London region. By comparison, more than 100 teams
participated in the 188384 season, with the Midlands and Lancashire
heavily represented.27
32. Cited in Michael Krger, Zur Geschichte und Bedeutung des Amateurismus, Sozial-
und Zeitgeschichte des Sports 2 (1988): 86.
33. See Dunning, Barbarians, 16574. 34. Ibid., 205.
35. Holt, Sport, 106. Also see Dunning, Barbarians, 188, as well as Julian Doherty, Dr.Ar-
A Game for the Elite
pressive approach of the RFU and the consequent schism within rugby
caused a reverse from which it never fully recovered.
The rise of FA rule football to a position as the premier team sport
which increasingly attracted all classes of the population as players and
22 | spectators was accompanied by a retreat of the elites from the game in
favor of other sports. Ironically, this included, among others, rugby,
which had lost the battle with football as a result of the approach of its
association to the question of professionalism, and which because of its
rough nature would normally have appealed more to the working classes
than to aristocratic gentlemen. The fact that football permitted profes-
sional play as early as the 1880s can only partially explain the withdraw-
al of gentlemen amateurs since there had been professional cricket
players for an even longer period without this leading to an exodus by
the elites. Rather, the decisive factor was the transformation of football
into a peoples game that no longer facilitated the gentlemans search
for distinction and separation from the common people.
In his lengthy essay La Distinction, the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu for-
mulated the thesis that taste is never a matter of individual preference but
rather must always be considered from a societal perspective.36 Bourdieu
distinguished among three different dimensions of taste: the so-called le-
gitimate taste of the upper classes, the middle taste, and the popular taste
of the lower classes. These dimensions of taste cross into all areas of life.
Bourdieu investigated music, theater, film, furnishings, eating and drink-
ing, clothing, sport, and habits of newspaper reading. Legitimate taste is
marked by numerous distinctive features that are supposed to prove the
cultural competence and sophistication of those who possess it. The pos-
sessors of legitimate taste use the lower classes simply to draw contrasts
in order to clarify their own superior position. At the same time, legiti-
mate taste constantly renews societal differences in that children of the
upper classes receive it, so to speak, from the cradleBourdieu deploys
the idea of cultural capital in this contextwhile those rising up from
the lower classes must work diligently to appropriate legitimate taste for
nolds Erben: Der Aufstieg und Fall des Amateurrugbys in Grossbritannien, Sozial- und Zeitge-
schichte des Sports 4, no. 3 (1990): 4655.
36. Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste (Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1987).
A Game for the Elite
38. Rudolf Muhs et al., Brcken ber den Kanal? Interkultureller Transfer zwischen
Deutschland und Grossbritannien im 19. Jahrhundert, in Aneignung und Abwehr: Interkultureller
Transfer zwischen Deutschland und Grossbritannien im 19. Jahrhundert, ed. Rudolf Muhs (Boden-
heim: Philo Verlagsgesellschaft, 1998), 18.
39. Pierre Lanfranchi, Football et modernit: La Suisse et la pntration du football sur le
continent, Traverse 5 (1998): 84.
A Game for the Elite
tually played the role of a football bridgehead on the continent. The intro-
duction of football here was connected to the newly developing avenues
for the education of the economic elite. The first evidence for the game of
football can be found in Geneva as early as the first half of the nineteenth
century. A ball game with uncertain rules was then played, under British |25
influence, during the very early days of the Institut du Chteau de Lancy,
which was founded in Geneva in 1853.
Beginning in the 1860s, British boarding school students, mer-
chants, and Anglo-Saxon inspired pedagogues spread the games of foot-
ball and rugby more broadly in the Lake Geneva region, although not
always in a gentlemanly manner. In 1866, a match and banquet in Laus-
anne led to a riot at the train station that was so large that the police had
to become involved.40 In 1869, the game of football entered the Institut
de la Chtelaine at Geneva, and probably followed the rules from Rugby.
Other private schools located along Lake Geneva also adopted the game
in the following years, and the British colony in Geneva recruited players
from among the students.41 In the 1870s, one could even purchase real
footballs in Calvins city.42 No later than the 1870s, football was adopted
in German-speaking Switzerland at the elite Institut Wiget auf Schn-
berg in Rorschach. In addition to Swiss students, this school also had
British, Spanish, Italian, and South American pupils. During the 1880s
and 1890s, the game with the round leather ball found its way into the
athletic activities of the Obere Realschule in Basel and into the second-
ary schools in Zurich, Trogen, Frauenfeld, and Schaffhausen.43
The establishment of clubs was already in train during the 1870s.
From 1871 on, the press was discussing football and rugby matches be-
tween British clubs of Geneva, Lausanne, and Chtelaine, which already
had formal team structures.44 These clubs were quite as old as La Havre
AC, founded by Britons in 1872. This is often seen as the first continen-
tal football club. In 1879, FC St. Gall was founded, which is usually been
considered as the oldest football club in Switzerland, and one of the first
in continental Europe.45 The founders were former students at Institut
Wiget, and the first balls came direct from England. Around 1880, the
26 | Lausanne Football and Cricket Club was raised from the baptismal font,
and its membership was largely composed of Britons.
The founding of the Grasshopper Club at Zurich in 1886 similarly
owed a great deal to the British biology student Tom E. Griffith.46 In
complete consonance with the Victorian model, the purpose of this club,
according to its statutes, was the development of the body.47 A dona-
tion of 20 francs by Colonel Nabholz made possible the importation of
a leather ball as well as blue and white jerseys and caps from England.
Analogously to the broader sporting preferences of the gentleman ama-
teur in Great Britain, the Grasshoppers established a tennis section in
1890 and a rowing section in 1904.48 It was not coincidental that the first
game was organized against a side from the Federal Polytechnic Insti-
tute at Zurich. The founders of the Genevan Servette FC in 1890 were
students at the Ecole professionelle. They first played with an oval ball,
which one of the students had received from his father, who had brought
it back with him from England. It was only after the turn of the century
that the club turned from rugby to football using the rules of the English
Football Association.
FC Basel was established by students and merchants, who previous-
ly had pursued sporting activities at the Basel rowing club. The academ-
ics saw football as providing an ideal balance for the one-sided upper
body work in rowing. As was true everywhere on the continent, in the
Swiss metropolitan centers it was students in the technical and natural
scientific fields who were most engaged in the English game. The more
conservative jurists and humanities students held fast to the sports that
were characterized by a stronger national tradition. In Switzerland, the
45. See Martin Furgler, 18791979Ein Jahrhundert FC St. Gallen: Offizielles Jubilums-
buch zum 100. Geburtstag des ltesten Fussballclubs der Schweiz (Herisau: Fussballclub St. Gallen,
1979), 23.
46. See Yves Eggenberger, 100 Jahre Grasshopper-Club Zrich (Zurich: Grasshopper-Club,
1986), 3539.
47. Ibid., 32.
48. Ibid., 7 and 19.
A Game for the Elite
49. With regard to the tradition of these disciplines, see Walter Schaufelberger, Der Wett-
kampf in der alten Eidgenossenschaft: Zur Kulturgeschichte des Sports vom 13. bis ins 18. Jahrhundert
(2 vols.) (Bern: Haupt, 1972).
50. In this context, see Rudolf Jaun, Preussen vor Augen: Das schweizerische Offizierskorps
im militrischen und gesellschaftlichen Wandel des Fin de sicle (Zurich: Chronos, 1999).
51. 50 Jahre National-Liga (Geneva: Ed. Sport Pub Bornadelly, 1983), 10; Jubilumsschrift 50
Jahre Schweizer Fussball- und Athletik Verband, 17.
52. Markus Giuliani, Starke Jugendfreies Volk: Bundestaatliche Krpererziehung und ge-
sellschaftliche Funktion von Sport in der Schweiz (19181947) (Bern: Lang, 2001), 117.
A Game for the Elite
lows, and Fire Flies.53 The association itself did not Germanize its name
as the Schweizerischer Fussballverband until 1913 in an effort to avoid
criticism as being a British import, and to establish its status as an or-
ganization that had a right to state subsidies. Initially, it did not achieve
28 | the second of these objectives.54
Switzerland played an important role in the fin de sicle in promoting
the diffusion of football on the European continent. A great many Ger-
man, French, and Italian football pioneers learned to love the game with
the round leather in Swiss schools. In addition, Swiss sporting pioneers,
primarily merchants and academics, established and directed clubs in nu-
merous continental European countries.55
Vittorio Pozzo, who was a two-time football world champion in 1934
and 1938 and an Olympic champion as the coach of the Italian national
team in 1936, studied language and business at Zurich and Winterthur
between 1906 and 1908. It was during this period that he learned football
at the Grasshopper Club. After another year abroad at Manchester, he re-
turned to his home city of Turin where he acted in turn as a player, ref-
eree, and sports journalist until he accepted the position of coach in 1929
for the Squadra Azzurra (Italian national team). The brothers Michele and
Paolo Scarfoglio, who were among the founders of the first football club
in Naples, learned the game a short time before during a training course
in Switzerland. The French banker, Henry Monnier, who always wrote his
first name with a y out of Anglophilia, introduced football to Nmes in
1898. Also a mountain climber, Monnier had discovered the game while
studying at Geneva. The French football pioneers Falgueirettes and Ju-
lien also studied in Switzerland. The German football pioneer Walter
Bensemann attended schools in western Switzerland and later studied,
among other places, at the university of Lausanne. He founded his first
football club, Montreux FC, in 1887, before establishing numerous clubs
in Germany, serving as one of the founders of the Deutsche Fussballbund
53. See Paul Ruoff, Das goldene Buch des Schweizer Fussballs (Basel: Verlag Domprobstei,
1953), 23739.
54. Giuliani, Jugend, 122.
55. For the following, see Lanfranchi, Football, as well as Christian Koller, Prolog: Little
England: Die avantgardistische Rolle der Schweiz in der Pionierphase des Fussballs, in Die Nati:
Die Geschichte der Schweizer Fussball-Nationalmannschaft, ed. Beat Jung (Gttingen: Werkstatt,
2006), 1122.
A Game for the Elite
58. See Ekaterina Emeliantseva, Sport und urbane Lebenswelten im sptzarischen St. Pe-
tersburg (18601914), in Sport als stdtisches Ereignis, ed. Christian Koller (Ostfildern: Thorbecke,
2008), 3176.
59. See Gergana Ghanbarian-Baleva, Ein englischer Sport aus der Schweiz: Der bulgarische
Fussball von seiner Entstehung bis zum Beginn der 1970er Jahre, in berall ist der Ball rund: Zur
Geschichte und Gegenwart des Fussballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa, eds. Ditmar Dahlmann et al.
(Essen: Klartext, 2006), 15582.
60. Danilo Stojanovi, ika Daine uspomene (Belgrade, 1953), 5.
61. Alfred Wahl, Les archives du football: Sport et socit en France, 18801980 (Paris: Gal-
limard, 1989), 2731.
A Game for the Elite
67. See Hans Kohn, Father Jahns Nationalism, Review of Politics 11 (1949): 41932; Thom-
as Stamm-Kuhlmann, Humanittsidee und berwertigkeitswahn in der Entstehungsphase des
deutschen Nationalismus: Auffllige Gemeinsamkeiten bei Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Ernst Moritz
Arndt und Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, Historische Mitteilungen 4 (1991): 16171.
68. Hagen Schulze, Der Weg zum Nationalstaat: Die deutsche Nationalbewegung vom 18. Jahr-
hundert bis zur Reichsgrndung (Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuch-Verlag, 1985), 83.
69. Ibid., 105.
70. See Dieter Dding, Organisierter gesellschaftlicher Nationalismus in Deutschland (1808
1847): Bedeutung und Funktion der Turner und Sngervereine fr die deutsche Nationalbewegung (Mu-
nich: Oldenbourg, 1984); Dieter Langewiesche, ... fr Volk und Vaterland krftig zu wrken ...:
Zur politischen und gesellschaftlichen Rolle der Turner zwischen 1811 und 1871, in Kulturgut oder
Krperkult? Sport und Sportwissenschaft im Wandel, ed. Ommo Grupe (Tbingen: Attempto-Verlag,
1990), 2261; Svenja Goltermann, Krper der Nation: Habitusformierung und die Politik des Turnens
18601890 (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1998); Arndt Krger, Deutschland, Deutsch-
land ber alles? National Integration through Turnen und Sport in Germany 18701914, Stadion
25 (1999): 10929; Michael Krger, Einfhrung in die Geschichte der Leibeserziehung und des Sports,
Bd. 2: Leibeserziehung im 19. Jahrhundert: Turnen frs Vaterland (Schorndorf: Hofmann, 1993); and
(also by Krger) Krperkultur und Nationsbildung: Die Geschichte des Turnens in der Reichsgrndungs-
ra (Schorndorf: Hofmann, 1996).
71. See Wolfram Siemann, Krieg und Frieden in historischen Gedenkfeiern des Jahre
A Game for the Elite
1913, in ffentliche Festkultur: Politische Feste in Deutschland von der Aufklrung bis zum Ersten
Weltkrieg, ed. Peter Dding (Reinbeck: Rowohlt, 1988), 3047.
72. See Klaus Cachay, Echte SportlerGute Soldaten: Die Sportsozialisation des National-
sozialismus im Spiegel von Feldpostbriefen (Weinheim-Munich: Juventa, 2000), 182.
73. Die Weihe des Stadions Grunewald, Gartenlaube 60 (1913): 536.
74. Akademische Turnzeitung, August 1, 1913, cited in Siemann, Krieg, 307. Also see Das XII.
Deutsche Turnfest in Leipzig, Gartenlaube 60 (1913): 647.
75. Akademische Turnzeitung, June 1, 1913, cited in Siemann, Krieg, 307.
A Game for the Elite
76. E. Witte, Wettkampf und Kampfspiel, Deutsche Turn-Zeitung 42 (1897): 757, cited in
Heinrich, Fussballbund, 20.
77. Karl Planck, Fusslmmelei: ber Stauchballspiel und englische Krankheit (Stuttgart, 1898,
reprinted Mnster: Lit., 2004), 5.
78. Heinrich, Fussballbund, 22.
79. Ibid., 3335.
80. Groundbreaking for the construction of traditions in the nineteenth century was the
essay collection The Invention of Tradition, eds. Eric J. Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger (Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983).
81. Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 68.
A Game for the Elite
86. Carl Diem, Friede zwischen Turnen und Sport, Fussball und Leichtathletik 13, no. 46
(1912): 905, cited in Heinrich, Fussballbund, 29.
87. Heinrich, Fussballbund, 3942.
88. See Martin van Creveld, Technology and War: From 2000 B.C. to the Present (New York:
Free Press, 1989), 172.
89. Martin Samuels, Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and
German Armies, 18881918 (London: Taylor & Francis, 1995).
90. Dietrich von Hlsen, Fussballsport und Wehrfhigkeit, in Deutsches Fussball-Jahrbuch
1912 (Dortmund, 1912), 126, cited in Heinrich, Fussballbund, 38.
91. Dedication by the Prussian minister for war in Deutsches Fussball-Jahrbuch 1913 (Dort-
mund, 1913), 14, cited in Heinrich, Fussballbund, 38.
A Game for the Elite
92. For the following, see Matthias Marschik, Vom Herrenspiel zum Mnnersport: Die ersten
Jahre des Fuballs in Wien. (Vienna: Turia + Kant, 1997).
93. Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 50.
94. Matthias Marschik, Wir spielen nicht zum Vergngen: Arbeiterfussball in der Ersten Re-
publik (Vienna: Verlag fr Gesellschaftskritik, 1994), 44.
95. See Victor E. Peppard, The Beginnings of Russian Soccer, Stadion 8, no. 9 (198283):
15168; James Riordan, Russland und die Sowjetunion, in Fussball, soccer, calcio: Ein englischer
Sport auf seinem Weg um die Welt, ed. Christiane Eisenberg (Munich: DTV, 1997), 13048; Peter
A. Trykholm, Soccer and Social Identity in Pre-Revolutionary Moscow, Journal of Sport History
24 (1997): 14354; Dittmar Dahlmann, Vom Pausenfller zum Massensport: Der Fussballsport
in Russland von den 1880er Jahren bis zum Ausbruch des Ersten Weltkrieges 1914, in berall ist
der Ball rund: Zur Geschichte des Fussballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa, eds. Dittmar Dahlmann et al.
(Essen: Klartext, 2006), 539; Emeliantseva, Sport und urbane Lebenswelten; Emeliantseva, Ein
Fussballmatch ist kein Symphoniekonzert! Die Fussballspiele und ihr Publikum im sptzarisch-
en Russland (19011913), in berall ist der Ball rundDie Zweite Halbzeit: Zur Geschichte und
Gegenwart des Fussballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa, eds. Dittmar Dahlmann et al. (Essen: Klartext,
2008), 1343; and I. B. Chmelnickaja, Sportivnye obestva i dosug v stolinom gorode naala XX
veka: Peterburg i Moskva (Moscow: Novyj chronograf, 2011).
A Game for the Elite
ica followed a similar pattern.96 The first football club was established
in 1867 in Buenos Aires, which had a large British colony. The founders
of Buenos Aires FC were William Herald and the brothers Thomas and
James Hogg. The driving force in Argentinian football was the Scot, Al-
38 | exander Watson Hutton, head of the English High School in Buenos Ai-
res. He founded the Argentine Association Football League in 1893. A
few years later, this association joined with the English FA. Until 1906,
English was the official language of the Argentinian association. Foot-
ball first was played in Brazil in 189495, again by Britons. The football
pioneers in South Americans largest state also included Americans, Ger-
mans, French, and Portuguese. In 1890, Britons also introduced football
into Uruguay, which later became the host and victor of the first football
World Cup in 1930. These included William Poole, a teacher at the Eng-
lish High School, and engineers from a British-owned railroad company.
When, in 1905, Argentina and Uruguay played against each other in an
international tournament, it was named after the Scottish tea-baron
and philanthropist, Sir Thomas Lipton.
It is noteworthy that the game spread the least in those areas of
the world where the British were not only merchants and technicians,
but also were present as colonial masters and missionaries. The primary
reason for this was that the Europeans in the African and Asian colo-
nies of the empire belonged to those elite classes that had abandoned
football when it had become the peoples game, and sought out more
exclusive sports for themselves. It was on this basis that sports such as
cricket, rugby, and field hockey became established in Asia and Africa,
while finding very little support on the European continent or in Latin
America. Interestingly, football enjoyed the greatest diffusion in those
colonies where the fewest European colonists settled, and which came
under indirect rule.
Nigeria (where the first football game is supposed to have been
played in 1841) became a football nation, while Uganda, Kenya, and
Rhodesia adopted the aristocratic sports of cricket and rugby. The first
Africans played for leading English clubs at the end of the nineteenth
century. However, it was not until around 1980, when the process of
97. See Rogan Taylor and Andreas Skrypietz, Pull the triggershoot the nigger: Fussball
und Rassismus in England, in Fussball und Rassismus (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 1993), 73106; as
well as Phil Vasili, Colouring Over the White Line: The History of Black Footballers in Britain (Edin-
burgh: Mainstream Publishing, 2000).
98. Worms City Archives 13/2243: II; report from the police administration, March 15, 1920.
99. With regard to the colonial sports policy of France, see Bernadette Deville-Danthu, Le
Sport en noir et blanc: Du sport colonial au sport africain dans les anciens territoires franais dAfrique
occidentale (19201965) (Paris: Harmattan, 1997).
100. See Tony Mason, Football on the Maidan: Cultural Imperialism in Calcutta, in The
Cultural Bond: Sport, Empire, Society, ed. J. A. Mangan (London: Frank Cass, 1992), 14253.
101. Concerning Indian cricket, see Ramachandra Guha, Politik im Spiel: Cricket und Ko-
lonialismus in Indien, Historische Anthropologie 4 (1996): 15772.
A Game for the Elite
102. On this point, see Mike Cronin, Sport and Nationalism in Ireland: Gaelic Games, Soccer
and Irish Identity since 1884 (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 1999).
103. However, it was not renamed the Australian Football League until 1990.
A Game for the Elite
nant sport is Rugby Union Football, which also has claimed an impor-
tant position in Australia. In Canada, where the first organized football
games took place in the 1860s, and where the Hamilton Foot Ball Club
was founded as the first club in 1869, a new and independent sport grew
out of Rugby Union Football, which also was separate from American |41
football. A Rugby Football Union was founded in Ontario and Quebec
in 1883, and the next year the Canadian Rugby Football Union was es-
tablished. The latter set down a Code of Rules for Canadian Football that
underwent numerous changes over the following years and decades,
sometimes in connection with divisions or new foundations of the asso-
ciation. In 1909, Governor-General Lord Earl Grey established the Grey
Cup as the highest prize in Canadian football. The Canadian Football
League was created in 1958.
Football remained a game of the elite for about half a century. In
Great Britain, this period extended from the school reforms of the 1830s
and 1840s up through establishment of working-class clubs in the 1880s.
On the continent and in Latin America, this period lasted from the in-
troduction of the sport in the 1860s up through the First World War. In
both Great Britain and in the countries that followed her, the elite phase
of football is divided into two phases: the first half in the schools, and
the second half that was characterized by the establishment of clubs and
associations. During the second phase, there were already signs of unor-
ganized football activities among the lower classes.104
This wave of foundations reached a high point with the establish-
ment of the Fdration Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) in
1904.105 In the beginning, the future world football association had only
seven participating nations, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark,
Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. The FA did not even respond to the invi-
tation to the organizational meeting.106 The FA did recognize FIFA in the
104. See, for example, Richard Holt, Working Class Football and the City: The Problem of
Continuity, International Journal of the History of Sport 3 (1986): 517; Christiane Eisenberg et
al., FIFA 19042004: 100 Jahre Weltfuball. (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2004), 17; and Christian Koller,
Transnationalitt und PopularisierungThesen und Fragen zur Frhgeschichte des Schweizer
Fuballs, Ludica 1718 (201112): 15166.
105. See Alan Tomlinson, Going Global: The FIFA Story, in his book The Games Up: Essays
in the Cultural Analysis of Sport, Leisure and Popular Culture (Aldershot: Ashgate, 1999), 99102.
106. England boycotted the football World Cup until 1950.
A Game for the Elite
following years. However, before the end of the 1920s, it withdrew two
times from the world football association for a variety of reasons. The es-
tablishment of FIFA laid the foundation for the organization of interna-
tional competitions. Indeed, as soon as FIFA was established, people were
42 | dreaming of an international tournament. A world championship for
club teams was planned and the final round was supposed to take place
in Switzerland in 1906. However, at the end of the invitation period, not
a single application to participate in the competition had been received.
In contrast to the Union Internationale Amateur de Football Association
(UIAFA), which competed with FIFA for a short time and organized a Eu-
ropean championship in 1911, FIFA hesitated, and then decided instead
to recognize the victor of the Olympic football tournament as amateur
world champion. The outbreak of war in 1914 forced the cancellation of
any further planning.
The First World War, which divided the bourgeois century from
the age of the masses, also led to a major fissure in the history of foot-
ball. Its motherland, although among the victorious nations, lost its
dominant position in the world. The United States, which shortly before
1900 had become the leading industrialized nation, emerged for the first
time as a great political power as well. Soon afterward, her cultural influ-
ence also began to increase in the old world. The Bolsheviks gained pow-
er in Russia in 1917 and began the first effort to create a classless society
following the teachings of Marx. In central Europe, imperial power col-
lapsed in 1918 and was inherited by ephemeral democracies. The old and
the rotted had broken apart, as the Social Democrat Philipp Scheide-
mann shouted to the jubilant masses of workers from the balcony of the
Reichstag building in November 1918.107 A few years after the conclusion
of peace, the first fascist dictators emerged, who survived largely on the
basis of their demagogic appeals to the masses. All of these factors had
an important impact on the character of football. Across the world, it
became what it had been in Great Britain since the fin de sicle, namely
the peoples game.
The rules of modern football, as shown above, were the creation of the
elite public schools. The elite turned away indignantly from football at
the very moment when urban workers and white-collar employees were
caught up in football fever, and instead devoted their attention to disci-
plines like Alpinism and rugby. The task of this chapter is to show why
the lower classes were so excited about the round leather. A few num-
bers serve to illustrate the triumphant advance of football during the
late nineteenth century. In the 188889 season, 602,000 spectators
attended the games of the first English professional league. Ten years
later, there were more than five million fans in attendance. In particu-
lar, the cup finals, which since 1895 had been held at the Crystal Palace
in London and marked the true high point of the season, mobilized the
masses. Countless chartered trains were organized for the final games.
In 1900, 69,000 spectators attended the match. Three years later, more
than 120,000 fans pushed their way into the stadium.1 There were about
12,000 clubs in the Football Association (FA) in 1914. Countless other
athletes kicked the ball around during their free time in numerous com-
pany, school, and parish teams.2
A number of factors led to the triumph of football.3 First, the indus-
trialization of Great Britain led to a division between work and leisure.
The female and male hourly workers at textile factories had regular time
away from work, and also a certain amount of money to use for enter-
1. James Walvin, The Peoples Game: The History of Football Revisited (Edinburgh: Main-
stream Publishing, 1994), 78.
2. Kaspar Maase, Grenzenloses Vergngen: Der Aufstieg der Massenkultur 18501970 (Frank-
furt: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 1997), 85.
3. See Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 3043.
43
The Peoples Game
tainment. They had fought for Sunday afternoons and also Boxing Day as
additional times for leisure. In addition, the unions had gained the nine-
hour day for craftsmen and certain factory workers in 1874. Between 1873
and 1896, the cost of living shrank dramatically, so that substantially
44 | more money remained for leisure activities at the end of the week.
A commercialized leisure culture oriented to the interests of crafts-
men and white-collar workers had already begun developing in Great
Britain in the late eighteenth century. Some of these attractions, which
now enjoyed increasing popularity, had their origins in the pre-modern
society. These included taverns, fairs, religious feast days, boxing with-
out gloves or time limits, and finally the bestial cock and dog fights. New
attractions included the popular Victorian small theatres, the massive
music halls, dime novels that largely attracted women, as well as short
trips to the ocean, which were made possible by the growing network
of railroads that were now affordable for the less well to do. However,
once one reached the ocean, social distinctions were again obvious. The
vacationers strolling along the various piers were divided by wealth and
social reputation.4
Second, the fact that football became the most popular pasttime of
all possible options is explained by the German football historian Diet-
rich Schulze-Marmeling as resulting from its affinity to industrial labor.
Physical strength, toughness, good conditioning, and robustness were
required in the mine as well as on the turf. Qualities such as intelligence
and craftiness joined together with masculine English hardiness that
could be used to outsmart the opposing defense as well as the suspicious
foreman or the hated work inspector. Football is a team sport, but it also
allows a player to exercise his own will. One can dribble and not, as
might be expected, pass. One can mock the opposing player and take
joy in ones own accomplishment. In short, a person can display what
5. See Alf Ldtke, Eigen-Sinn: Lohn, Pausen, Neckereien: Eigensinn und Politik bei Fabrik-
arbeitern in Deutschland um 1900, in Alf Ldtke, Fabrikalltag, Arbeitserfahrungen und Politik vom
Kaiserreich bis in den Faschismus (Hamburg: Ergebnisse Verlag, 1993), 12060, especially 13643.
6. E. P. Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class (London: Victor Gollancz, 1963).
7. See the exceptional summary of the state of the question by Rohan McWilliam, Popular
The Peoples Game
Politics in Nineteenth-Century England (London: Routledge, 1998). Also see John Belchem, Popu-
lar Radicalism in Nineteenth-Century Britain (New York: St. Martins Press, 1996). With regard to
the issue of gender, see, for example, Karl Ittman, Work, Gender and Family in Victorian England
(New York: New York University Press, 1995).
8. Ritual is one of the most discussed ethnographical concepts. A splendid overview of the
enormous literature concerning this concept is offered by the Scottish historian Edward Muir,
Ritual in Early Modern England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 6: Ritual then is
basically a social activity that is repetitive, standardized, a model or a mirror, and its meaning is
inherently ambiguous.
9. Phillip J. Waller, Town, City, and Nation: England 18501914 (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1983), 4.
10. Asa Briggs, Victorian Cities (Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 1993), 247.
The Peoples Game
11. Phillip J. Waller, Democracy and Sectarianism: A Political and Social History of Liverpool
18681939 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1981), 9.
12. For an example of a suppressed holiday, see Alaun Howkins, The Taming of Whitsun:
The Changing Face of a Nineteenth-Century Rural Holiday, in Eileen Yeo and Stephen Yeo, Popu-
lar Culture and Class Conflict: Explorations in the History of Labour and Leisure (Brighton: Har-
vester Press, 1981), 187208. With regard to the general suppression of the older popular culture,
the standard work is P. Bailey, Leisure and Class in Victorian England: Rational Recreation and the
Contest of Control (London: Routledge, 1978).
13. Eric Hobsbawm, Die Entstehung der Arbeiterklasse (18701914), in his book Un-
gewhnliche Menschen: ber Widerstand, Rebellion und Jazz (Munich-Vienna: Hanser, 2001), 83.
The Peoples Game
14. The standard work regarding the history of pubs is Peter Clark, The English Alehouse: A
Social History, 12001830 (Harlow: Longman, 1983). For the longue dure perspective of popu-
lar leisure time activies, see James Walvin, Leisure and Society, 18301950 (London: Longman,
1963). A summary of the state of the research regarding taverns and tavern keepers is available
in Fabian Brndle, Toggenburger Wirtshuser und Wirte im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert, in Obrig-
keit und Opposition: Drei Beitrge zur Kulturgeschichte des Toggenburgs aus dem 17./18. Jahrhundert,
eds. Brndle et al. (Wattwil: Toggenburger Vereinigung fr Heimatkunde, 1997), 751.
15. The authoritative study regarding the commercialization of leisure time is Robert Mal-
colmson, Popular Recreations in English Society, 17501850 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1973). A particularly strong overview of the topic of popular cultures in the early modern
period, which had received extensive scholarly attention, is offered by Barry Reay, Popular Cul-
tures in England 15501750 (London: Routledge, 1998).
16. Mike Race, Public Houses, Public Lives: An Oral History of Life in York Pubs in the Mid-20th
Century (York: Voyager Publications, 1999), 95.
The Peoples Game
22. J. M. Golby and A. W. Purdue, The Civilization of the Crowd: Popular Culture in England
17501900 (New York: Schocken Books, 1985), 17072.
23. Alan Metcalfe, Organized Sport in the Mining Communities of South Northumber-
land, 18001899, Victorian Studies 24 (1982): 477. See also, by the same author, Potshare Bowl-
ing in the Mining Communities of East Northumberland, in Sport and the Working Class in Mod-
ern Britain, ed. Richard Holt (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1990), 2944.
24. Ross McKibbin, Working-Class Gambling in Britain, 18801939, Past and Present 82
(1979): 14778.
25. Hobsbawm, Entstehung der Arbeiterklasse, 95.
The Peoples Game
make his status as a self-made man publicly visible through the spon-
sorship of a sports team, but then went along the unconventional path
of allowing the fans to celebrate him in the stadium and thereby ac-
cumulate symbolic capital in the sense set out by Pierre Bourdieu. He
therefore stood in the centuries-old tradition of festively staged election |53
campaigns which included the provision of food and drink as well as the
patronage of various revelries.35 The gentry, the lower rural aristocracy
in England, had tried to use both lease agreements and generosity to
keep the voting-eligible freeholders from doing them any harm. With his
decidedly anti-Irish and anti-Catholic prejudices, Houlding attempted
to mobilize numerous Protestant workers, both English and those from
Ulster, because the Catholic Irish, who often worked for lower wages,
were hated by members of these groups.36 In many ways, Houlding an-
ticipated the populist, fame-seeking, headstrong, aggressive but also af-
fable club presidents who still attract attention in smaller cities today.
The American Charles Korr demonstrated the ways in which this pa-
ternalistic style of leadership continued to function over several genera-
tions in his study of the London club West Ham United.37 The club had its
origins in the working-class club Thames Ironworks FC in the proletar-
ian east end of the metropolis. West Ham was founded by the owner of
the factory Arnold F. Hills in 1895 after the end of a strike. The year be-
fore, in 1894, Hills had introduced the eight-hour working day so that his
company was not disturbed by the great London Engineers Strike three
years later. This patron offered other games to his workers in addition
to football, including, for example, theater and concerts. The doctrine
of the club claimed that the executives, players, workers, and other sup-
porters would form one large family. This appealed to Korr, who lived for
35. See, for example, Frank OGorman, Campaign Rituals and Ceremonies: The Social
Meaning of Elections in England 17801860, Past and Present 135 (1992): 79115; James Epstein,
Rituals of Solidarity: Radical Dining, Toasting and Symbolic Expression, in his book Radical Ex-
pression: Political Language, Ritual, and Symbol in England, 17901850 (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1994), 14765.
36. With regard to the complex and often hostile relationship of English radicals to im-
migrant Irish Catholics, see, for example, John Belchem, English Working-Class Radicalism and
the Irish, 18151850, in R. Swift and S. Gilley, The Irish in the Victorian City (London: Croom
Helm, 1985), 8597.
37. Charles Korr, West Ham United: The Making of a Football Club (London: Duckworth,
1986). Also see S. Tischler, Footballers and Businessmen: The Origins of Professional Soccer in Eng-
land (London: Holmes & Meier Publishers, 1981).
The Peoples Game
a lengthy period in the East End and thoroughly adopted the strongly
expressed claims of the London dockers that they formed an extended
family: East Londoners have maintained a strong sense of extended
family, which is one of the reasons why the club was and is so important
54 | to people. West Ham United shows that this community is different and
important.38 The workers had no say on the board of directors, however,
which was expanded through a process of internal selection. This fact led
to Korrs most important thesis: In the creation of West Ham United,
as in so many other areas of English life, working-class participation was
limited to work either as players or as supporters.39 It certainly appeared
at the end of the century as if the employers had recognized the social-
disciplinary character of football and integrated it into their long-held
strategy of divide-and-rule.
Another important source of patronage came from the various
churches and denominations. The ideological basis for this engagement
with football came from muscular Christianity, which began to spread
in the mid-nineteenth century.40 The worker was supposed to learn that
a healthy body was pleasing to God and protected him from moral de-
cline and eternal damnation. Many clubs had their origins in a religious
milieu. As late as 1885, 25 of the 112 clubs in Liverpool had a religious
background.41 It appears that the numerous free churches, which char-
acterized and still characterize Great Britain, were courting the favor
of the workers as they established football clubs. In Britain, even the
market in religion was largely liberalized. Celtic Glasgow was founded
by a member of a Catholic religious order, while the Bolton Wanderers
played their first game as Christ Church FC. The anecdote spread quite
widely that football players for this club emancipated themselves from
the church when the vicar had demanded that they all attend services
regularly. The Wanderers transferred their headquarters to a pub across
the street from the church.42 In one last example, Aston Villa, which
that this was usually limited to fist fights and that deaths were very rare.
The ritualized violence served to release aggression in rapidly growing cit-
ies that were characterized by substantial social tensions. There were no
similar opportunities in the rapidly expanding American boomtowns of
56 | the nineteenth century, especially in the company towns of the frontier.
Because men generally possessed firearms and the whites, in particular,
could claim in court that they acted in self-defense, a very high percent-
age of these conflicts ended with a death.47
Fundamentally, the inhabitants of the newer and rapidly growing
large cities made use of a pre-modern repertoire of social places and rit-
uals to make their community perceptible and to renew it. Many football
matches took place on traditional holidays. Christmas was used early on
for football matches. It was also common to play on the morning after
Christmas (Boxing Day) and also on New Years Day, generally against lo-
cal opponents. New Years matches quickly developed into the most pop-
ular events, above all in Glasgow where the derby between the Catholic
Celtic team and the Protestant Rangers regularly attracted more than
50,000 spectators in the years before the First World War.48 The name
derby derived from the Shrove Tuesday custom, noted above, in which
hundreds of men from the city of the same name sought for hours, us-
ing considerable violence, to maneuver a ball through the gate of the op-
posite side of the city. The noble upper class participated as spectators
and as well-wishing patrons of this unpretentious game by providing the
competitors with drink and food, and offering prize money to the vic-
tors. After a strongly puritanical city administration banned the game
in 1845, cavalry had to be deployed to keep the protesting citizens in
check. In the following years, troops were always kept ready to disperse
the sporting enthusiasts. A reader of the Derby and Chesterfield Reporter
wrote on February 7, 1845: It is all disappointment, no sports and no
football. This is the way they always treat poor folks.49 According to An-
47. See, for example, Claire V. McKanna, Homicide, Race, and Justice in the American West,
18901920 (Tucson, Ariz.: University of Arizona Press, 1997), especially 78116 and 15658
(equipped with an extensive bibliography).
48. Holt, Working Class Football, 13.
49. Anthony Delves, Popular Recreation and Social Conflict in Derby, 18001850, in Popu-
lar Culture and Class Conflict 15901914, eds. Eileen Yeo and Stephen Yeo (Brighton: Harvester
Press, 1981), 94.
The Peoples Game
thony Delves, who is the author of the basic work on this spectacle and
its suppression, as late as 1853 there were still serious efforts being made
to guard against this unloved game. From this point onwards, the wild
activities took place in the fields outside of the city gates. Horse racing
took the place of the wild football game. Finally, according to the social |57
historian James Walvin, shinney, a local variant of folk football in the
Midlands city of Nottingham, was the origin of modern football.50
The struggle of the lower classes for an autonomous area within
the thickly settled inner cities and their decades long struggle to obtain
green spaces, with their intrinsic connotations of power, is evidenced in
the popular claims to autonomous social sites.51 During the nineteenth
century, at least, it simply was not possible to utilize empty meadows or
fields located outside the cities. Police and armed gamekeepers saw to it
that the exclusive rights of the upper classes to hunt and fish, privileges
that dated back to the ancien rgime, remained undisturbed. The right
to rambling and roaming, which was the name for wandering in the
moors and hilly country outside the city, was highly contested well into
the twentieth century. As a contemporary recalled, it was often neces-
sary to travel long distances on the train to be able to play football. Even
so, there was always the threat that the police would bring an early end
to the fun. The same man observed that when a group began singing
the popular song Nelly Dean on the train, a conductor intervened and
severely chastised the singers.52
When they finally gained free spaces, such spaces were used for po-
litical events, including speeches by the radical orator Hunt, or as places
to listen to the demands of the Chartists for universal suffrage, but also
for theatrical and sporting events. Groundbreaking micro-historical case
studies illustrate the tenacious decades-long struggle in the cities of
London, Newcastle, Norwich, and Bristol.53 The free space for community-
Space, Popular Radicalism and the Politics of Public Access in London, 18481880, International
Review of Social History 40 (1995): 383407. For Newcastle see Alan Metcalfe, Sport and Space: A
Case Study of the Growth of Recreational Facilites in North East Northumberland, 18501914,
International Journal of the History of Sport 7 (1990): 25864. For Norwich see Neil McMaster,
The Battle for Mousehold Heath, 18571884: Popular Politics and the Victorian Public Park,
Past and Present 127 (1990): 11754. For Bristol see Steve Poole, Til our liberties be secure:
Popular Sovereignity and Public Space in Bristol, 17801850, Urban History 26 (1999): 4054.
54. McMaster, The Battle of Mousehold Heath, 153.
55. See John Bohstedt, The Moral Economy of the Crowd and the Discipline of Historical
Context, Journal of Social History 26 (199293): 26584; and John Stevenson, Popular Disturbanc-
es in England, 17001832 (London: Routledge, 1992).
56. This was also true of American baseball stadiums that were constructed at the same
time. See David Nasaw, Going Out: The Rise and the Fall of Public Amusements (Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1999), 96103.
57. With regard to the representative function of train stations and opera houses for the Brit-
ish bourgeoisie see, for example, Eric J. Hobsbawm, The Age of Capital 18481875 (London: Weiden-
feld and Nicolson, 1975), 28890. For the representational character of early baseball stadiums in
the U.S., which fulfilled similar functions as British football stadiums, see Lawrence S. Ritter, Lost
Ballparks: A Celebration of Baseballs Legendary Fields (New York: Studio, 1992), especially 20.
The Peoples Game
58. Wolfgang Maderthaner and Lutz Musner, Die Anarchie der Vorstadt: Das andere Wien um
1900 (Frankfurt: Campus, 2000), 45. A foundational study for understanding for the relationship
between countryside and city is Raymond Williams, The Country and the City (London: Chatto &
Windus, 1973). Also see Henri Lefebvre, Die Revolution der Stdte (Frankfurt: Athenum, 1990).
David Nasaw, Going Out, 4, stresses these aspects in an American context.
59. Maderthaner und Musner, Anarchie der Vorstadt, 46.
60. Concerning the traditional cycle of festivals, see Ronald Hutton, The Rise and Fall of
Merry England: The Ritual Year 14001700 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996). Regarding
the influence of Protestantism on the festival calendar, see David Cressy, Bonfires and Bells: Na-
tional Memory and the Protestant Calendar in Elizabethan and Stuart England (London: The His-
tory Press, 1980).
61. Eric J. Hobsbawm, Worlds of Labour: Further Studies in the History of Labour (London:
Pantheon Books, 1984), 185.
The Peoples Game
62. The classic interpretation of football as ritual is Morris, Spiel, particularly 31112.
63. Sillitoe, Saturday Night, 5657.
64. See Graham Swift, Last Orders (London: Picador, 1986).
The Peoples Game
9092. Also see Forrest C. Robertson, The Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup (18771900),
Elf 4 (1986): 9399.
69. Holt, Working-Class Football and the City, 13.
70. Ian Crump, Amusements of the People: The Provision of Recreation in Leicester 1850
1914, PhD diss., University of Warwick, 1985, 392.
71. See Mason, Association Football and English Society, 257; and Holt, Working Class Foot-
ball, 15.
72. Citation following Waller, Town, 105.
73. Nicholas Fishwick, English Football and Society 19101950 (Manchester: Manchester
University Press, 1989), 61.
The Peoples Game
fight each other.74 The gangs, which occasionally were armed, were par-
ticularly fond of hurling stones at the windows of public buildings and at-
tacking the police. They were also involved in the petty crime scene in the
city. Unfortunately, bitter fights against the gangs of other ethnic groups
or religious communities, such as the Irish or the Jews, were a regular |63
occurrence. In times of economic uncertainty, these could even escalate
into true pogroms. Football hooligans can be shown to have taken part in
the antisemitic race disturbances in Liverpool in 1919, and the similarly
antisemitic race riots in South Wales in 1911 and 1919.75
Although they were poor, the members of the gangs still found op-
portunities to get into the stadiums. Stan Clowes from Stoke-on-Trent
recalled: Id be down on the football ground and we used to jump over
the top of the corrugated sheets, seven or eight foot high. Used to dodge
over the top. That went on. I think Ive followed Stoke City since I was
about six or eight, and for years and years weve never paid.76
Furious fans regularly stormed the playing field, as happened, for
example, in January 1900, when the championship game between the
Blackburn Rovers and Sheffield United had to be stopped because unhap-
py spectators were on the field demanding their money back. According
to a newspaper report, in 1890 the seemingly invincible goalie from the
Birmingham team West Bromwich Albion was almost lynched by militant
Sunderland fans. One year later, a violent group of Liverpool supporters
waited for the team from Aston Villa at the Liverpool train station to curse
and mock them. Vandalism by groups of fans, such as the wanton destruc-
tion of public buildings, was well-nigh endemic.77 In 1901 Sir John Gorst
reported to the government that the class of lads and young men who
spring up in every city have emancipated themselves from all home influ-
ences and restraints.78 A report to the Inter Departmental Committee on
Physical Deterioration in 1904 raised the criticism that young members of
64 | the working classes had rejected all forms of parental authority. [They]
get to congregating around the street corners at night ... become what we
call corner boys, and get drunken habits ... they have no idea of discipline
or subordination.79 The media stoked the rampant fears, the so-called
moral panics, by painting the behavior and culture of the youth in the
darkest possible colors. In particular, the reading of the dime novels, the
murder mysteries and cheap horror stories, the so-called penny dreadfuls,
was held responsible for leading the youth to disregard authority. These
same arguments and seemingly apocalyptic fears were periodically revived
as, for example, the elite criticism of gangster films, comic books, heavy
metal, punk rock, video games, as well as rap and hip hop.80
The members of gangs and corner boys were often the victims of po-
lice violence since they were among the usual suspects whenever some-
thing happened. Bert Teague from Bristol, for example, recalled an oc-
casion before the First World War when he was playing football on the
street. After playing, he returned briefly to his parents home to change
his clothing, and then went back out into the neighborhood. A police-
man then spoke to him, ranting that Bert Teague and his friends were al- |65
ways disturbing the public peace. Finally, the policeman struck Bert and
brought him back to the station. The street rallied behind Bert by organiz-
ing a collection to pay his fine.81 A man named David Smith reported that
a particularly bad-tempered and hated cop named Old Bloodnut regularly
cut up every ball that his group received from the workers at the port: He
pinched our ball, and he knifed it, pierced it.82 The Victorian police saw
themselves as the tamers of popular culture and missed no opportunity
to regulate the world of the gangs.83 The local gangs took their revenge
by cutting any of the police hats, the so-called tarpaulin capes, that came
into their possession: He done our football, we done his cape was the
simple logic of the ongoing small-scale war between the gangs and the au-
thorities.84 Physical violence increased even further in importance as an
element of the aggressive, hostile to authority, and xenophobic working-
class culture of Great Britain in the period after the First World War. Con-
sequently, hooliganism cannot be seen merely as a phenomenon of the
second half of the twentieth century. Mutual assistance during physical
confrontations bound these supporters even closer together.
Cursing also took place on and near the field. Players were often
warned about their foul language, or even expelled from the field. The
supporters of Stoke City shouted out the following disrespectful words
in 1912: Knock Fleming in the bloody river!85 Harold Fleming was a
star player for Swindon, a railway town in the county of Wiltshire in
southwestern England. As a player for this club in the Second Division
Southern League from 1907 to 1924, he scored no fewer than 148 goals.
Fleming was a hero to the sporting fans of Swindon, beloved not only
for his many beautiful goals, but also for his loyalty to the club, where
he remained despite many lucrative offers from the First Division. He
was the first and only international player from this club, playing in nine
international matches and scoring the same number of goals. The local
66 | Daily News praised the local hero in the highest possible terms: Harold
Fleming is already a Knight of Football.... Already Fleming of Swindon
is becoming Wiltshires most illustrious figure of all time.86
Harold Fleming, the son of a pastor, was a dutiful, religious, and so-
ber man. Consistent with the strong Victorian norms, he was a good fam-
ily man who never played on Christmas Day or Good Friday. He avoided
pubs like the devil avoids holy water, and served as a captain in the Wilt-
shire regiment during the First World War. Fleming was the very model of
petty bourgeois respectability toward which many workers strived.87 He
might be compared with Wynton Rufer, the self-identified and unwaver-
ing Christian striker from New Zealand during the 1980s and 1990s.
Stephen Bloomer, the star of Derbyshire who played professional
football until he was forty years old, was cut from a very different cloth.
The legendary Bloomer played in 293 league matches, as well as 23 in-
ternational matches in which he scored 28 goals; or better said, headed
in 28 goals, since he was the best header of his generation. The son of
a working-class family, he was beloved for his friendly manner and his
proverbial love for the pubs, where he happily quenched his thirst with
the fans. According to the legend, he drank a couple of pints of beer be-
fore important matches. Whatever the truth of this, he was fined on sev-
eral occasions for undisciplined behavior.
Both Fleming and Bloomer, despite their differences, fascinated peo-
ple, at least in their own cities and in the surrounding areas. They scored
many spectacular and decisive goals, were match winners, and incorpo-
rated many of the overlapping ideals of working class culture: On the
one hand was the respectable social climber, a Christian and an officer.
On the other side stood the hard drinking, tough lad, the undisciplined
ruffian who was hostile to authority. Recalling Fleming as a pillar of the
community, a small statue at the main entrance to the Swindon football
club has the following inscription: To the inspiring memory of Harold
Fleming, the great footballer and gentleman, who played for Swindon
Town between 19071924, and was capped nine times for England.88 In
addition, a street in Swindon is named in his honor. As Stephen Bloomer,
in a manner befitting his life, died in a pub in 1938, there is nothing left
to recall him other than his statistics, and an essay by Tony Mason, on
which this part of our study relies. |67
Players generally remained active up through their mid-thirties, al-
though some played even longer. They received, on average, 3 to 4 for
the winter, and 2 to 3 for the summer. They also received performance
and victory incentives, and the stars received additional allowances and
guaranties. For example, in 1913, Sheffield United offered the striker
George Utley from Barnsley a captains armband, a lucrative charity
match for his benefit, the profits from a sporting goods business, and a
five-year contract, which was unusual for this business.89 These kinds of
arrangements made it possible to get around the maximum salary that
was established by the conservative Football Association, that remained
in force up through 1961. In addition, illegal bounties remained quite
common, as numerous legal cases make clear. Even so, in 1940, only seven
hundred of the three thousand professional football players earned the
maximum of 12. Football players earned more than industrial workers
and miners, but certainly did not become rich. The best and most popular
players could continue working in the clubs following their active careers,
become coaches, or even manage a pub. However, many of them had to
return to the factories or mines to fill their wallets by the sweat of their
brow. Many fell victim to alcoholism, which led one official in the Foot-
ball Association to instruct clubs that they should only take under con-
tract those players who had learned a fallback profession.90 The fact that
breweries frequently leased successful public houses to beloved football
players again quite clearly demonstrates the very close relationship be-
tween football and pub culture.
The professionals, themselves, thought about their status in conflict-
ing ways. The contract rules of the FA were tied to the interests of the
clubs, so that the players were completely dependent on the all-powerful
club managers. The first efforts to organize themselves as a union failed.
William Rose, the goalie of the Wolverhampton Wanderers, and Robert
Holmes, a defenseman for Preston North End, could not count on the
solidarity of their colleagues when things became difficult, and thus
failed in their challenge to the all-powerful presidents.91 Even stars like
the Welsh right winger William Billy Meredith of Manchester City, who
68 | later changed over to the local rival United and was elected by the readers
of Empire in Manchester as the most popular player in the league, com-
plained about his lack of free time, since he always had to play on Sat-
urdays and holidays. On the one hand, the strong-willed Meredith, who
played from 1895 to 1924, until he was almost fifty years old, understood
better than almost anyone else of his period how to direct the attention
of the media to himself. He was one of the first media stars of the sport
and bore the nickname the Wizard. On the other hand, the right winger
complained that a professional was simply a better type of clown, albeit
one who was better paid than the rest of society.92
Nathaniel Nat Lofthouse, a striker and idol of the 1940s and 1950s,
stated: You could say Id only been getting fourteen quid a week, but it
wasnt really work. They were working damned hard for eight quid. Id got
easy money. I know; Ive worked down the pit and Ive played football.93
The comparatively higher wages, the physically and psychologically easier
work in comparison to the factory or the mine, as well as the prospect of
fame and honor generally made it an easy decision for young workers to
choose to become professionals. British toughness as a reflection of the
social origins of the players marked the playing style of the teams from
the island up through the 1990s.94 The American social anthropologist
Don Handelman correctly observed that a ritual maps out how a society
is supposed to function, as if it were a model of that society.95 Thus, the
mentality of the spectator effected the interpretation of the game so that
the prevailing view of British players outlasted the corresponding social
structure of Britain by several decades. British robustness and tenacity
are outwardly celebrated, and set on the scale against Italian calculation
or South American dream dancing. For a long time, the game served as
91. Ibid.
92. John Harding, Football Wizard: The Story of Billy Meredith (Derby: Breedon Books, 1985).
93. Cited following Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 38.
94. See David Downing, Passovotchka: Moscow Dynamo in Britain 1945 (London: Blooms-
bury Publishing, 1999), 26062.
95. See Don Handelman, Models and Mirrors: Towards an Anthropology of Public Events
(Cambridge: Berghahn, 1990).
The Peoples Game
1. The term professionalization is used here in the sense of the social-historical concept
of professionalization, which is usually understood in the academic sense of professional ex-
perts and utilized to discuss the genesis of a nonacademic profession. See, for example, Dietrich
B. Rschemeyer, Professionalisierung: Theoretische Probleme fr die vergleichende Geschichts-
forschung, Geschichte und Gesellschaft 6 (1980): 31125.
71
Football and Money
2. See the brief sketch in Kaspar Maase, Grenzenloses Vergngen. Der Aufstieg der Massen-
kultur 18501970 (Frankfurt: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 1997), 11538. With respect to the
forms taken by criticism of mass culture see, for example, Umberto Eco, Apokalyptiker und Integ-
rierte: Zur kritischen Kritik der Massenkultur (Frankfurt: S. Fischer, 1984).
3. See Robert W. Lewis, The Genesis of Professional Football: Bolton-Blackburn-Darwen,
the Centre of Innovation, 187885, International Journal of the History of Sport 14 (1997): 2154.
Football and Money
gan to rise rapidly there during the 1870s. The efforts to obtain money by
charging admission led during the 1880s to professionalism, albeit hid-
den at first. The FA soon recognized that there was no plausible expla-
nation for the numerous Scottish players who were in Lancashire other
than that they had come to play football for money. As a consequence, |73
it was determined that it would be necessary to deal with the issue of
professional athletes. In 1882, the FA issued a formal prohibition against
professionalism, one that was strengthened even further in 1884. How-
ever, in 1882, the FA did permit the reimbursement of expenses. One
consequence of these decisions was that defeated clubs frequently levied
the accusation that their opponents utilized professionals. In 1884, the
teams from Preston North End, Burnley, and Great Lever were disquali-
fied from playing in the FA Cup because of their violation of the pro-
hibition against employing professional players, and were banned from
competition for a year.
It was at this point that the contest began between London and Lan-
cashire, between the south and the north, between amateurs and profes-
sionals, for supremacy in football. The restrictive policies of the FA led to
a threat by thirty-one clubs at the meeting in Blackburn, including the
leading clubs from Lancashire as well as Aston Villa, Walsall Swifts, and
Sunderland, that they would leave the association and found their own
organization. Under the pressure of this threat, the prohibition on profes-
sionals was lifted in July 1885. However, it is obvious that the FA sought
in this manner to gain control over the process of professionalization. At
the same time that professional players were legalized in 1885, the FA in-
troduced a maximum rate of pay for these same players. Professional foot-
ball was further regulated in 1893 through the introduction of a system for
trading players and compensating teams. Players who signed a contract
with a club (at first these contracts were limited to a maximum of one
year) were registered with the association and could not go to new teams
after the end of their contracts without permission from their old teams.
The legalization of professional players led to a marked shift in the
center of power in the FA Cup, which had been dominated by the elitist
clubs of the south since its foundation in 1871. The victors in the first ten
For the professionalization of English football, Tischler, Footballers and Businessmen, is particu-
larly important.
Football and Money
competitions were The Wanderers (1872, 1873, 1876, 1877, 1878), Oxford
University (1874), Royal Engineers (1875), Old Etonians (1879), Clapham
Rovers (1880), and Old Carthusians (1881). In 1882, the Blackburn Rov-
ers were the first team from the north to make it to the final game. The
74 | next year, the Blackburn Olympics inflicted a historic defeat on the Old
Etonians in the final game and brought the cup to the north for the first
time. The victorious team included four textile workers, three metal
workers, one white-collar worker, one master plumber, one barkeeper,
and a dentist. In contrast to their opponents, the Olympics prepared for
the final game in a one-week training camp that had been financed by
the owner of a local iron works. Eric Hobsbawm describes this game as
a symbolic turning point for the character of football that was recog-
nized as a class confrontation.4
The cup was won in three consecutive years by the Blackburn Rovers
from 1884 to 1886. A commentator for the Pall Mall Gazette made clear
in his discussion of the final game in 1884 that the advance of the teams
from the north was understood by contemporaries as a disruptive force
in the culture: An incursion of Northern barbarians on Saturdayhot-
blooded Lancastrians, sharp of tongue, rough and ready, of uncouth
garb and speech. A tribe of Sudanese Arabs let loose in the Strand would
not excite more amusement and curiosity.5 Obviously, the players and
supporters of the working-class clubs from the north were seen by the
upper classes in the south as no less strange than the uncivilized sub-
jects from some far off corner of the Empire.6
From this point on, amateur clubs largely disappeared in the south.
Many of the university and public school teams transitioned away from
football toward other sports in which gentlemen could play each other,
such as rugby, or toward individual sports. The only amateur team that
continued to play against the professionals was the Corinthians. This
was a select team drawn from among the academics of various clubs who
held adamantly to the ideals of the gentleman amateur and fair play.
Thus, for example, they cultivated the practice of taking their goalie out
of the net when a penalty shot was taken so that they would truly have
to bear the consequences of having committed a foul.7 The founder of
this select team was N. Lane PA Jackson who had voiced his intense
opposition to professionalization while serving as assistant secretary of |75
the FA. In the following years, the Corinthians won a number of spectac-
ular victories over professional teams, including an 81 triumph over the
Blackburn Rovers in 1884, who nevertheless went on to win the FA Cup,
and a 103 victory over Cup champion Bury in 1903. The Corinthians,
however, did not participate in either the FA Cup or in other champion-
ships because they saw this as antithetical to their amateur philosophy.
The foundation of the Football League (FL) in 1888 provided pro-
fessional football with its own organization, and led consequently to a
continuously tense relationship with the FA.8 While the FA continued
to be dominated by supporters of the old status quo, the elitist partici-
pants from the south who remained hostile to professionalism, the FL
was controlled by the new money of the rising middle class from north-
ern England and the Midlands. The founding members of the FL came
exclusively from those regions as the final standings for the first cham-
pionship in the 188889 season demonstrate (see table 4-1). It was not
Table 4-1. Final Standings in the First Football League Championship, 188889
Rank Team Games Won Tied Lost Points
7. Holt, Sport and the British, 99. 8. Also see Tomlinson, North and South.
Football and Money
until 1891 that the Woolwich Arsenal became the first professional club
in southern England. As late as 1914, only six of the forty clubs in the FL
came from southern England, and all but two of these were from Lon-
don. Up through 1931, the league championship was won exclusively by
76 | teams from the north and the Midlands. Between 1883 and 1922, the FA
Cup was won just two times by southern teams.9
The moving spirit in the establishment of the FL was William Mc-
Gregor, a liberal landowner and Methodist. Other founding fathers of
the FL also came from the petty bourgeoisie or even from among the
skilled laborers. The establishment of a championship, which guaran-
teed the clubs a regular source of income from the games and eliminated
the risk of being excluded from the FA Cup, was a logical consequence
of the legalization of professional football. The success of the FL was fa-
cilitated above all by two technological factors. The railroad, which had
become a mass transportation system in the middle of the nineteenth
century, made it possible for working-class football fans to travel from
the hinterland into the large cities, and also to get to away matches. The
first chartered trains were organized in Scotland on the occasion of the
cup final in 1881. In addition, thanks to the developing telegraph and
postal system in Great Britain, the early modernization of the press had
a concomitant effect on the popularization of football. Beginning in the
1880s, reporting about football was a fixture of the local press. Thanks to
the telegraph, the results from the entire country could be hanging on
the walls of the editorial offices that same evening.
The numbers of spectators grew steadily. During the first season of
the FL an average of 4,600 spectators attended the games. This had risen
to 7,900 in the 189596 season, 13,200 in the 19056 season, 15,800 in the
19089 season, and 23,100 in the 191314 season.10 The average number
of spectators attending the final games of the FA Cup grew even more
spectacularly (see table 4-2).11 Up until the end of the nineteenth century,
the players in the FL, which was able to establish a Second Division in
9. Concerning the development of professionalism in the south, see J. P. Korr, West Ham
United Football Club and the Beginnings of Professional Football in East London, Journal of
Contemporary History 13 (1978): 21132.
10. Wray Vamplew, Pay Up and Play the Game: Professional Sport in Britain 18751914 (Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 63.
11. Ibid.
Football and Money
|77
1892, and in the Scottish Football League (SFL), which was established
in 1890, were only part-time professionals. However, after the turn of
the century, they generally became full-time professionals. At first, their
salaries were equivalent to those of foremen or specialized craftsmen. In
1901, the average annual salary of a professional football player was 144,
while a foreman in the metal industry earned 134 and a foreman in the
printing industry earned 127.12 Craftsmen from trades that were threat-
ened with extinction and also miners were heavily represented among
the professional football players. For the latter, football was not only an
attractive alternative to their ancestral profession, it also offered one of
the few means of escaping the exceptionally difficult and dangerous work
under ground.
The first football union was established in 1899, but had only lim-
ited success.13 Then, in 1907, the Professional Footballers Association
(PFA) was founded in Manchester. The core of this union was the players
from Manchester United and the star Billy Meredith, who came from a
mining village in South Wales. The central demands of the union were
the elimination of the upper limit on wages and the free choice of em-
ployer, which was made impossible by the current trading system. The
PFA joined the General Federation of Trade Unions (GFTU), thereby
demonstrating that the players who were organized in the union con-
sidered football as a branch of industry and saw themselves as work-
ers. This view, as well as the possibility that membership in the union
umbrella organization might lead to solidarity strikes among the pro-
fessional football players in support of work actions in other economic
sectors, led the FA to take energetic counteractions. The players from
Manchester United had their pay docked by the association. Finally, the
PFA decided to act on its own and not to become integrated into the
wider union movement.
14. Wray Vamplew, The Economics of a Sports Industry: Scottish Gate-Money Football,
18901914, Economic History Review 35 (1982): 54967.
Football and Money
but rather, each of the individual clubs was focused on athletic success,
since they were not willing to sacrifice this success for a more evenly bal-
anced and exciting championship in order to gain greater profits.15
The situation was less unequivocal with regard to the English FL.
Here, the restrictions on players moving from team to team and the lim- |79
its on pay meant that the richest teams could not perpetuate their ath-
letic success. The result, as Vamplew showed, was that the FL had greater
competitive balance than the SFL. Nevertheless, the FL did not have ex-
plicit mechanisms to create equality, such as the draft system, which are
common in the unequivocally profit-oriented U.S. team sports.
The interwar period saw a further impetus toward commercialization
and professionalization.16 The shortening of the workday and increasing
per capita income, despite increasing unemployment, led to an increasing
demand for leisure goods. For millions of people in this period, the con-
sumption of football was the premier leisure time activity. The game was
an integral element in working-class culture. The stadiums were located
in working-class neighborhoods. The players and coaches, and sometimes
the club officials, came from the same social milieu as the spectators: pet-
ty bourgeois, shopkeepers, white-collar workers, and above all workers.
In addition, football was a comparatively inexpensive leisure time activ-
ity. Thus, during the 193738 season, the average attendance at the games
of the First Division of the Football League was 30,000 (it was 15,800 dur-
ing the 19089 season). The Second Division had an average attendance
of 20,000, and the two groups of the Third Division had 11,000 and 7,000
spectators, respectively. The numbers of spectators at the games during
the FA Cup were generally much higher still. There were only 2,000 spec-
tators at the first FA Cup final in 1872. There were 17,000 in attendance
by 1888, 42,000 in 1895, and 120,000 in 1913. The legendary White Horse
Cup final in 1923, where the playing field was completely overrun by spec-
tators before the match began and had to be cleared by mounted police,
had an estimated quarter of a million people in attendance.17
betters as sixteen times the number of spectators who streamed into the
stadiums. A total of roughly 800,000 was wagered every week, and the
gambling companies had approximately 30,000 employees.
|81
The Long Path toward Professional Football
in Continental Europe
In the interwar period several non-British countries established profes-
sional leagues, which became an important element in the leisure activi-
ties of working class men. The first professional championships on the
European continent took place in the mid-1920s in the east-central Eu-
ropean Calcio Danubiano. A professional football league was established
in Vienna in 1924.19 Soon afterward professional leagues were founded
in Czechoslovakia20 and Hungary.21 A few years later, professional foot-
ball came to Spain (1929),22 France,23 Switzerland,24 and Romania25 (all
in 1932). Other countries saw the beginnings of at least underground
19. See Matthias Marschik, Wiener Melange: Fuball in sterreich 19181939, in Fuball
zwischen den Kriegen. Europa 19181939, eds. Christian Koller and Fabian Brndle (Mnster: Lit,
2010), 24563.
20. Ren Kpper, Fuball im multinationalen Staat: Tschechoslowakei, in Fuball zwischen
den Kriegen: Europa 19181939, 26580; Stefan Zwicker, Fuball in den bhmischen Lndern,
in Hakenkreuz und rundes Leder: Fuball im Nationalsozialismus, eds. Lorenz Peiffer and Dietrich
Schulze-Marmeling (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2008), 22333.
21. See G. Molnar, Hungarian Football: A Socio-Historical Overview, Sport in History 27
(2007): 293317.
22. Jrg Ackermann, Spanischer Fuball in der Zwischenkriegszeit, in Fuball zwischen
den Kriegen. Europa 19181939, 12744.
23. See Alfred Wahl, Un professionalisme de rsignation en France, Socits et Reprsenta-
tions 7 (1998): 6775; Le footballeur franais: De lamateurisme au salariat, Le mouvement social
135 (1986): 730; and with Pierre Lanfranchi, Les footballeurs professionels des annes trente nos
jours (Paris: Hachette, 1995).
24. See Christian Koller, Schweizer Fuball zwischen Modernitt und Geistiger Landes-
verteidigung, in Fuball zwischen den Kriegen. Europa 19181939, 20320; and Philippe Vonnard
and Grgory Quin, Elments pour une histoire de la mise en place du professionnalisme dans le
football suisse durant lentre-deux-guerres: Processus, rsistances et ambiguts, Schweizerische
Zeitschrift fr Geschichte 62 (2012): 7085.
25. See Sebastian Balta, Die Goldenen Dreiiger: Das legendre Jahrzehnt des rumn-
ischen Fuballs von 1930 bis 1940, in berall ist der Ball rund: Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart des
Fuballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa, eds. Dittmar Dahlmann et al. (Essen: Klartext, 2006), 25174;
and Bogdan Popa, Our Team? Ethnic Prejudices and Football in Interwar Rumania, in Sport
zwischen Ost und West. Beitrge zur Sportgeschichte Osteuropas im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, eds.
Ari Malz et al. (Osnabrck: Fibre, 2007), 191203.
Football and Money
26. See Colin Jose, The American Soccer League: The Golden Years of American Soccer 1921
1931 (Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 1998).
27. Alex Bellos, Futebol: FuballDie brasilianische Kunst des Lebens (Frankfurt: Fischer
Taschenbuch Verlag, 2005), 40.
28. See Historia del Ftbol Chileno, 1:1721.
29. See Eisenberg, FIFA, 8189.
30. The basic work on this topic is Maase, Grenzenloses Vergngen: Der Aufstieg der Massen-
kultur 18501970.
31. Christian Koller, Transnationalitt: Netzwerke, Wettbewerbe, Migration, in Fuball
zwischen den Kriegen: Europa 19181939, 3763.
32. See Andreas Hafer and Wolfgang Hafer, Hugo Meisl oder die Erfindung des modernen
Fuballs: Eine Biographie (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2007), 127.
33. Mathew Taylor and Pierre Lanfranchi, Moving with the Ball: The Migration of Professional
Footballers (Oxford: Berg, 2001), 51 and 14551; Koller, Transnationalitt, 5663.
Football and Money
34. Taylor and Lanfranchi, Moving with the Ball, 51 and 14551; Werner Skrentny, Hakoahs
Exodus: Importe in die US-Profiligen, in Davidstern und Lederball: Die Geschichte der Juden im
deutschen und internationalen Fuball, ed. Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling (Gttingen: Werkstatt,
2003), 43358.
35. Pierre Lanfranchi, Fussball in Europa 19201938: Die Entwicklung eines internation-
alen Netzwerkes, in Die Kanten des runden Leders: Beitrge zur europischen Fussballkultur, eds.
Roman Horak and Wolfgang Reiter (Vienna: Promedia, 1991), 168; and Lanfranchi and Taylor,
Moving with the Ball, 5158 and 17073.
36. See Eco, Apokalyptiker und Integrierte.
37. See Robert B. Edelman, Serious Fun: A History of Spectator Sports in the USSR (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1993), 711.
Football and Money
38. In this context, see Roman Horak and Wolfgang Maderthaner, A Culture of Urban Cos-
mopolitanism: Uridil and Sindelar as Viennese Coffee-House Heroes, in European Heroes: Myth,
Identity, Sport, 13955; and by the same authors, Vom Fussballspielen in Wien: berlegungen
zu einem popularkulturellen Phnomen der Zwischenkriegszeit, in Philosophie, Psychoanalyse,
Emigration: Festschrift fr Kurt Rudolf Fischer, ed. Wegeler Cornelia Wegeler (Vienna: WUV-
Universittsverlag, 1992), 99118.
39. See Roman Horak and Wolfgang Maderthaner, Mehr als ein Spiel: Fussball und populare
Kulturen im Wien der Moderne (Vienna: Lcker, 1997), 11340.
40. On this point, see John Bunzl, Hoppauf Hakoah: Jdischer Sport in sterreich von den
Anfngen bis in die Gegenwart (Vienna: Junius, 1987); Hakoah: Ein jdischer Sportverein in Wien
19091995, ed. Jdisches Museum Wien (Vienna: Jdisches Museum der Stadt Wien, 1995); and
Arthur Baar, FussballgeschichtenErnstes und Heiteres: Hakoah Wien (Tel Aviv: Brith Hakoah
1909, 1974).
Football and Money
and Austrian national teams.41 Under the influence of Max Nordaus ide-
ology of the muscular Jew, Hakoah (Hebrew for the power) wanted
to dispel on the playing field the antisemitic prejudice that Jews were
physically inferior. The club went on tours to Palestine, Romania, Po-
land, Lithuania, Germany, and Great Britain as an ambassador of Jewish |85
sport. In Great Britain, the team defeated West Ham 50. At home, the
club was always the target of antisemitic jokes and slogans.
This was also the case for the liberal and upper class Austria Wien.
The club was originally called Wiener Amateur-Sportverein (Vienna Ama-
teur Sporting Club), and only accepted intellectuals as members. When it
moved into professional football, the name was changed. During the sec-
ond half of the 1920s, Austria had the second most expensive team in the
Vienna professional league, after Hakoah. Most of the clubs patrons as
well as many of the players came from the Jewish upper class. Although
Austria, in contrast to Hakoah, did not claim a specifically Jewish iden-
tity, it was always cursed as a Jewish club, particularly by supporters
of its in-city rival Rapid. (Even today, in games against Austria, which
has not had any active Jewish players for decades, supporters of Rapid
chant out smash the Jews.)42 The Wiener Sport-Tagblatt, one of the larg-
est sporting newspapers in the country, regularly published antisemitic
columns in which two Viennese with Jewish names, Schatzinger and
Schmonzides, vent about the supposed greed and wealth of the Jewish
professional football players. The Sport-Papagei similarly published regu-
lar stories about the Yiddish-speaking kleine Moritzl (little Morris).43
The players and officials of Hakoah regularly suffered assaults, in-
spired by antisemitism, at the hands of the public and from players of op-
41. See Detlev Claussen, Bla Guttmann: Weltgeschichte des Fussballs in einer Person (Berlin:
Berenberg, 2006); as well as Ludwig Tegelbeckers, Bla Guttmann: Weltenwanderer ohne Kom-
promiss, in Davidstern und Lederball: Die Geschichte der Juden im deutschen und internationalen
Fussball, ed. Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2003), 34768.
42. Regarding continuity in antisemitism in Austrian football after 1945, see Gerhard
Fischer and Ulrich Lindner, Strmer fr Hitler: Vom Zusammenspiel zwischen Fussball und Nati-
onalsozialismus (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 1999), 14749; and Michael John and Dietrich Schulze-
Marmeling, Hauts den Juden!: Antisemitismus im europischen Fussball, in Fussball und Ras-
sismus (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 1993), 14143.
43. See Fischer, Strmer, 129, as well as Michael John, Aggressiver Antisemitismus im
sterreichischen Sportgeschehen der Zwischenkriegszeit: Manifestationen und Reaktionen
anhand ausgewhlter Beispiele, Zeitgeschichte 26 (1999): 20323; and with Schulze-Marmeling,
Antisemitismus, 13537.
Football and Money
men first came into contact with football in the military. Looking back
over this period, the famous publicist Sebastian Haffner wrote in 1939:
In the years 1924, 1925, and 1926, Germany developed overnight as a sporting
power. Germany had never before been a sporting country. Never before had
88 | there been creativity and imagination in sport, as is the case in England and
America. The true spirit of sport, the self-abandoning and playful transition into
a fantasy world with its own rules and laws, is entirely foreign to the German
spiritual condition. However, all of a sudden, membership in sport clubs and the
attendance at sport festivals increased tenfold.52
blick, Archiv fr Sozialgeschichte 33 (1993): 13778; and Erik Eggers, Fussball in der Weimarer
Republik, Stadion 25 (1999): 15375.
52. Sebastian Haffner, Geschichte eines Deutschen: Die Erinnerungen 19141933 (Stuttgart:
Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 2000), 72.
53. See Diller Ansgar, Die erste Sportbertragung im deutschen Rundfunk, Publizistik 17
(1972): 31525.
54. Cited in Fischer, Strmer, 31.
55. Cited in Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 130.
Football and Money
The workers athletic movement, which had its origins in the 1890s,
also opposed professional sports because they represented a manifesta-
tion of the capitalist quest for profit.59 As was true of the Olympians, the
ability of sport to bring peoples together was in the foreground. However,
the workers sport movement criticized the Olympic movement for fail-
ing to serve this goal, but rather stoking national rivalries in their com-
petitions. It was not the upper classes and aristocratic elites, but rather
the representatives of the working classes, who were supposed to join in
90 | brotherhood in the context of athletic competitions.
In 1939, Sebastian Haffner offered retrospective ridicule of both the
nationalist and working class conceptions of sport:
The nationalists foolish and plump as always, found that our healthy instinct
had come upon a wonderful replacement for the now absent military service.
As if any one of us had thought about physical exercise! The left, too clever by
half, and, as a result almost more stupid than the nationalists (as always), con-
sidered it a great discovery that warlike instincts could now be redirected to the
friendly green grass through running and calisthenics, and therefore believed
that world peace had been saved. They did not seem to notice that the German
champions without exception wore black, white, and red ribbons, although the
national colors at that time were black, red, and gold. They did not realize that
the allure of the game of war, the old concept of the great and exciting competi-
tion between nations, was being practiced and kept alive here, and that warlike
instinct by no means had been redirected. They did not see the connection, and
did not see the relapse.60
63. See, for example, Gehrmann, Fuball, 28; Heinrich, Fuballbund, 7592; Schulze-Marmel-
ing, Fuball, 12840; Dirk Bitzer and Bernd Wilting, Strmen fr Deutschland: Die Geschichte
des deutschen Fuballs von 1933 bis 1954 (Frankfurt: Campus, 2003), 3941; and Rudolf Oswald,
Ideologie, nicht konomie: Der DFB im Kampf gegen die Professionalisierung des deutschen
Fuballs, in Hakenkreuz und rundes Leder: Fuball im Nationalsozialismus, 10726.
64. See, for example, Erik Eggers, Berufsspieler sind Schdlinge des Sports, sie sind aus-
zumerzen ...: Crux und Beginn eines deutschen Sonderweges im europischen Fuball: Die Ama-
teurfrage im deutschen Fuball der Weimarer Republik, in Der lange Weg zur Bundesliga: Zum
Siegeszug des Fuballs in Deutschland, ed. Wolfram Pyta (Mnster: Lit, 2004), 91112; Nils Have-
mann, Fuball unterm Hakenkreuz: Der DFB zwischen Sport, Politik und Kommerz (Frankfurt: Cam-
pus, 2005), 5662 and 15964; and Markwart Herzog, Eigenwelt Fuball: Unterhaltung fr die
Massen, in Fuball zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus: Alltag, Medien, Knste, Stars, eds. Markwart
Herzog and Andreas Bode (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2008), 1135.
65. Havemann, Fuball unterm Hakenkreuz, 15964. For criticism of this thesis, see Rudolf
Oswald, Rezension zu Havemann, Fuball unterm Hakenkreuz, SportZeiten 6, no. 1 (2006): 164;
Ideologie, 119 and 121; Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling, Juden und Antisemitismus im deutschen
und europischen Fuball, SportZeiten 7, no. 2 (2007): 98; Von Neuberger bis Zwanziger: Der
lange Marsch des DFB, in Hakenkreuz und rundes Leder, 59092; and Lorenz Peiffer, Sport im
Nationalsozialismus: Zum aktuellen Stand der sporthistorischen Forschung: Eine kommentierte Bib-
liografie (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2009), 22.
Football and Money
the use of football as an escapist spectacle for the mass audience. There
was also the possibility of using football to serve the needs of propagan-
dizing the outside world. Here, however, there was a difference between
Germany and fascist Italy. The latter sought to win the World Cup in
94 | 1934, which was open to professionals, while Nazi Germany focused on
the Olympic games in 1936, for which the best athletes were intended to
preserve their amateur status.
Even if bonuses were paid under the table, professional football re-
mained forbidden in the Third Reich. In 1937, the sports journalist Lutz
Koch claimed that when it came in third at the World Cup held in Italy in
1934, Germany became the amateur world champion.69 In truth, how-
ever, a camouflaged professionalism continued during the National So-
cialist period. There was even some renewed consideration of establish-
ing a Reich league in 1939, but the outbreak of war ended this project.70
There were true exceptions to the prohibition on professionalization in
the Third Reich with regard to some other sports. These included mo-
tor sports, which enjoyed the support of long-time ADAC member Adolf
Hitler, and boxing, which Hitler had already described in Mein Kampf as
providing an almost ideal representation of the National Socialist con-
ception of mankind as a pure fighting sport.71
The polemic against professional football, tinged with antisemitism,
which had been part of public discourse in both the Weimar Republic
and in Austria before the Anschluss, only became an important issue in
the National Socialist press in 1938. The integration of Austrian football
following the Anschluss and the general radicalization of anti-Jewish per-
secution beginning in 1938 played a decisive role in this development,
which Oswald describes as an antisemitic turn in the debate about pro-
fessional football.72 Professional football remained a target of antise-
mitic attacks during the war as well. The high-ranking football official
69. Lutz Koch, Hinein ... Tor, Tor! Deutschlands Nationalelf in 135 Fussball-Schlachten (Berlin:
Deutscher Schriftenverlag, 1937), 13746.
70. Erik Eggers, Profifuball im Amateurverband: Der deutsche Sonderweg, in Fuball
zwischen den Kriegen: Europa 19181939, 242.
71. Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf (Munich: Zentralverlag der NSDAP, 1941), 454.
72. Rudolf Oswald, Ein Gift, mit echt jdischer Geschicklichkeit ins Volk gespritzt: Die
nationalsozialistische Judenverfolgung und das Ende des mitteleuropischen Profifuballs,
19381941, SportZeiten 2, no. 2 (2002): 5367.
Football and Money
and former national coach Dr. Otto Nerz published an article on June 4,
1943, in the Berlin 12 Uhr Blatt with the title Europes Sport will become
free of the Jews, in which he claimed, among other matters, that
Jews and their bondsmen continually made the lives of the leadership [of the
|95
football association] very difficult, particularly with regard to the issue of profes-
sional players. During the crisis before 1933, there was a great danger that foot-
ball would also become Judaized. The major clubs were always deeply in debt,
and the creditors frequently were Jews. The drive toward professional football
was very strong, and the state at that time could not give the leadership of the
sport any support because the state, itself, was dependent on the Jews.73
73. Citation in Jrgen Leinemann, Sepp Herberger: Ein Leben, eine Legende (Berlin: Heyne,
1997), 265.
74. According to Heinrich, Fussballbund, 18292, and Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 135.
75. See Siegfried Gehrmann, Ein Schritt nach Europa: Zur Grndungsgeschichte der Fuss-
ballbundesliga, Sozial- und Zeitgeschichte des Sports 6 (1992): 337.
Football and Money
which lost to Real Madrid (37) in 1960. There were no German clubs in
the final round of the Cup Winners Cup established in 196061. At the
same time, there was a threat that the best German players would leave
for the Romance language-speaking countries, where professionalism
96 | long had been established. Between 1960 and 1963, no fewer than nine
members of the German national team left the Federal Republic, mostly
for Italy.
Even the establishment of the Bundesliga, which began play in the
196364 season with 16 teams, did not entail a full acceptance of profes-
sionalism by the DFB.76 The first set of statutes of the Bundesliga re-
quired the players to have a profession in addition to football, insisted
that the players have a good reputation, and forbade them from using
their names for advertisements. Precise upper limits were set for wages,
expenses, bonuses, and transfer payments. The total monthly income of
the players could not exceed 1,200 German marks unless an expert con-
firmed the extraordinary qualifications of a player and the playing com-
mittee gave its approval. Because of these restrictions, during the first
season of the Bundesliga, just thirtyfour players listed football as their
full-time occupation. The great majority of the players chose to pur-
sue another occupation and to treat football as an additional source of
income.
However, this careful professionalization soon collapsed in the face
of success at the international level. In 1966, the German national team
made it to the final game in the World Cup against England. That same
year, Borussia Dortmund was the first German club to win the European
Cup. The next year, FC Bayern Mnchen achieved this same triumph.
In 1965 and 1968, TSV Mnchen 1860 and Hamburger SV, respectively,
reached the final game as the German representative in the competition,
although each left the field as the loser.
Over the course of the 1960s, it became increasingly clear that the
limits imposed by the Bundesliga statute were too narrow. Competition
for the best players meant that the clubs in the Bundesliga continually
came into conflict with the regulations concerning professional players.
Just before the beginning of the first rounds of the Bundesliga in August
Football as Entertainment in
a Globalized Age
When one considers the discussions that took place in the interwar pe-
riod up through the 1960s from the perspective of the early twenty-first
century, they seem to come from the distant past. While in the early
years of the Bundesliga, there was controversy whether the transfer of
player had illegally breached the 50,000 German mark transfer fee limit,
and in the 1980s the best players in the world were worth just a few
million, at the end of the 1990s, the market value of some individual
players reached into the hundreds of millions. In 2013, Real Madrid paid
an astonishing transfer fee of 100 million euros for the Welsh midfielder
Gareth Bale.
Even better than numbers such as these, which could be interpret-
ed as the result of a linear development, is the clarity brought to the
structural and even more to the cultural divergence of the 1990s by the
79. Football Research Unit, University of Liverpool: MBA (Football Industries); http://fru
.merseyside.org/mba.htm.
80. The numbers are taken from Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 218.
Football and Money
to make changes in the rules that were intended to center the game on
offense again. This same goal led to a change in the point system that
made it more attractive to seek victory than to play for a draw.
The crisis of the 1980s, however, was not due solely to the decreas-
ing attractiveness of the play on the field. Rather, several catastrophic |99
incidents also inflicted considerable damage on the image of the sport.
Thirty-nine people were killed at the final game of the European Cham-
pion Clubs Cup in 1985 held at Heysel stadium in Brussels when rowdy
supporters of Liverpool FC started a panic that led to the collapse of a
wall in the stadium. Just eighteen days earlier, fifty-seven people were
killed when an old wooden stadium at Bradford caught fire. Finally, in
April 1989, ninety-six supporters of Liverpool FC were crushed to death
in an overcrowded standing terrace at Hillsborough stadium in Sheffield.
These catastrophes, all of which were traced back to an aged stadi-
um infrastructure, led to a significant push for modernization. Under
pressure from a threat by the British prime minister Margaret Thatcher
to ban professional football, safety precautions were improved and gen-
eral surveillance systems were installed to fight hooliganism. In particu-
lar, however, stadiums in both England and internationally introduced
seats. The uncovered standing-room bleachers, which had always been
a symbol of the roots of football in working class culture as well as the
emotional bonds of the fans with their club for which they were pre-
pared to endure the wind and weather, now largely disappeared. Follow-
ing the catastrophe at Hillsborough, the clubs in the top two divisions
were legally required to equip their stadiums exclusively with seats. This
modernization of the infrastructure combined with an increase in the
price of admissionthe least expensive adult ticket for the top league
in England was 2 in 1984, 8 in 1992, and 12 in 1994led to a substan-
tial change in the social composition of the spectators.81 Football games
were transformed from spectacles that were attended largely by male
members of the lower classes to events that were consumed by middle
class families in a manner analogous to the professional leagues of sev-
eral North American team sports. In addition, more women now ven-
tured into the stadiums. In 1997, 50 percent of the season-ticket holders
82. Fletcher Research: Net Profits: How to Make Money Out of Football, cited in Schulze-
Marmeling, Fussball, 210.
Football and Money
was changed to the benefit of the clubs in the top division, and the con-
tribution to the general pot was reduced to 3 percent of revenues from
attendance. In 1988, the leading clubs in the First Division, with the sup-
port of the television company ITV, threatened to leave the FL and estab-
lish a Super League. As a consequence, the percentage of the television |101
revenues that flowed into the pockets of the first division clubs increased
again, this time from 50 percent to 75 percent. Then in 1991, a financially
independent Premier League was established under the management of
the FA, which formerly had been the guardian of amateurism. The Pre-
mier League was loosely connected with the other professional leagues
through the relegation and advancement mechanisms, but no longer
shared television revenues or money from sponsorships. This marked the
end of the traditional redistribution structure of the FL.83
The other professional leagues saw similar processes, albeit some-
what later. The main cause is to be found in the liberalization of the elec-
tronic media, which drove television income to astronomic levels. The
result was an increasingly sharp fight over the division of these revenues
between the top clubs, whose bargaining position had been strength-
ened immeasurably, and the remainder of the professional clubs. In ad-
dition, television gained ever greater influence over the organization of
the season and kick-off times, often to the detriment of the fans, who
were still streaming into the stadiums.
The so-called Bosman judgment delivered yet another blow to the tra-
ditional system. In 1990, the Belgian player Jean-Marc Bosman brought a
complaint before the European Court because his transfer from RC Lige
to the French club Dunkirk was quashed through financial demands made
by Lige. In 1995, the European Court declared that transfer fees for play-
ers who were not under contract were illegal. At the same time the court
ruled, on the basis of the principle of the free movement of people that
held sway in the European Union, that the number of EU nationals who
were permitted to play on a team had been set arbitrarily. As a conse-
quence of these decisions, the players were no longer the objects of trans-
fers, but rather became contractual partners of the clubs.84 The salaries of
the star players subsequently rose at a dizzying rate. At the same time, the
top European leagues lost their national character. The number of foreign
players in the English top league grew from 11 in the 199293 season to
166 in the 199899 season.
102 | Over the course of the 1990s, the top level of European football came
to resemble ever more closely the model of the thoroughly commercial-
ized professional sports in the United States. The leading clubs were trans-
formed into true entertainment companies. For example, Manchester
United, which took the development of commercialization to the most ex-
treme levels, employed no fewer than thirty cooks who worked in the six-
teen restaurants in the stadium. The number of club administrators and
people involved in merchandising far outstripped the number of players
and coaches. In the 199899 season, the club had revenues of $290 mil-
lion and admission fees comprised just 38 percent of the clubs income.
The remainder came from new sources such as television, merchandising,
and food service. In keeping with the strategic alliance of economic con-
cerns, in February 2001, Manchester United established a trans-Atlantic
partnership with the New York Yankees, the American baseball team
with the most championships, whose sports empire also included the
New York Nets basketball club and the New Jersey Devils ice hockey club.
Among other items, the agreement included the mutual marketing of fan
merchandise. By the end of the 1990s, the 92 English professional clubs
earned an average of $80 million per year. The clubs in the Italian, Spanish,
and German professional leagues averaged $50 million per year.
On the other side of the equation, as noted above, wages and trans-
fer fees also rose immeasurably. The total bill for the wages of the 412 em-
ployees of Manchester United was more than $150 million in the 199899
season. Overall, however, just a few of the major clubs, who understood
how to draw on the new sources of income, benefitted from these de-
velopments. These were the same clubs that gained the most from the
transformation of the European Cup into the Champions League in 1992.
In comparison with the single knock-out system of the old competition,
the Champions League guaranteed the top clubs, with their exceptionally
Fischer, 1998); and Sport und Kommerz, eds. Franz Jaeger and Winfried Stier (Zurich: Regger,
2000).
Football and Money
expensive teams, a fixed number of games within their groups, with the
concomitant income. By contrast, the majority of the professional clubs
were forced deeply into debt by the rising salaries and transfer fees. The
introduction of the Champions League resulted in the establishment of a
two-class system in the national leagues. |103
This reality was mirrored by the very different experiences of the
professional clubs when they entered the stock market. In 1983 Totten-
ham was the first professional club to dare to go public. In 2000, nine-
teen English football clubs were quoted in the stock market. The biggest
investors were, as a rule, media companies. A number of clubs in other
leagues also ventured into the market. In 2000, Borussia Dortmund was
the first club in the Bundesliga to do so. While the shares of a few clubs,
such as Manchester United, rose very quickly in price, the shares of most
football clubs fell in value.
In some cases, the interconnection of commercialized football, pri-
vate media, and financial capital also had a political component. The best-
known example is AC Milan, which was purchased in 1986 by the media
and construction entrepreneur Silvio Berlusconi. At the beginning of
the 1990s, Berlusconi, who served as club president until 2004, and then
again from 2006 to 2008, entered politics. He founded a political party
with a name drawn from the traditional chant of the Italian football fans,
Forza Italia. In all, the Milan president, who regularly was involved in
scandals and judicial conflicts, served four terms as Italian prime minis-
ter (199495, 20015, 20056, and 200811). Berlusconis system, some-
times denoted as Calciocracy (ruled through football),85 was emulated
in Ukraine where oligarchs with political ambitions established, and
still do establish, their influence through the financial support of popular
football clubs.86
This is not the place to ask whether the further development of
exceptional commercialization at the highest level of football, with the
enormous media attention it receives, and the numerous betting scan-
dals that have rocked the sport, as well as the almost daily presentation
85. John Foot, Calcio: A History of Italian Football (London: Harper Perennial, 2007), 326.
86. See Stefan Wellgraf, Die Millionengaben: Fuball und Oligarchen in der Ukraine, in
berall ist der Ball rund: Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart des Fuballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa
Nachspielzeit, eds. Dittmar Dahlmann et al. (Essen: Klartext, 2011), 97105.
Football and Money
87. Richard Haynes, The Football Imagination: The Rise of Football Fanzine Culture (Alder-
shot: Arena, 1995).
88. For the spheres of influence of the various London clubs, see Morris, Spiel, 239.
Football and Money
the old stadium, which had since fallen into ruin, with a new building
that had covered bleachers with seats, failed because of resistance by the
authorities with jurisdiction in the district of Greenwich. The supporters
of Charlton Athletic FC, who no longer wished to wait for the return of
their club to their neighborhood, and already had their own institutional |105
voice in the fanzine Voice of the Valley, established the Valley Party and
received 10 percent of the vote in the council elections. As a result of this
impressive democratic result, The Valley suddenly became an important
political player, and the relevant authorities gave their permission for
the construction project without any further objections. On December 5,
1992, the players from Charlton were able to play in their own arena af-
ter years of exile.
A similar situation occurred in Hamburg in the winter of 198889.
Here, the leadership of FC St. Pauli and a group of investors from Canada
planned to tear down the old Millerntor stadium and construct a gigantic
state-of-the-art project called the Sport Dome on the site. In response, a
local campaign was organized by supporters of St. Pauli, who did not wish
to lose their beloved stadium, and by inhabitants of the neighborhood,
who feared that their property values would decline. For two months
there were protests against the major project, which included numerous
activities such as demonstrations, open forums, minutes of silence at
games, and pamphleteering, at which point the club backed down. One
result of the local action was the establishment of the fanzine Millerntor
Roar! in the summer of 1989 that took a decidedly antiracist line from
the very beginning. During the 1990s, the supporters of St. Pauli were
known internationally for their leftist views in contrast to the generally
extreme rightwing views that were cultivated in German fanzines.89
These developments seem to have been expressions of the capability
of football to serve as a symbol of the dialectic between lightness and
weight that marks postmodern globalized society, a capability that the
sociologist Niklas Luhmann attributed to football as early as 1990.90 It
is a fundamental characteristic of football that it is able to create loyal-
ties and indeed serve to create identities in the atomized society of the
89. Sven Brux, St.Pauli-Fans gegen rechts! Chronik einer Bewegung, in Fussball und Ras-
sismus (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 1994), 23343.
90. Niklas Luhmann, Der Fussball, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, July 4, 1990.
Football and Money
modern world without, however, cutting off the relations of the fan to
their real social, political, and economic interests. Thus, it is possible
for the fan to maintain his football loyalties over the long-term with-
out succumbing to the rarified air of the global players. It is precisely
106 | because of globalization that he faces a greater need to hold on to his
local anchor in order to pursue his increased desire for authenticity and
traditions.
5|Football and
Emotion
In his bestseller Fever Pitch, the English writer Nick Hornby recalled the
background noise of the North Bank, the since-redesigned standing-
room area of the venerable Highbury Park in London, the home of Arse-
nal FC: I loved the different categories of noise: the formal, ritual noise
when the players emerged (each players name called in turn, starting
with the favourite, until he responded with a wave); the spontaneous
shapeless roar when something exciting was happening on the pitch: the
renewed vigour of the chanting after a goal or sustained period of attack-
ing.1 Rhythmic clapping and drumming, communal singing and jeering,
drinking alcohol and playing trumpets, all of this made the entry into
the stadium a happy experience. When one adds in the fine aroma of
grilling bratwurst and sausages, the fireworks and smoke, the colorful
banners and deafening sirens, the rituals of football come vibrantly to
life: they appeal to all of the senses. There is a feeling of solidarity. There
is a festive and almost euphoric atmosphere. Thus, Hornby addresses
two themes at the same time. These are the auditive or acoustic turn and
the emotional turn, which have received considerable attention recently
from cultural historians.2
In this chapter, we wish to examine how the game and its protago-
nists influence the emotions of the fans in the stadium, or as they listen
on the radio or watch on television, and create a typology of the feel-
ings that they express during the course of a match. We all know about
the third goal at Wembley, that ominously sharply kicked ball by Geoff
107
Football and Emotion
Hurst during the overtime of the World Cup game toward the German
net that was tended by Hans Tilkowski. The ball struck the underside of
the crossbar, landing either behind or in front of the line, and then go-
ing back into the field from where the German defender Weber headed
108 | it over the bar. There were several minutes of hope and dread while the
Swiss referee, Gottfried Gotti Dienst, had an extensive discussion with
the Soviet linesman Bakhramov, and finally decided that it had been a
goal. Hurst, the tall midfielder from West Ham United, shot another
goal to make the final result 42, and England won its firstand so far
onlyWorld Cup. For decades afterward, people in the Federal Republic
of Germany lamented the contested decision and wanted to present evi-
dence that the ball was not behind the line. The Wembley Goal became
a site of memory that was heavily debated, analyzed, and condemned.
The range of emotions that the third goal aroused in Germany went
from sadness to scorn to defiance. There were even conspiracy theories
in which the referee and linesmen were implicated.
In the second section of this chapter we will consider various play-
ers who serve as ideal model types for both fans and opponents. The fi-
nal section of the chapter is focused on those who have been forgotten
and the mavericks, and considers a small selection of players and train-
ers who still have the power to arouse emotions in modern observers be-
cause they suffered tragedies in their liveslives that only would have
been possible in the twentieth century.
The history of the World Cup is filled with a whole series of games
that fans will remember all the days of their lives. On July 8, 1982, the
French and German teams faced each other in the semifinals of the
World Cup in Piz Juan stadium in Seville.3 While the Germans had
needed all the luck in the world to reach the second round after their |109
sensational loss to Algeria in the first round and the subsequent dis-
grace of Gijn, a game in which the Austrians and Germans apparently
made an arrangement to eliminate the North African team and enraged
the entire world, the French delighted everyone with their technically
inspired football, playing with lan and supplesse. Four years earlier, the
coach Michel Hidalgo had put together a team for the tournament in Ar-
gentina whose midfield was all about ingenuity, an infield that was filled
with virtuosos, namely the manager Michel Platini, the tiny and almost
fragile technician Alain Giresse, the black long-distance runner Jean Ti-
gana, and the lanky Bernard Genghini from Sochaux. The sweeper for
the quipe tricolore was the veteran Marius Trsor from Martinique. The
elegant offensive defenseman Manuel Amoros whirled along the edge.
Up front, the wingers changed among Bernard Lacombe, Dominique Ro-
chetau, and Didier Six, all of whom were excellent technicians, but who
were nevertheless inconsistent in their main task of taking shots on net
and coming away with the intended result.
Sympathies were clearly divided before the match. The football
world, at large, supported the French, and Germany supported the Ger-
mans. The game was a duel between finesse and fitness, elegance and
energy, ingenuity and directness. Pierre Littbarski from 1. FC Kln gave
the Germans the lead in the eighteenth minute, but just ten minutes
later Michel Platini scored the equalizer on a penalty shot.
Shortly before the end, this excellent and intense match seemed to
be decided when the defenseman Patrick Battiston, who had come in as
a replacement, appeared alone in front of the goalie Toni Schumacher.
But then Schumacher brutally cut down the attacking player. The ball
rolled a few centimeters in front of the empty net. Battiston remained
unconscious on the ground. As a result of the exceptionally rough foul
by the German goalkeeper, Battiston lost several teeth and suffered a se-
3. Erich Baumann et al., Fussball-WM 1982 Spanien (Knzelsau: Sigloch, 1982), 18298.
Football and Emotion
did not restrain himself from dancing in the stands. Rossi, Tardelli, and
the Inter Milan player Alessandro Altobelli, who had been substituted
into the game, each scored for the clearly dominant Azzurri before the
Munich player Paul Breitner was able to score a consolation goal. Tar-
112 | dellis goal celebration remains fixed in the minds of football fans as he
shouted out his joy past the center line. His face made clear in an almost
platonic manner what total release and boundless joy mean at their core.
Four years later, during the World Cup in Mexico City, the dream-
dancing Brazilians failed against the French in a similarly dramatic match
on penalty shots. Scrates, the left-wing pediatrician and midfielder,
made the decisive penalty kick against another intellectual, the French
goalie Jol Bats from Paris St. Germain, who enjoyed writing love poetry
in his spare time. In one of the most technically proficient games of all
time, the goal-scoring Careca gave the lead to the Seleco. The French tied
the score on a goal from Platini following a cross pass from Amoros. In
the midfield, where the French had previously been dominant, they grad-
ually gained a slight advantage thanks to the combative Luis Fernandez.
Both teams, however, failed to capitalize on their numerous chances to
score. In the penalty kicks, the preeminent Platini missed his shot, while
the striker Bruno Bellone from AS Monaco took advantage of tremen-
dous luck as his sharp kick sprang back from the post, bounced off of the
goalies back, and then rolled like a billiard ball into the goal. This time
fortune was with the French, as Scrates failed in his penalty kick.
In the semifinals, the French equipe tricolore again had to pay trib-
ute to the effort of the Germans. The caustic Hamburger Wolfgang Rolff
kept his attention on the visibly exhausted Platini. Felix Magath, who
was also from HSV, played with great vision. The hard-nosed defend-
ers Guido Buchwald and Karl-Heinz Frster did their part to frustrate
the technical game of the French. The Germans lost in Aztec stadium in
Mexico City to the Argentinians 23 after having rallied from an appar-
ently insurmountable two goal deficit just as quickly as they had done
four years previously against the French. The fact that Toni Schumacher
allowed the Argentinians to take the lead in this final game on a goal by
the sweeper Jos Luis Brown because of a bad error, and that he did not
so much as see another goal brought a sense of gratification to many
observers. The villain of Seville finally had been punished!
Football and Emotion
It is striking that both Brazil and France only became world cham-
pions when they acquired solid defensive players and strong goalies,
namely Claudio Taffarel in the case of Brazil and Fabien Barthez in the
case of France.4 This success, however, came at the cost of concessions in
both tactics and athleticism. Dunga, Mauro Silva, and Marcio Santos, or |113
comparatively, Marcel Desailly, Didier Deschamps, Lilian Thuram, Patric
Viera, and Emmanuel Petit were generally athletic and immensely ro-
bust players, whose conditioning was superior to that of even the Ger-
mans and English, and who occasionally drove forward without mercy
in order to cover the backs of the artists such as Zinedine Zidane or Ri-
valdo, Romario, and Bebeto.
It was precisely the technically most proficient teams and play-
ers who failed at the decisive moment: Hungary in 1954, Netherlands
in 1974 and 1978 when they unfortunately lost against the hosts in the
World Cup finals, and the Portuguese in 2000 when a contested handball
opened a path for the French to reach the finals of the European cham-
pionship. The only consolation that Luis Figo, Joa Pinto, Rui Costa and
Nuno Gomes have is that they were on the best-playing team, and that
sympathy is on their side.
Around the turn of the millennium epic games of the type described
above became quite rare. The Golden Goal and Silver Goal rules in
place between 1993 and 2004 made it difficult to have apparently impos-
sible comebacks rewarded in the last minute when the tactical shackles
are finally removed and a world that believes in miracles seems to be
filled with magic. The combination of suffering and hope, triumph and
tears, which is characteristic of cycling, was almost completely played
out for more than a decade. Those mythical duels, as they are known
from the Tour de France or Giro dItalia, such as the duels between
Kbler and Koblet, Bartali and Coppi, Anquetil and Poulidor, Hinault
and Zoetemelk, Le Mond and Fignon, seemed to have no place in a time
with closely calculated windows for advertising.5 Only the recent return
4. In 1984, France became European champion on its own home ground with five goals by
the exceptional Platini.
5. Regarding the mythical nature of the Tour de France, see Michael Gamper, Mythos Tour
de France: Wie die Tour ihr Publikum fasziniert, in Tour de France: Auf den Spuren eines Mythos
(Zurich: AS Verlag, 1999), 714. Concerning the Swiss cycling heroes Ferdi Kbler and Hugo Koblet
Football and Emotion
of the penalty kicks would then result in a return of such duels, for in-
stance in the 2006 World Cup finals.
We would consider ourselves lucky to experience a high-scoring
game such as the 75 victory of the Austrians over the Swiss during the
114 | World Cup quarterfinals in Lausanne in 1954. In the broiling heat, the
hosts in the Pontaise stadium had gained a 30 lead just eighteen min-
utes into the match following two goals by Seppe Hgi from FC Basel as
well as a goal from Ballaman. Both goalies suffered sunstroke, and the
defenseman Bocquet also had to play with health problems. It was later
discovered that he had a brain tumor. At that time, substituting players
was not permitted. The Swiss, who were required by their association
to be pure amateurs, were not properly conditioned for the demands of
playing in such heat. For their part, the Austrians, and particularly the
hat-trick scorer Wagner as well as Ocwirk, cleverly used the weakness of
the Swiss defense and took long-distance shots, thereby gaining a 53
lead and finally managing to gain the advantage against the Swiss, who
refused to retreat as they possessed in the winger Jackie Fatton (Ser-
vette Geneva) one of the best left outside strikers in the world.6 On their
side, the Austrians had two great players Gerhard Hanappi and the run-
ner Ernst Happel. The latter went on to have great success as a coach,
and frequently won the German championship with HSV. Even after he
had been diagnosed with cancer, he coached the Austrian national team
in a game just a few weeks before his death.
I am going crazy, the reporter Edi Finger from Austrian TV shout-
ed into the microphone in 1978 after Hans Krankl, a player for Rapid
Vienna, scored for the third time on the German goalie Sepp Maier in
Crdoba, Argentina.7 Finger went crazy because the Austrians around
Schneckerl Herbert Prohaska, Walter Schachner, sweeper Bruno Pez-
zey, goalie Friedl Koncilia, and the scorer Hans Krankl finally defeated
the Piefkes. This game also had gone back and forth. The laws of tactics
and their multiple efforts to cash in, see Fabian Brndle and Christian Koller, Ferdi National oder
Hugo International? Radsport und Zeitgeist in der Schweiz der fnfziger Jahre, Sozial- und Zeit-
geschichte des Sports 14 (2000): 725. For similar phenomena in Italy, see Stefano Pivato, Sia lodato
Bartali: Idealogia, cultura e miti dello sport cattolico (19361948) (Rome: Edizioni Lavoro, 1985).
6. Fritz Hack, Spiele des Jahrhundert (Bad Homburg: Limpert, 1980), 7375.
7. Martin H. Schwarz, 5 Jahrzehnte Fussball im Originalton: Die Geschichte des Fussballs in
Deutschland, 5 CDs (Hamburg: Hrbuch, 2000), CD 3, title 15.
Football and Emotion
Heroes
Whoever has seen the great teams of football history for himself will re-
member them for his entire life. He will remember the Uruguayans of the
116 | 1920s and 1930s and their tall, dark-haired manager Jos Leandro An-
drade.10 A few decades later, one dreams about the Hungarian team that
had the misfortune of losing the World Cup final in Bern in 1954. Older
fans revel in the memory of the legendary Real Madrid team of the 1950s
that won a total of five European Cup championships. The writer Wolf-
gang Frank recalled (in 1971):
CanarioDel SolDi StefanoPuskasGento. There would never again be an
attack such as this. Ten super feet, 100 hyper toes. To make a comparison to
another area of life, one would have to imagine that Bach, Mozart, Beethoven,
Haydn, and Handel had all come together to compose for the prince-bishop of
Salzburg, at the same time, working on the same concerto, on the same piano,
with Brahms in reserve.11
10. Andrade was one of the first dark-haired sports stars. The French journalists who
watched him during the 1924 Olympic games, called him the black marvel. See Edoardo Ga-
leano, Der Ball ist rund (Zurich: Unionsverlag, 2000), 65.
11. Wolfgang Frank, Was ist real an Real Madrid?, ZEITmagazin, September 28, 1973.
12. Javier Maras, Alle unsere frhen Schlachten: Fussball-Stcke (Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta,
2000), 133.
Football and Emotion
Real, which played an epic duel for the Club World Championship
(Intercontinental Cup) against Pearol Montivideo, was then defeat-
ed in Europe by Benfica Lisbon and their strikers Eusbio and Torres,
who then contested against the Brazilian Pel and his FC Santos for the
crown in club football. The Brazilians were long considered the best club |117
team of all time. Pel, who in his long career for the Seleco, FC Santos,
and Cosmos New York scored more than a thousand goals in profession-
al football, many of which were spectacular and unforgettable, is seen by
many experts as the best football player ever.
During the so-called iron 1960s, the game was dominated by the
tactics and defensive-style of football, the so-called catenaccio (chain),
which was taught by Herrera, the Argentinian coach of Inter Milan. The
World Cup in Chile in 1962 was marked by numerous brutal fouls and
violent conduct. Four years later, there was again more defensive than
offensive play. The Swiss team did play an offensive style, but were not
even a factor in the first round, where they were completely stalled. The
Zurich Sport reported: A team like ours cannot afford to play an offen-
sive style in the World Cup. It is necessary to play carefully in World Cup
matches.... In todays style of play, it is necessary to have attacking for-
wards, who can also fall back on defense.13
It was the Dutch, and particularly Johan Cruyff, who along with the
South Americans rediscovered the original point of the game, namely scor-
ing goals. In 1978, the Argentinians won the World Cup in their own coun-
try under the aegis of their coach Menotti, the top scorer Mario Kempes,
the defenders Passarella and Tarantini, and the playmaker Oswaldo Ardi-
les, along with Bertoni, Luque, and Ortiz. The French and Brazilians had
a pair of spectacular teams before the Italians and then the Argentinians
again came through as worthy world champions in the 1980s. But we also
do not wish to forget the Danes, Poles, Peruvians, Portuguese, and African
teams from Cameroon and from the Maghreb that played a fast-paced and
mixed style of football without, however, achieving great success.
In considering club football, the athletic and combative style of Not-
tingham Forest and Liverpool sticks in the mind, particularly their prac-
tice of forechecking. Liverpools Scots, Kenny Dalglish, Graeme Souness,
and Alan Hansen, as well as their powerful and tough outside defenders
Mickey Mills and Phil Neal, taught the ensembles of stars from South
America to fear Anfield Road.
At the end of the 1980s and early 1990s, it was AC Milan that per-
fected the pressing defense with their resourceful sweeper Franco Ba-
118 | resi, the defenders Paolo Maldini and Costacurta, the midfielder Deme-
trio Albertini, and particularly the three Hollanders Ruud Gullit, Frank
Rijkaard, and Marco van Basten, supported by the Yugoslav Dejan Sav-
icevic. They then seamlessly turned to the attack with the captured ball.
Connoisseurs will always remember Dynamo Kiev under coach Valeriy
Lobanovskyi that offered a style of football with an unheard of tempo
and very few mistakes, with fast strikers such as Oleg Blokhin and Igor
Belanov. We also want to mention briefly Ajax Amsterdam, a team with
a perfected style of offensive play with three strikers. After its victory
over AC Milan in the Champions Cup, Ajax was forced to release abroad
almost all of its players, who as a rule had come up the ranks of the club
into the team. These were the strategist and goal scorer Bergkamp, the
elusive Fin Litmanen, the de Boer twins, Witschge, the long-limbed
goalie van der Sar, the fast outside striker Overmars, the defenders Bog-
arde and Reiziger, all of whom left Ajax. There is a certain tragedy in the
fact that fans from small countries can only enjoy the great talents for a
short time before they convert their skills into economic rewards in the
leagues of Italy, Spain, Germany, and England.
The English cultural historian Peter Burke, a trailblazer in his field,
made clear in his standard work on premodern popular culture that cer-
tain prototypes such as heroes, rogues, and fools provide a means of un-
derstanding the popular system of values because the heroes fulfill and
surpass the normally expected behaviors, the rogues call them into ques-
tion, and the fools cannot live up to them.14 A hero, whose original type,
according to Burke, following the model of Max Weber, is the warrior,
affords the audience someone with whom to identify. People can define
themselves in opposition to the rogue. Fools are praised for providing en-
tertainment. As the two British social historians, Richard Holt and J. A.
Mangan, have described the matter, heroes embody the values and aspi-
rations of their admirers and reflect their hopes and secret desires.15
14. Peter Burke, Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe (London: Temple Smith, 1978).
15. Richard Holt and J. A. Mangan, Prologue: Heroes of a European Past, in European
Heroes: Myth, Identity, Sport, 113.
Football and Emotion
It is obvious that the truly great players who have had a decisive im-
pact on international championships are immortal in the eyes of the fans.
Men such as Pel, Jackie Charlton, Diego Maradona, and Michel Platini
are honored for their entire lives. However, we think that there are certain
more interesting mental constellations that transform specific players |119
into the symbolic representatives of a (sub)culture. We discussed above
Stephen Bloomer, who represented the rough pub-culture of England
around 1900, while his colleague Harold Fleming epitomized a pious and
sober class that desired respectability and social advancement.
The two Austrian urban sociologists Roman Horak and Wolfgang
Maderthaner address, in their exceptionally important essay, the ques-
tion of what the immense popularity of the two football players Josef
Uridil and Matthias Sindelar meant in the Vienna of the 1920s and
1930s.16 As observed above, Vienna at this time was already a center of
professional football. Matches between First Vienna, Rapid, Wacker, Ad-
mira, Hakoah, and Austria, and international contests for the Mitropa
Cup against Sparta, Bohemians, and Slavia Prague, as well as the best
Hungarian and Italian teams, drew in tens of thousands of spectators.
Josef Uridil, who wrote his biography in 1924 while still a young
man,17 was born the son of a tailor in the working class suburb of Ot-
takring in 1895, and quickly joined SK Rapid, the favored club of the in-
habitants of this suburb. As a fighter, he represented the working class
ideal. He scored numerous decisive goals, enjoyed singing, and had a role
in the now lost film about the game called Pflicht und Ehre (Duty and Hon-
or). In 1928, after many great successes with Rapid, he left Austria and
coached Bratislava, Bari, then the Romanian national team, as well as
numerous teams in Yugoslavia, Switzerland, and Germany. By no means
a National Socialist, Uridil returned to Vienna at the start of the war in
order, as the title of the film Duty and Honor unintentionally anticipat-
ed, to accept his obligation to serve in the German army. As was true in
other working class districts, Uridil was that beloved kind of player who
never failed to get up after a foul and to keep on fighting. With these
characteristics, he surely would have succeeded in the cities of northern
England, in the Ruhr region, or in Silesia, with the club Gornik Zabrze.
of the VIP stand, which was filled with high-ranking Nazi functionaries.
It was claimed, at least by the remaining opponents of the regime, that
the Nazis had taken their revenge on Sindelar for his hostility to the re-
gime. In fact, feelings about the Nazis in Vienna changed very quickly af-
ter the Anschluss. The euphoria from Heroes Square quickly turned into |121
a general feeling of disillusionment. The Vienna National Socialists were
replaced in their positions by newer, sometimes old German power
brokers. Among the social-democratic working class, particularly among
the city tram operators, there remained a hard core of anti-regime crit-
ics, who had already begun to work underground during the period of
the clerical-fascist corporative state.20 The new authorities reacted to
the serious charges by organizing a state funeral at which about 15,000
people paid their last respects to Matthias Sindelar. On January 30, Hit-
ler finally removed the unloved careerist Dr. Odilo Globocnik from his
office as the Gauleiter of Vienna in order to curb the unrest among the
population in the capital city. The events surrounding the mysterious
death of the Paper Man certainly led to a change of feelings in Vienna,
bringing about an anti-foreign and anti-German sentiment.
Sindelar and Uridil were both the sons of immigrants who had come
to Vienna from Bohemia. The real name of Raymond Kopa, who was
born in 1931 in the mountainous Noeux-les-Mines region of northern
France, was Kopaczewski. His father had immigrated from Poland and
worked, along with Raymonds older brothers, in the local mine. The im-
migrants son achieved phenomenal success as an outside striker with
Stade de Reims, Real Madrid, and the French national team. He was a
key player in the great Real teams of the late 1950s, and won a bronze
medal in the World Cup in Sweden in 1958. The sport made him rich.21
Kopa, who wrote several autobiographies, thereby gaining an audience
outside the world of football,22 was not particularly interested in his
20. Evan Burr Bukey, Hitlers sterreich: Eine Bewegung und ein Volk (Hamburg: Europa-
Verlag, 2001), particularly 1035; Popular Opinion in Vienna after the Anschluss, in Conquering
the Past: Austrian Nazism Yesterday and Today, ed. Fred Parkinson (Detroit, Mich.: Wayne State
University Press, 1989), 15164; and Gerhard Botz, Nationalsozialismus in Wien: Machtbernahme
und Herrschaftssicherung 1938/39 (Vienna: Mandelbaum, 1988).
21. Alfred Wahl and Pierre Lanfranchi, The Immigrant as Hero: Kopa, Mekloufi and
French Football, in European Heroes: Myth, Identity, Sport, 11427; and Alfred Wahl, Raymond
Kopa une vedette du football, Sport Histoire 2 (1988): 46.
22. See Raymond Kopa, Mes matches et ma vie (Paris: Pierre Horay, 1958); and Raymond
Kopa and Pierre Katz, Mon Football (Paris: Calmann-Lvy, 1972).
Football and Emotion
roots, as his name attests, although his parents spoke Polish exclusively
to each other at home. He gained French citizenship at the age of twenty-
one and was very happy to do his military service in the army. Many
photographs show the strapping soldier posing. Just like the American
122 | Elvis Presley, who famously served in Germany, Raymond Kopa in uni-
form was a ubiquitous presence in all forms of media. Pierre Lanfranchi
and Alfred Wahl argue in their assessment of Kopa that his impressive
career demonstrates the success that can come from hard work if one
abides by the cultural expectations of ones adopted country. During the
1960s, Kopa showed his other, political face. He campaigned against the
growing power of the clubs and against contracts that bound players to
their clubs until they were thirty-five years old.
Rachid Mekloufi, who was born in the town of Stif in Algeria in
1937, was cut from an entirely different cloth than Kopa, who had sought
to assimilate. In his youth, Mekloufi was playing for Union Franco-
Musulmanne de Stif when a talent scout for AS St. Etienne found him
and brought him to France in 1954. Although football was a means of
bridging divides in Algeria where French and North Africans played on
the same teams, until 1956 Algerian teams were not permitted to play in
French cup championships or in the professional championship. Mekloufi
played so well that he became a French national player and won the world
military championship in Buenos Aires in 1957. The media coopted his
great talent by presenting him as a peaceful mediator between cultures.
However, in April 1958, journalists were shocked to learn that Mekloufi
refused an invitation to play in the World Cup for the ambitious French
team in order to join together with nine other professionals the team of
the Front de Libration Nationale (FLN), which was training in exile in
Tunisia. Between 1958 and 1962 he played in numerous matches in Tu-
nisia, Morocco, Libya, Iraq, Jordan, as well as in eastern bloc countries,
China, and North Vietnam. Because he was the best and most prominent
player on this team, he soon became a hero of the Algerian resistance and
symbol of the revolution. In 1962, after independence had been achieved,
Mekloufi went back to France and again played for money. In May 1968,
he received the trophy he had won with his home club AS St. Etienne
from the hands of the French president Charles de Gaulle. Back in Alge-
ria, he criticized the government there because it had forbidden young
Football and Emotion
brothers Murat and Hakan Yakin (Turkey), to mention just a few. These
players, who have been among the best in the nation for years and from
the 1990s on have brought the Swiss national team back to the inter-
national stage after nearly three decades of absence from any major in-
124 | ternational tournament, are all second-generation Swiss. Almost every
professional club has several so-called Secondos in their ranks, including
Serbs, Albanians, Croats, Congolese, and others. In both of the top two
amateur leagues, particularly in densely populated urban areas, these
Secondos form a clear majority.23
By contrast, the Germans have a hard time integrating their immi-
grants. The winger for Schalke, Gerald Asamoah, was just the third black
player, following the two children of the occupation Erwin Kostedde and
Jimmy Hartwig, to wear the eagle on his chest. During the 197475 sea-
son, Kostedde suffered so much abuse from the racist fans of his own
club in Dortmund that he would only play away matches for a time.
Before this difficult period he had enjoyed so much success in Belgium
with Standard Liege that he became the top goal scorer. He returned to
this form in 1980 with the French provincial club AS Laval. Like the Ger-
mans, the Italians have finally realized the quality of their black players.
In 2001, Fabio Liverani, from AS Perugia, was the first black player to
participate in an international match. In a period when the president
of Hellas Verona made clear that he would never bring in a black player
because of the racism of the fans in the stands, this was certainly an im-
portant sign of change.24
Naturally, there are also mundane reasons why one from the great
multitude of players sticks in the memory so strongly. There are goalies
who on a good day stop everything, and cannot be beaten, bringing the
strikers to despair. For example, in 1986, when Steaua Bucharest played
against Barcelona in the European Cup Final in Seville, the Romanian
Helmut Ducadam stopped all of the penalty shots taken by the Span-
ish. Keepers like the Soviet Lev Yashin always seemed to make the laws
of gravity irrelevant. Goalkeepers are often like melodies one hears in
childhood that continue to play in the ears for a lifetime. They are simi-
23. See Christian Koller, Fussball und Immigration in der Schweiz: Identittswahrung, As-
similation oder Transkulturalitt? Stadion 34 (2008): 26184.
24. Guardian, May 30, 2001.
Football and Emotion
Zico, and Gnter Netzer. Alongside them stand Italys playmaker Rober-
to Baggio, Bernd Schuster, Dirceu, Rivellino, and the Uruguayan Enzo
Francescoli. In those smaller countries that only produce a top player
once every few decades people are particularly prone to recall wistful-
126 | ly spectacular goals from free kicks, or the passes that made even the
most refined defensive scheme obsolete. The Irish had Liam Brady, the
Danes Michael Laudrup, the Belgians Enzo Scifo, the Austrians Herbert
Schneckerl Prohaska, and finally the Romanians particularly revere
Gheorge Hagi, the Carpathian Maradona. The Swiss, for their part,
remember with ecstasy the free throws and tactics of Georges Bregy.
During the late 1960s and 1970s little Switzerland experienced the one-
time constellation of factors that led to two top players competing for
the crown as patron. They were Karli Odermatt from FC Basel and Kbi
Kuhn from FC Zurich who fought grandiose duels on breathtaking stag-
es in their struggle for mastery and a cup. The Joggeli in Basel and Letzi-
grund in Zurich were filled to capacity when these two antagonists faced
each other. Odermatt recalled in an interview that Kbi was something
of a rascal. When FCZ won the cup yet again, he held out the trophy
to me and called: so-long until the next time. But Kbi played for our
strongest competitor, and everyone wanted to win on the field. But we
were also true friends.25
The heroic figure includes within it the sub-type of the tragic hero.
The reliable goalkeeper who has a terrible lapse in a decisive game, the
striker who, like the outstanding Netherlander Rob Rensenbrink hit the
post rather than the net from a short distance in the final seconds just
before the whistle blows in the World Cup finals of 1978. It is often the
very best players who lose their nerve when taking the eleven-meter
shots. Roberto Baggio, for example, who was the best player in the World
Cups in 1990 and 1994, missed the decisive penalty kick against the Bra-
zilians in the final in Los Angeles, and has never since been the brilliant
player that he was before.
Then naturally, the goal scorers, the game deciders, also fascinate
us. Frequently, they were non-descript figures, virtual opportunists, who
simply were standing at the right place at the right time. Gerd Mller
from FC Bayern Mnchen scored sixty-eight goals in sixty-two interna-
tional matches. An excellent Brazilian striker took his name: Muller. Gerd
Mllers legendary instinct for the goal also has entered the lexicon of
sports coverage. A striker mllers the ball two meters across the goal
line. Here is a list of great goal scorers without any claim of complete-
ness: the Italian Paolo Rossi, the Englishmen Jimmy Greaves, Kevin |127
Keegan, and Gary Lineker,26 the Scotsman Ally McCoist, the Austrians
Hans Krankl, Andreas Anderl Ogris, and Toni Polster, the Germans Uwe
Seeler and Ulf Kirsten, the Argentinian Gabriel Batistuta, the Bulgarian
Hristo Stoitchkov, the two Swiss Stphane Chapuisat and Adrian Knup,
the two Spaniards Emilio Butragueo and Ral, the Mexican Hugo San-
chez, and finally the Dutchman Marco van Basten, whose legendary vol-
ley from a narrow angle against the Soviets in the 1988 European Cham-
pionship final brought a long-sought major title to the Orange. Overall,
one can say that there are specialists in creating spectacular goals. The
Italian Paoli from Pro Vercelli, who was a two-time World Cup champion
in the 1930s, was one of the first to perfect the overhead bicycle kick. Laio
Amad, who played for FC Lugano and Grasshoppers Zurich, mastered
the sideways scissor kick. Klaus Fischer was an expert at striking from
the upside-down position. His overhead bicycle kick against the Swiss
goalie Erich Burgener was voted best goal of the century in Germany. The
Dutch have always had great long-range scorers in their ranks, Arie Hahn
and Ronald Koeman to name just two. The Brazilian Eder had such a hard
shot that the frame around the goal sometimes threatened to burst if it
got in the way.
The aforementioned strikers are memorable for their efficiency.
However, the eternal dribblers and side-steppers, who stay out on the
wings and look out for trouble, can bring the spectators in the stadium
to applause and sometimes to rage. Garrincha, Francisco Gento, Rein-
hard Stan (after Stan Matthews) Libuda, Pierre Littbarski, Brian Lau-
drup, and Tony Woodcock, for example, made fools of entire defenses.
These players knew how to humiliate a defender with a ball through his
legs, and to sow panic with their capers. At the 1998 World Cup we were
delighted by the antics of the Mexican winger Cauthemoc Blanco who,
among other ploys, mastered the legendary trick of locking the ball be-
26. Regarding the character of the English goalscorer see Tony Pawson, The Goalscorers:
From Bloomer to Keegan (London: Cassell & Co, 1978).
Football and Emotion
tween his feet to jump past the opposing player and thereby outmaneu-
ver him.
Alongside these artists there are also the tireless, the fearless, the
battlers, and the rascals who have earned our lasting respect. For exam-
128 | ple, the short, red-haired Scot, Gordon Strachan, fought for literally ev-
ery ball, as did the English World Cup champion from 1966 Nobby Stiles.
Once in a while the luster of fame shone upon those workers who other-
wise remained in the shadows. For example, the modest Katsche Schwar-
zenbeck, who otherwise was known simply as the sweeper for Kaiser
Franz Beckenbauer, scored the equalizer on a brilliant long-range shot
in the additional time of the European Cup finals in 1974 in Brussels
against Atltico Madrid in the 120th minute, thereby forcing a rematch,
which the Bavarians won decisively 40. The defensive midfielder Walter
Iselin from FC Aarau scored a similar goal from 27 meters right into the
net that decided the 1985 Swiss Cup final. In British football, battlers are
particularly revered. Woe to a player who does not want to run after or
get control of a sharply passed ball, and stands still, letting the game go
by. Those players who do not give up despite injuries earn eternal glory
in Britain. The center defender Terry Butcher played despite a severe in-
jury, wearing a bandage that became so soaked with blood that it had to
be replaced. The Scot Murdo McLeod, a total Highlander, ended a game
against Borussia Dortmund with such a severe concussion that he could
not remember how it had happened. In Scotland, they venerate the
coach Jock Stein, who suffered a heart attack while sitting on the coachs
bench as Scotland defeated Wales 10 on September 10, 1985, to qualify
for the World Cup in Mexico. Completely in keeping with our definition,
the players named here fulfilled, and even went beyond, the norms of
British working class culture to fight until they drop dead. The former
German prisoner of war, Bernd Trautmann, who played as a goalie for
Manchester City after 1945, finished a cup final with a broken neck. To-
gether with his gallant and fair manner of play, this heroic deed helped
to relieve the massive anti-German sentiment of the time: there truly
were good Germans.27
27. The memory of Trautmann remains unbroken up to the present. A fan magazine in
Manchester, for example, is called Bernd Trautmanns Head.
Football and Emotion
Villains
At the same time, Otto Fritz Harder, nicknamed Tull, embodied the
bad German. Tall and blond, Harder was one of the best strikers in
Germany during the 1920s and scored many goals for the Hamburger SV. |129
The angular striker played in fifteen international matches between 1914
and 1926. His fans sang, when Harder plays the score is three to noth-
ing.28 Harder was a popular hero, known as the Kicker.29 He never
made a secret of his antisemitic feelings, joining the Nazi Party on Sep-
tember 1, 1932, and the SS on May 1, 1935. In 1939, he was mobilized for
service in the Waffen-SS, and began his career in this criminal organiza-
tion as a guard in the concentration camp at Sachsenhausen, ending up
as camp commandant at the Neuengamme satellite camp of Hannover-
Ahlem. A British military court sentenced the commandant to fifteen
years in prison for the many gruesome crimes for which he was respon-
sible. Even a plea by DFB president Dr. Peco Bauwens was not able to
change this judgment. After four-and-a-half years, Harder received a
pardon. After he was set free, Harder was an honored guest of the DFB
at international matches held in Hamburg. During his burial in 1956, his
coffin was draped with an HSV flag. It is not certain that Tull Harder
personally sought out and plagued his former teammate, the Norwegian
Asbjrn Halvorsen, in the concentration camp. As manager of the Nor-
wegian team, Halvorsen had inflicted a severe defeat on the Germans
in Berlin when, in 1940, he had participated in the country-wide strike
against the cooption of football by the National Socialist conquerors and
their domestic accomplices. In 1942, he was taken into custody in the
concentration camp at Grini near Oslo. A year later, he was transferred
to the Alsatian concentration camp at Natzweiler, before being deport-
ed, weighing a mere 40 kilograms, to Neuengamme. Halvorsen was an
inmate at the same camp where Harder had been commandant, but it is
unclear whether the two ever saw each other.30
Fortunately, not all of the biographies of the villains in football have
31. Schumacher enraged many German fans with his vulgar revelations in 1987. Harald
Schumacher, Anpfiff: Enthllungen ber den deutschen Fussball (Munich: Droemer Knaur, 1987).
Football and Emotion
for Brazil. With the score at 11, the striker Ghiggia received the ball in
the middle of the field, dribbled, and shot toward the top right-hand cor-
ner. Barbosa, who had been voted the best goalie in the world, did not
have a chance. The unreachable ball went in. The Uruguayans were world
132 | champions! In seconds, euphoria was transformed into abysmal sor-
row. Several Brazilians took their own lives that same night. According
to the historian Alex Bellos, this defeat set in train a collective trauma.
Ghiggias attack and his unusual goal received as much analysis as the re-
cordings of John F. Kennedys death. The dramaturge Nelson Rodrigues
spoke in 1966 about the Brazilian holocaust. The author Pedro Perdigo
compared the defeat with Waterloo and the end of civilization, crippling
Brazil for years.
The goalie Barbosa quickly became the scapegoat for this game. He
was attacked mercilessly everywhere he went, and his career came to an
end. His failed defense followed him to his death. Twenty years after the
match, a woman pointed her finger at him and said this is the man who
brought Brazil to tears. In 1993 he was expelled from the training cen-
ter for the national team because he could only bring bad luck. In 1996,
shortly before his death, he observed that the highest penalty in Brazil-
ian law is thirty years, but that he had to do penance for about fifty. In
1963 he attempted to banish the curse with a ritual. At a barbeque one
night, the flames flickered unusually high. Barbosa burned the goalposts
that had been so merciless to him. In just a few seconds, Ghiggias un-
usual goal had transformed the life of poor Barbosa, the best goalie of
his time, into a hell.32
Another South American, the Columbian Andrs Escobar, paid for an
own goal with his life. Although it is not entirely certain whether he was
also involved in the drug trade, this own goal led to the exit from the
1994 World Cup of a Colombian team that had received extensive pre-
tournament praise. It also brought a death sentence: a few days after the
game Escobar was shot in a nightclub in Medelln by a group of three kill-
ers, possibly linked to the gambling syndicates that had bet on Colombia.
Fools
A short while before, we mentioned the strikers who made fools out of an
entire defensive scheme and clearly enjoyed entertaining the spectators
with tricks and gags. Willy Ente Lippens, for example, dribbled, played |133
tricks, and engaged in an ongoing patter. The Brazilian Garrincha had an
x and an o leg, although after he had dribbled through his opponents,
he certainly was no laughing matter for the opposing defenses. The Uru-
guayan author Edoardo Galeano described a legendary goal that Garrin-
cha scored in a preparatory match in 1958 against the club Fiorentina:
Garrincha entered the penalty area, left a defender on the ground, played around
a second defender, and then another. As he sized up the opposing goalie, he real-
ized that another opposing player was on the goal line. Garrincha flirted, hesi-
tated, and then acted as if he wanted to shoot the ball into the corner; the poor
defender jumped with his head toward the post. Then the goalie started to move
forward. Garrincha played the ball between his legs, and shot it into the goal.33
ier had decided to go toward the left corner and had to watch as the ball
almost stood still in the air before falling into the goal. The Italians call
this type of shot a spoon. The Roman striker Francesco Totti had the
audacity to use it in the semifinal of the 2000 European Cup against the
134 | Netherlands.
Many fans think it is appropriate to call players such as the musta-
chioed Panenka, the Italian Franco Causio, the Portuguese Chalana, the
Hungarian Laszlo Faszekas, or the Polish Andrzej Szarmach smooth
operators. This kind of player is now almost extinct. Players who calmly
wait for the mistakes of their opponents, who play the ball tactically and
with restraint, not flailing blindly for the ball but skillfully lobbing the
ball over the goalie, or shooting so that he dives in despair, with his fin-
gertips almost brushing it but nevertheless has to let it pass by into the
goal. At times they are celebrated. Apparently abandoned, there only for
the sake of their art, a bit of chamber music, seemingly conjuring their
magic to no purpose at midfield, always preferring the simpler option
to the more difficult one. Because they generally did not shoot the deci-
sive goal, and as a rule were never World Cup champions, these fools,
who understood the relationship between the theater and the stadium,
often retreated quickly into oblivion. Just as the great comedians of the
silent films, such as Buster Keaton, Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, or Charlie
Chaplin, no longer felt truly at home in the new medium of the talkies,
modern athletic and fast football no longer has room for smooth opera-
tors, tricksters, and clowns.
The Austrian striker Toni Polster was one of the last of the dying
breed of football fools. The goal scorer for Austria Wien often had a dis-
interested appearance on the field, almost apathetic, in order to be at the
right place at the right time. His comments always seemed forthright
and cheerful. He was always in a good mood, and lived this way after the
game as well. Polster, who played for 1. FC Kln, soon became a popu-
lar cult figure in the cheerful Rhineland. The gas-station owner made
audiences of the TV broadcast Aktuelles Sportstudio laugh with his song
Blaumann (Blue Man). Then, with his song Toni lass es polstern he
stormed onto the Hit Parade as Radi Radenkovic once had done.
Clearly there is a fine line between comedy and ridiculousness when
engaging in these kinds of presentations. While the small tears shed by
Football and Emotion
the big and tough England playmaker Paul Gascoigne after he received
the yellow card that cost him a final chance to play in the World Cup
in 1990 moved spectators around the planet, overly demonstrative dis-
plays are often rather repellent. The insightful observer Javier Maras
recalled with regard to the small and theatrical striker for Real Madrid, |135
Juanito Gmez: Many years ago, Real Madrid lost a championship to
Real Sociedad San Sebastan at the last moment, and the late Juanito
Gmez rolled around on the grass like a maenad (also called a crybaby
in school). It seemed far less that he was really suffering than it was im-
portant for us to see how much he was suffering.35 Anyone who wishes
to cut a good figure in the stadium has to reckon with the fact that he is
dealing with perceptive spectators.
Outsiders
Steve Heighway, the Irish midfielder who played for Liverpool FC and
had a major role in the success of the Reds in the 1970s, is one of the few
professional football players with a university degree. The lack of inter-
est among his colleagues in seeing the sights was shocking to him. Dur-
ing overseas trips, he went out alone to see the cities. His fellow players
soon scorned Heighway as a pretentious intellectual. He finally gave in
to peer pressure and henceforward played cards with them.36
Politically engaged football players are also the exception. Ewald
Lienen, for example, went far out on a limb in support of disarmament
and against the NATO Double-Track Decision. Alain Sutters stand
against the nuclear ambitions of the government of Jacques Chirac,
which he expressed in the form of a banner before an important qualifi-
cation match of the Swiss national team against Sweden in Stockholm,
did not meet with much sympathy in football circles. The gifted foot-
ball player Sutter went his own way in other areas as well. He refused
to be treated with medications or injections and relied on homeopathic
methods instead. Because of this, he never became the superstar that he
could have been on the basis of his talent.
Clubs with politically active fan bases are also the exception. FC
St. Pauli, for example, is the favorite club for the engaged Left, and Volker
Finke, the coach of SC Freiburg from 1991 to 2007, has become a byword
for green football. However, the majority of clubs do not participate in
politics, and the boardrooms are decidedly apolitical. It is sometimes said
136 | that football and politics do not belong together. We will demonstrate be-
low that this view actually does not correspond to reality.
Yet other football players fell victim to the multifarious political
turmoil and excessive violence that characterized the last century. The
German Jew Julius Hirsch, for example, who scored ten goals against
Russia in an international match, thereby establishing an immortal re-
cord for international competitions, lost his membership in Karlsruhe
FV in 1933. In 1937 and 1938 he worked as an auxiliary bookkeeper at
a Jewish firm in Ettlingen-Maxau before being deported in 1943 to the
concentration camp in Auschwitz, where he was murdered.37
Oscar Heisserer, born in 1914, played outside striker for Racing
Strasbourg from 1934 to 1938. In 1938, he participated in the World Cup
for his own country, where he scored Frances only goal against Italy in
the quarterfinals. Following the conquest of France by Hitler in 1940
and the Germanization of Alsace, Racing was renamed Rasensport. The
club soon faced stiff competition from the team SS Strassburg, which
put considerable pressure on Heisserer to play with them. Despite facing
threats of being sent to the eastern front, Heisserer kept Rasensport at
arms length. Finally, in 1943, he fled to Switzerland where he was in-
terned and compelled to do hard labor. Heisserers wife was questioned
under torture by the SS. In 1945, Heisserer returned to Alsace, but hard
labor in the internment camp meant that he could no longer pursue his
career as a professional football player.38
Oskar Rohr was a teammate of Heisserer at Racing during the
1930s. Up to 1933, Rohr was on the German national team on three sepa-
rate occasions. The middle striker from Bayern Mnchen was accounted
one of the most talented strikers in Germany. In 1933, he left Germany
to become a professional player with the Grasshoppers in Zurich. This
step had no political connotations. In 1934, Ossi Rohr went to Strasbourg
where he won the goal-scoring crown several times in the French league.
139
Football and the Nation
2. See, for example, Nationales Bewusstsein und kollektive Identitt: Studien zur Entwick-
lung des kollektiven Bewusstseins in der Neuzeit 2., ed. Helmut B. Berding (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp,
1994); Mythos und Nation: Studien zur Entwicklung des kollektiven Bewusstseins in der Neuzeit 3., ed.
Helmut B. Berding (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1996); Nation und Emotion: Deutschland und Frankreich
im Vergleich19. und 20. Jahrhundert, eds. Etienne Franois et al. (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ru-
precht, 1995); Georg Elwert, Nationalismus und Ethnizitt: ber die Bildung von Wir-Gruppen,
Klner Zeitschrift fr Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie 3 (1989): 44064; Nationale und kulturelle
Identitt: Studien zur Entwicklung des kollektiven Bewusstseins in der Neuzeit, ed. Bernhard Giesen
(Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1991); Transformationen des Wir-Gefhls: Studien zum nationalen Habitus,
eds. Helmut Kuzmics et al. (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1993); Nationale Mythen und Symbole in der
zweiten Hlfte des 19. Jahrhunderts: Strukturen und Funktionen von Konzepten nationaler Identitt,
eds. Jrgen Link and Wulf Wlfing (Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1991); Anthony D. Smith, National
Identity (London: Penguin Books, 1991); Ruth Wodak et al., Zur diskursiven Konstruktion nationaler
Identitt (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1998); Anne-Marie Thiesse, La cration des identits nationales: Eu-
rope XVIIIe-XXe sicle (Paris: Seuil, 1999); Jaroslav Stritecky, Identitten, Identifikationen, Identi-
fikatoren, in Formen des nationalen Bewusstseins im Lichte zeitgenssischer Nationalismustheorien,
ed. Eva Schmidt-Hartmann (Munich: Oldenbourg, 1994), 5366. For a critical history of the term
collective identity see Lutz Niethammer, Kollektive Identitt: Heimliche Quellen einer unheimli-
chen Konjunktur (Reinbek: Rowohlt, 2000).
3. For example, George Herbert Mead, Die objektive Realitt der Perspektiven (1927), in his
Gesammelte Aufstze, ed. Joas von Hans (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1983), 2:21124; The Problem
of SocietyHow We Become Selves, in his Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century, ed.
Merrit H. Moore (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1936, 36085; and Mind, Self, and Society:
From the Standpoint of A Social Behaviorist, ed. Charles W. Morris (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1972).
4. Christiane Eisenberg, Sportgeschichte: Eine Dimension der modernen Kulturgeschich-
te, Geschichte und Gesellschaft 23 (1997): 296. Hobsbawm believed that he could recognize a me-
dium for national identification and factitious community in sport (Hobsbawm, Invention of
Tradition, 300). In 1971, the medievalist Marcel Beck placed football festivals in a line with me-
Football and the Nation
controversial matches, the this chapter will make clear how football and
the construction of political identities can have the same catalyzing ef-
fects, and also that certain circles were aware of this fact and transformed
athletic competitions into struggles for regional, ethnic, religious, or na-
tional superiority. |141
dieval saints feast days and modern national celebrations as an important factor in community-
building (Badener Tagblatt, September 1, 1971).
5. See David Allen, Lnderspiele England (18721900), Elf 4 (1986): 6274.
Football and the Nation
ality. Sunderland FC, the English runners-up in the 189091 season, put
forward an attacking formation that was composed exclusively of Scots,
namely Johnny Harvie, Jimmy Millar, Johnny Campbell, David Hannah,
and Jack Scott. For years, Campbell was the most fearsome goal scorer
142 | in the early period of English football. In 1897, he switched along with
the inside right forward Harvie to Sunderlands most significant local
rival, Newcastle United, for a record transfer fee of 40.6 The dominance
of Scottish football in the early decades is made clear by the fact that in
the popular matches between the select teams from the two leagues, the
English league usually came out on top, but it was Scottish players who
usually scored the decisive goals against their countrymen.7
Scholarship on the topic indicates that the period between 1832 and
1914 was one of crisis for Scottish political nationalism. Broad sections
of the Scottish elite began to think of themselves as Britons. They ben-
efitted from the economic advantages of the steadily growing empire
as well as from the new opportunities for profit that arose from the in-
dustrial revolution. In particular, entry into the free-trade zone of the
empire strengthened the standing of Glasgow, which became a center of
trade and the second largest city in the empire. Jacobitism, the hope for
the restoration of a Stuart king, had unleashed a bloody revolt against
England as late as 1745, but was now passing into oblivion.8 Scots took
on active roles as empire builders, as soldiers, officers, government of-
ficials, financiers, engineers, teachers, and merchants. In keeping with
their economic interests, a majority of them voted for the Liberal Party
of William Gladstone.9 On the cultural level, a widely popular roman-
tic image of the Highlands endowed the poets Robert Burns and Walter
Scott, as well as the legendary knight and terror of all Englishmen, Wil-
liam Wallace, Braveheart, with the status of national heroes.10
Although members of the lower classes also on occasion harbored
sympathies for the empire,11 for most Scots the we feeling came pre-
dominantly from two sources that reinforced each other, namely an oc- |143
casionally militant anti-Englishness and pride in their membership in
the Reformed Presbyterian church, the Kirk.12 The ever-present desire
to establish boundaries against England was best served by the football
matches during the British Championship. Thanks to the research of the
British historian H. F. Moorhouse, we are well informed about a number
of interesting aspects of this classic event.13 During the interwar period,
numerous chartered trains traveled from Edinburgh and Glasgow to
London so that countless Scots could attend the prestigious contest at
Wembley stadium. The travelers were accompanied by bagpipers dressed
in traditional kilts, creating the impression of a wild invading armythe
tartan army, as they called themselves. When they arrived in London,
the fans made themselves conspicuous with their instruments, occupy-
ing highly symbolic public spaces such as Trafalgar Square or Piccadilly
Circus. When no fewer than 60,000 Scots made the trip to Wembley in
1938, the Daily Record reported that the events in the capital had become
a regular institution of a burgeoning Scottishness. In general, wives and
daughters accompanied their husbands and fathers to London in order
to take advantage of the opportunity to visit one of the popular depart-
ment stores, such as Harrods.
10. See Richard J. Finlay, Heroes, Myths, and Anniversaries in Modern Scotland, Scottish
Affairs 18 (1997), 15278; M. Ash, William Wallace and Robert the Bruce: the Life and Death of a
National Myth, in The Myths We Live By, eds. R. Samuels and P. Thomson (London: Routledge,
1990), 8394; Robert Clyde, From Rebel to Hero: The Image of the Highlander, 17451830 (London:
Tuckwell, 1995); Linas Eriksonas, National Heroes and National Identities: Scotland, Norway and
Lithuania (Brussels: Lang, 2004); Graeme Morton, The Most Efficacious Patriot: The Heritage of
William Wallace in Nineteenth Century Scotland, The Scottish Historical Review 77, no. 2 (1998):
22451; William Wallace: Man and Myth (Stroud: Sutton, 2001); Hugh Trevor-Roper, The Inven-
tion of Tradition: The Highland Tradition of Scotland, in The Invention of Tradition, 1541.
11. Also see Richard J. Finlay, The Rise and Fall of Popular Imperialism in Scotland, Scot-
tish Geographic Magazine 113 (1997): 98114.
12. See, for example, T. M. Devine, The Scottish Nation 17002000 (London: Allen Lane,
2000), 29.
13. H. F. Moorhouse, Scotland against England: Football and Popular Culture, Interna-
tional Journal of the History of Sport 4 (1987): 189202.
Football and the Nation
16. Devine, Scottish Nation, 486522; Bill Murray, The Old Firm: Sectarianism, Sport and So-
ciety (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1984); Tom Gallagher, Glasgow: The Uneasy Peace (Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 1987); James E. Handley, The Irish in Modern Scotland (Cork: Cork
University Press, 1947); Brenda Collins, The Origins of Irish Immigration to Scotland in the
Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, in Irish Immigrants and Scottish Society in the Nineteenth
and Twentieth Centuries, ed. T. M. Devine (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1991), 125.
Football and the Nation
Most Presbyterian Scots did not thank the Catholic Irish for their
substantial role in the economic take-off of the country, and held fast
to their premodern stereotypes, according to which the pope was the
anti-Christ (anti-popery), who would be only too happy to organize a
146 | broad-based conspiracy to destroy Protestantism and their beloved Kirk.
During the first half of the nineteenth century, many Irish immigrants
assimilated into the dominant Scottish culture, for example, by chang-
ing their names: ONeil became McNeil, and McDade became Davidson.
Until 1816, there was not a single Catholic school in western Scotland,
and there was just a single priest for approximately 10,000 Catholics in
Glasgow in 1836. The economic situation for the immigrants was also
disadvantageous because they were denied entry into the more ad-
vanced schools because of discriminatory laws.
Sporadic violence, the so-called anti-Catholic riots, led most immi-
grant Irish to remain quiet and unobtrusive by keeping their nationality
and religion invisible to those on the outside. The wave of so-called fam-
ine emigrants visibly strengthened the self-consciousness of the Irish
after 1850. The number of Irish parishes steadily grew, and the Catholic
church took the initiative to set up charitable agencies to care for the
poor. The clergy concerned themselves increasingly with the immigrants,
which led to the development of a social Catholicism that in Germany is
associated with the name Kolping. The Catholic Church was the biggest
community builder in Glasgow and other places as well.17 It was primar-
ily out of pastoral and charitable motives that Brother Walfrid, himself
an immigrant from Sligo in County Donegal, established the Celtic club
in the Glasgow slum known as the East End in 1888. With the revenues
from admission to the games, which soon began to flow abundantly, he
financed meals for the poor, and hoped to provide competition to the
Protestant soup kitchens, which had successfully seduced believers from
the Catholic parishes. Even in its early years, Glasgow Celtic practiced
a political Catholicism in which the Irish question was dominant.
President John Glass was a leading member of the Catholic Union and
17. Tom Gallagher, The Catholic Irish in Scotland: In Search of Identity, in Irish Immi-
grants and Scottish Society in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, 2750; Joseph M. Bradley,
Football in Scotland: A History of Political and Ethnic Identity, International Journal of the His-
tory of Sport 12 (1995): 8198.
Football and the Nation
by scoring more than fifty goals. However, this rivalry led to the pool-
ing of resources that generally turned the other teams into mere statis-
tics. Only Aberdeen FC succeeded during the 1980s in challenging the
two Glasgow clubs on a regular basis. At best, the other smaller teams
148 | from Dundee, Edinburgh, Kilmarnock, and Motherwell compete with
each other to reach a European competition. All too often they were
outplayed and knocked out in Celtic Park or Ibrox. Only the bankruptcy
of the 54-time Scottish champion Glasgow Rangers in 2012 brought the
120-year-old rivalry to a sudden end.
The battles between the immense and well-organized fan groups
were fought with fists, but also on a symbolic level. After the SFA forbid
the Irish tricolor to be waved above Celtic Park in 1950 there were sharp
protests by Celtic fans, who triumphed in their bid to demonstrate their
loyalty to their team. The Celtic supporters brandished the Irish flag,
and many of them sympathized, at least in the stadium, with Sinn Fein,
the party of radical separatism, and its military arm, the Irish Republi-
can Army (IRA), while singing republican songs in the pubs. The Protes-
tant fans, for their part, did not suffer from ambiguity in enunciating
their views. After the British antiterrorism unit, the SAS, killed three
IRA members in Gibraltar in 1988, the supporters of the Protestant
Motherwell FC sang: SAS 1, 2, 3 ... SAS 1, 2, 3 ....18 The riots between
the two sides were among the worst in the world for decades. Neverthe-
less, Glasgow remains a football-crazy city. Scotland also has the highest
per capita attendance at football matches of any country.
For many decades, Celtic Glasgow was the single most important
factor in the development of a self-conscious Irishness in the diaspora.
Political and social disadvantages were compensated for on the field and
after the game. A victory over the Rangers repaid many supporters for
their miserable wages. Victory in a street fight perhaps allowed them to
forget their social disadvantages for a little while. For the Scots of Irish
ancestry, Celtic Glasgow was the most important symbol of the fact that
they could struggle for recognition and equality without being forced to
give up their own identity in a foreign culture.
On a smaller scale, this was also true for the two clubs in Ulster,
namely Belfast Celtic and Derry City FC.19 In 1949 Belfast Celtic, the
leading Catholic club in Northern Ireland, withdrew from the profes-
sional First Northern Irish Division. The clubs home and away matches
were always accompanied by riots. Cliftonville, the only remaining pro-
fessional Catholic club in Belfast, cannot play its home games against |149
the flagship club of the Protestant unionists, Linfield FC, in its own
stadium at Solitude. This stadium is located in the heart of the Catholic
part of the city. The odyssey of Derry City FC seems just as grotesque.
Founded in 1928 as Derry City Football and Athletic Club, the Catholic
club from (London-)Derry played, until its withdrawal in October 1972,
in the Northern Irish professional league. However, games in its stadium
at Brandywell, in the Catholic part of the segregated city, were always
moved to other stadiums. Its games against Linfield always led to politi-
cally and religiously tinged riots. In 1984 the club was finally refounded
with the name Derry Football Club. After a great many discussions back
and forth, the team finally was allowed to play the next year in the First
Irish League, where it quickly became a magnet for spectators. For the
fans, Derry has become a symbol for a united Ireland.20 Just as was the
case for the supporters of Celtic Glasgow, support for the Catholic club
from Derry provides the opportunity to show on a regular basis their
support for Irish republicanism, to show their colors, and to mark their
presence. In a country where symbolic actions like the annual marches
by the Orangemen notoriously lead to violence and counter-violence,
the effectiveness of such demonstrations should not be underestimated.
There are a whole series of other clubs that give a voice to ethnic
groups that are a minority in national states. The most famous example
is FC Barcelona, as will be explained in detail below, which served as the
most important symbol of anti-Castillian Catalonian identity during the
Francoist dictatorship (193675). Negative excesses in the relationship
between politics and football can also be seen in various periods in the
Balkans. In communist Yugoslavia, the duels between Dynamo Zagreb
and the two Belgrade clubs, Partisan and Red Star, provoked ethnically
tinged riots in the early 1980s. On May 13, 1990, the Croat Zvonimir Bo-
ban, who played for Dynamo at the time, set in motion a massive brawl
on the playing field because of his clear assault on another player, just
months before the outbreak of the war. The brawl was continued by fans
150 | from both sides on the street, and set the stage for the nationalistic radi-
calization of the following decade. In 1992, Dynamo became Croatia, a
team that was under the direct protection of the nationalist Croatian
president Franjo Tudjman. The coach of Croatia, Miroslav Blazevic, was
a friend of Tudjman, and also served as the coach of the Croatian na-
tional team that took a surprising third place in the World Cup in France
in 1998 with players such as Boban, Robert Prosinecki, Robert Jarni, and
Davor Suker, thereby setting off a new nationalist frenzy. Blazevic, who
had been active in Switzerland during the 1970s and 1980s, sat next to
Tudjman in the open state limousine while celebrating the re-conquest
of Krajna.
A further example of the instrumentalization of football for nation-
alist purposes is provided by the Serbian super-fan Zeljko Raznatovic,
who participated in several massacres under the name General Arkan.
Raznatovic, who was himself finally assassinated, was under heavy sus-
picion for having participated in the murders of more than two thou-
sand Bosnians and Croats in various theaters of the war with his death
squad, the Tigers. As the fans representative, Raznatovic unified the
rival groups of militant Ultras of Red Star. He presented himself as a
generous benefactor, inviting, for example, eighty supporters to an away
match in Glasgow. In 1991, he appeared in Slovenia as the leader of a
paramilitary unit, whose members were recruited largely from the ranks
of football hooligans. The capture of Vukovar led to a wave of excitement
in the Serbian sporting press. The newspaper Zvedzivina Revija, for ex-
ample, reported: All nicely groomed in their black military caps, they
began to sing: The Serbian army, that is us, Arkans tigers, volunteers
in rank upon rank, we will never give up the land of Serbia.21 In 1994,
Raznatovic purchased the Belgrade club Obilic, whose name recalled the
legendary prince Milos Obilic, who defeated an Ottoman army at the
battle of Kosovo in 1389 and is still venerated today as a saint in some
regions of Serbia. Obilic quickly achieved considerable success and be-
21. Ibid.
Football and the Nation
22. For a detailed discussion of this matter, see Christian Koller and Fabian Brndle Man
fhlte, dass die Eidgenossen eine Grosstat vollbracht hatten: Fussball und geistige Landesvertei-
digung in der Schweiz, Stadion 25 (1999): 177214.
Football and the Nation
Swiss victory. Looking back from 1955, the chief editor, Fred Luchsinger,
described the circumstances in this way: In view of its effect on the na-
tional consciousness, the victory ... doubtlessly was political.23 By the
summer of 1938, Germany had found itself for some time on an aggres-
152 | sive expansionist course. In March 1935 Adolf Hitler had declared the
military sovereignty of Germany, and the next year he remilitarized
the Rhineland contrary to the obligations of the Versailles peace treaty.
Two years later came the Anschluss of Austria. This led, as the Zurich
Tages-Anzeiger observed at the end of May 1938, to a situation in which
the political sensitivities of the Swiss grew quite acute. It was only with
great unease that policies were pursued that might disrupt proper rela-
tions with the state to our north.24 Shortly after the Anschluss, an issue
of the Schulungsbrief, which had a circulation of more than three million
and served as the main organ for transmitting educational materials for
the NSDAPs evening classes, drew the attention of the Swiss authorities.
The issue had a map in which Switzerland belonged to the region of Ger-
man peoples.25 It is hardly surprising that an athletic meeting between
the two states carried such importance in this charged atmosphere.
Even in the run-up to the World Cup, political events surrounding
the game between Switzerland and Germany drew considerable atten-
tion. On March 28, 1938, the Austrian Football Association (FB) was
dissolved. Consequently, one of the sixteen teams that had qualified for
the World Cup was eliminated from the tournament right at the start.
The best football players from the Ostmark were supposed to strength-
en the team of Greater Germany. The 22-man roster of the Greater Ger-
many team included no fewer than nine Viennese, of whom five were
selected to play in the first game against Switzerland. On the Swiss side,
the eligibility of Gnia Walacek from Servette Geneva to play remained
unclear until two days before the match. As the son of a Czech piano
player and a woman from Neuchtel, Walacek only possessed a Nansen
refugee card but had nevertheless played in nine international matches
for Switzerland. He had already received federal approval for his request
23. Fred Luchsinger, Die Neue Zrcher Zeitung im Zeitalter des Weltkrieges 19301955 (Zurich:
Neue Zrcher Zeitung, 1955), 191.
24. Tages-Anzeiger, May 30, 1938.
25. Ibid.
Football and the Nation
for citizenship, but had not yet received citizenship in the city of Ge-
neva, which was necessary to obtain Swiss citizenship. Consequently, he
was prevented from participating in the World Cup. Then, on June 2, the
FIFA board met to hear a Swiss request that the issue be reconsidered.
After a heated debate, Walacek received permission to play on a 1410 |153
vote, after which the FIFA president Jules Rimet put on the record that
this was an extraordinary decision, and will not serve as a precedent.26
The decision was greeted avidly by the Swiss press, which interpreted it
through a political lens. The Neue Zrcher Zeitung stressed that the del-
egates from the small states used the appeal from the Swiss association
to help a player, who did not have his own political fatherland, find an
athletic fatherland.27
The first meeting between Switzerland and Greater Germany stood
at a 11 tie at ninety minutes following a hard-fought game. The Swiss
lock, a defensive formation that the Swiss had learned from their Aus-
trian coach Karl Rappan, and whose main exponent and major sup-
port was Severino Minelli (the central defender of Italian extraction),
remained solid so that a thirty-minute extension of the game did not
serve to bring about a decision. The Schalker Kreisel (Schalke Spinning
Top) around Fritz Szepan and Ernst Kuzorra did not work, as the inte-
gration of the technically stronger Viennese players did not go accord-
ing to plan. Subsequently, the two teams faced each other again three
days later. In the rematch, the Germans led 20 after twenty minutes.
Then the Swiss, who played weakly in the first half, got back to within a
goal before the intermission on a score by Walacek. Nevertheless, after
45 minutes, the game already seemed to be decided. However, the game
was turned on its head in the second half. The German team fell apart.
By contrast, under the magisterial conductor Fredy Bickel, and thanks to
the nose for the net and the three goals by the prolific Trello Abegglen,
the Swiss left the field as the sparkling victors after ninety minutes.
The victory over Greater Germany sent all of Switzerland into a
spasm of joy. According to press reports, during the radio broadcast of
the game there was a striking silence ... in all of the cities and localities
26. This is according to Walter Lutz, Rudolf Mingers Dank und 175 Franken: 1938Das
Wunder von Paris, Sport, May 31, 1991.
27. Neue Zrcher Zeitung, June 4, 1938.
Football and the Nation
28. Tages-Anzeiger, June 10, 1938; Neue Zrcher Nachrichten, June 10, 1938.
29. See Otto F. Walter, Zeit des Fasans: Roman (Reinbek: Rowohlt, 1988), 12126, for a liter-
ary reworking of this account.
30. Tages-Anzeiger, June 10, 1938; Neue Zrcher Nachrichten, June 10, 1938.
31. Sport, June 13, 1938. 32. Arbeiter-Zeitung, June 10, 1938.
33. Journal de Genve, June 10, 1938.
34. Archive of the Swiss Football Association, box for the 1938 World Cup.
35. Helmut Hubacher, Einwurf: Der legendre Sieg in Paris, Tages-Anzeiger, June 12, 1998.
Football and the Nation
for the magnificent fashion in which they defended the white cross on
the field of red,43 and the Gazette de Lausanne explicitly attributed an
importance to the game that went far beyond the realm of sports:
This event goes far beyond sport. It is national. And all of us who are patriots
156 |
have the right to be proud of our national team.... This team from a nation of
just 4 million inhabitants was able to defeat ... a team from Greater Germany,
that did not have enough, it would appear, from its 80 million. There it is, a step
away from the ordinary. What is the importance of the eleven small Swiss who
played Thursday evening, who played the match of their lives? They had what the
others could not have: the will to conquer, faith in victory. Our side, wounded
in the previous meeting, vilified by an arrogant and powerful adversary, serried
their ranks and fought like they were at St. Jakob and achieved a victory that will
live on.44
The reference to the battle near St. Jakob an der Birs points to the ideo-
logical context in which the event was conceptualized in Switzerland.
The massacre on August 26, 1444, in which about 1,300 young Swiss lost
their lives in battle against eight times as many French mercenaries led
in the late sixteenth century to the development of myth about their
sacrificial death, a myth that was further strengthened in the nineteenth
century. This myth was particularly instrumentalized on the occasion of
the five hundreth anniversary of the battle in 1944 to strengthen the
spiritual national defense.45 The Swiss football players were thus viewed
as following in succession with the heroes of a Swiss national myth in
consonance with the phrase Hail to you Helvetia, Do you still have
sons, such as those whom St. Jakob saw, from the contemporary Swiss
national anthem. The Patrie valaisanne briefly and succinctly articulated
what the overwhelming majority of Swiss population thought and felt
on that day: it doesnt matter that our eleven does not go any farther,
they beat Germany, and one could say that is certainly something.46 The
Arbeiter-Zeitung of Basel pointed to the national team as a role model for
the entire Swiss people. In a poem with the title Thousands of Victors
in the Family Register a passage states: If the people remained truly
Swiss, and acted with such speed, then everything would be much easier
and less of a burden!47
There were interesting and clearly politically motivated differences
in the image that was painted of the German team. The bourgeois press
did not refrain from mentioning the toughness with which the Ger- |157
man team played, particularly during the first half of the game.48 The
left-wing press presented the matter entirely differently. The Social
Democratic Arbeiter-Zeitung from Basel wrote, playing on a line from
the Horst Wessel Song, that it was with great satisfaction that the
Swiss team stopped the crazed invincibility of the brown battalions.49
The Limmattaler Tagblatt, the official publication of various working
class neighborhoods and suburbs of Zurich, took pleasure, while casting
a glance at the wars in Spain and China, in the fact that between the
battlefields where power politics glories in orgies of blood ... the ath-
letic representatives of four million democratic people defeated on the
field the representatives of a major state controlled by a militarist ide-
ology, doing so through their superior individuality and their ability to
feel enthusiasm in their hearts.50 The Social Democratic Volksrecht from
Zurich and the communist Freiheit also made no secret of their political
disgust for the Nazi team, and emphasized in their reporting that the
German team began the World Cup match with their brutality ... in an
unpleasant manner and that they continued to play with increasing
crudeness that led to a storm of indignation among the public and to
a passionate chorus of cat-calls.51 It was happily noted that the nor-
mal opening of Hitler salute-gymnastics by the German team before
the game received a chilly reception from the public, and that the Ger-
man supporters of the team faced a chorus of hoots when they began to
sing to the Horst Wessel Song.52
The left-wing press offered even greater criticism of the German
athletic officials than they did of the German players and their support-
ers in the stands. The fact that the German team did not remain in Paris
The Freiheit went so far as to claim that the players on the German na-
tional team were being treated like inmates in a concentration camp.55
The Social Democratic Berner Tagwacht made clear it was pleased that the
National Socialist regime would not be able to exploit the football world
championship for propaganda purposes, as happens with all athletic
success in the Fascist states. And it is proper that small Switzerland made
such a propaganda coup impossible. It is just that it was players from a
democracy whose inhabitants have only filth under their skulls.56
These passages show the different conceptions of the medias ap-
proach to Nazi Germany. Left-wing coverage was on a clear course of
confrontation with the northern neighbor. There was far less praise of
the achievements of the Swiss, with a greater stress on the anti-Fascist
tendencies of the French popular front. By contrast, the bourgeois press,
concomitant with the idea of spiritual national defense, placed the pu-
tative virtues of Swissness, bravery, force of will, willingness to make
sacrifices, and comradeship, to the fore. In particular, the German Swiss
avoided, as much as possible, making direct attacks against the Ger-
mans. While the left engaged in the diffusion of an image of the ene- |159
my, the bourgeois strove to strengthen and increase the national self-
conception without explicitly renouncing an attitude of neutrality in
foreign affairs. Seen in this light, the bourgeois reporting seems to be a
prefiguration of the policies pursued toward the northern neighbor dur-
ing the war, namely a demonstrated willingness to defend themselves
combined with economic cooperation.
The day after their victory, the Swiss teams quarters were deluged
with good wishes by telegraph, letter, and phone. One of the first to of-
fer his congratulations was federal councilor Rudolf Minger, the head
of the Swiss military department, who offered a Swiss greeting for the
brave Swiss national team ... that achieved a magnificent victory with
exemplary dedication.57 The Social Democratic national president Fritz
Hauser, formally the Highest Swiss and former president of the Swiss
Football and Athletic Union, made clear his joy about this beautiful suc-
cess at a meeting of parliament on June 10, and ordered that the con-
gratulations of the greater chamber be transmitted by telegraph to the
Swiss team.58 Further congratulations came from the Free Democratic
faction in the federal assembly, from various athletic associations, clubs,
and numerous private individuals.59
In the archive of the Swiss Football Association there is a box con-
taining these congratulatory messages.60 The letters and telegrams are
interesting sources for the history of mentalities. The collection includes
456 texts by individuals, as well as 89 mailings by clubs, groups of pub
regulars, and school classes. The missives are divided roughly in propor-
tion to the populations in the various regions of the country. The num-
ber of congratulations sent by groups of regulars is striking, and points
61. Since many people only included the first letters of their names, it is not possible to
give an exact number for the women. The large number of women does show that football was
not a purely male domain.
62. All of the citations in the following section are drawn from the archive of the Swiss
Football Association, box for the 1938 World Cup. Sixty-six mention brave, bravery, virtuous,
fighting spirit, etc.
63. Three mentions (woman from Lausanne, man from Zurich, man from Locarno).
64. Two mentions (man from Basel, man from Dietikon).
65. One mention (regulars table, Caf Ernst, Zurich).
Football and the Nation
66. A total of twenty-six mentions. Today both German Swiss and Romance speakers con-
tinue to celebrate their team with a phrase that crosses the language boundary: Hopp Schwyz/
Hop Suisse (Go, Switzerland).
67. Hotel Touring Chiasso.
68. Fourteen mentions of small fatherland, etc.
69. F. C. Winterthur to the brave Swiss team in Paris, June 10, 1938.
70. Neue Zrcher Zeitung, June 14, 1938.
Football and the Nation
71. Following Walter Lutz, Rudolf Mingers Dank und 175 Franken: 1938Das Wunder von
Paris, Sport, May 31, 1991.
72. See, for example, Sport, June 15, 1938. 73. Cited in Sport, June 20, 1938.
74. Sport, June 17, 1938. 75. Ibid.
Football and the Nation
to our hearts did not go unheard. The echoes have been powerful! Let us give a
hearing to these voices! Let us give to football what it has richly earned!
76. Ralph Giordano described this process of suppression, forgetting, and stylization as a
victim of the second guilt. Ralph Giordano, Die zweite Schuld oder Von der Last Deutscher zu sein
(Hamburg: Rasch und Rhring, 1987).
77. Cited following Arthur Heinrich, Tooor! Toor! Tor! 40 Jahre 3 : 2 (Hamburg: Rotbuch
Verlag, 1994), 32. Also see Daniel Aeschlimann, Der Tag, an dem das Wankdorf weltberhmt
wurde, Der Bund, July 4, 2001; Siegfried Gehrmann, Le sport comme moyen de rhabilitation
nationale au dbut de la Rpublique Fdrale dAllemagne: Les Jeux Olympiques de 1952 et la
Coupe du Monde de Football de 1954, in Sports et relations internationals,, 23143.
78. Heinrich, Tooor! Toor! Tor!, 18.
Football and the Nation
79. In response to a internal demand for democratization of the DFB, president Peco Bauw-
ens said in 1948: Democracy does not belong to the high ideals that we maintain. Citation from
Heinrich, Fussballbund, 166.
Football and the Nation
tabloid Bild wrote, for example, that Rahn achieved the final victory80
against the Yugoslavs in the eighty-fourth minuteand thus the first
bad relapse into jargon of the Third Reich, the Lingua Tertii Imperii (Vik-
tor Klemperer) could be detected. The victory tasted even sweeter because
the match had been moved to Geneva with the obvious purpose of limit- |165
ing the number of German fans who could attend the game in Charmilles
stadium. The semi-final was in the border city of Basel on June 30 against
Austria, which had defeated Switzerland 75 in the highest scoring match
in the history of the World Cup final round. The German team outclassed
the Austrians 61. The Hungarians awaited them in Bern for the final.
The Hungarians had played brilliantly up to this point, dominating the
defending champion Uruguay in the semifinal.
Thus, on the fourth of July, David faced Goliath in the Bernese
Wankdorf stadium. About half of the 60,000 spectators had traveled
from Germany, and the drizzle gave them grounds for hope. This was
Fritz Walter weather,81 or so claimed the reporter Herbert Zimmer-
mann, who greeted the nation gathered in front of their radios and even
a few televisions.82 The captain and playmaker Fritz Walter was one of
five players from Kaiserslautern, who were supposed to achieve the im-
possible. Everything seemed like it would follow the course that people
feared as the Hungarians took a 20 lead after just eight minutes with
goals by Pusks and Czibor. The Nrnberger Maxl Morlock brought the
Germans to within one in the 13th minute. Just five minutes later, the
striker from Essen Helmut Rahn scored the equalizer. The game went
back and forth although the clear advantage lay with the Hungarians,
who again and again failed against the superb German goalkeeper Toni
Turek (Fortuna Dsseldorf). He was a football god83 according to the
correspondent Herbert Zimmermann, whose reporting became increas-
ingly euphoric. According to the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, every
man on the German national eleven fulfilled his duty to the utmost of
his ability.84 In the eighty-fourth minute, Rahn got the ball at the edge
of the penalty area, dribbled around two opposing players, and shot. The
ball, falling toward the wet grass, landed, unreachable for Grosics, the
goalie, in the left corner. Herbert Zimmermann screamed into his mi-
crophone, Rahn has to shoot from behind. Rahn shoots. Goaaal! Goal!
166 | Goal! Goal! Goal for Germany!85 Turek saved yet another unstoppable
shot and the miracle at Bern became a reality. Germany was world
champion for the first time.
Some sinister undertones, which recalled the very recent period of
horrors, quickly mixed in with the understandable joy. In its reportage
regarding the minutes after the end of the game, the Frankfurter Allge-
meine Zeitung happily observed that 25,000 German spectators power-
fully joined in singing the Deutschlandlied.86 Indeed, the visiting fans
sang the first stanza, although the more peaceful third stanza had be-
come the text for the national anthem.87 It is contested whether some
individual spectators also raised their right arms in the Hitler salute.
However, it was not only victory-besotted fans who sang Deutschland,
Deutschland, ber alles after the final whistle. This stanza was also
played during the triumphal procession that the players enjoyed on their
journey through Germany. The return trip on the chartered train, called
Red Lighting, turned into an unprecedented public event. More than
30,000 fans waited for the train at the border station at Singen. More
than 500,000 people wanted to celebrate with the heroes of Bern in
Munich. These were the first true mass events in nine years. Masses of
German men and women also participated in the official tributes that
were held for the world champions in Kaiserlautern, Essen, Dsseldorf,
and Frth.
Some players had qualities that made it particularly easy for fans to
identify with them. In contrast to the other star players, the best player
and their conductor, Fritz Walter, had been conscripted during the Sec-
ond World War. His experiences as an infantryman, a completely nor-
mal Landser who simply carried out orders, matched the experiences of
millions of German men, who had simply wanted to do their duty. Dur-
ing the war, Walter had played with other football players on the Red
Hunter army team. At the same time, he put his life on the line dur-
ing his tours of duty, and so did not have the same privileged existence
as other elite athletes.88 Five years after the game in Bern, Walter pub-
lished a popular wartime memoir that corresponded exactly with these
kinds of memories.89 In addition, Walter was humble, or down-to-earth, |167
as one says today. The literary critic Jrg Drews, who grew up in Kaiser-
slautern, remembered meeting his youthful idol in 1947 during a back lot
game. Fritz Walter juggled a new leather ball, a luxury, on the sidewalk
on Fischer street before offering comfort to the assembled boys: You
have it good, you boys. I was so poor, I never had a ball. My mother al-
most killed me because I wrecked my shoes playing with a bit of iron.90
Helmut Rahn, the boss, came from the Ruhr region and was very
friendly. He happily drank a beer, or two or three. He made his contem-
poraries laugh with his priceless parody of a market woman from Essen,
which was also a play on the clever survival strategies of the immediate
postwar period:
Top notch firm tomatoes people! The best grandma sucking berries for toothless
grandmothers. Yes, red cabbage, white cabbage, savoy cabbage, spinach! If no
one comes, then kiss my ... I am tired of life, today I am giving the merchandise
away! Ah, here comes someone! Top notch firm tomatoes!91
Just like the captain Fritz Walter, the happy-go-lucky Helmut Rahn
spoke to many Germans, who did not want to hear any more about the
World War, the Holocaust, or their associated historical guilt. In 1959,
Fritz Walter cut to the chase when he wrote: Lets not talk about the
war, lets talk about football.92 In the end, the legendary comradeship
among the coaches and players in the continuously conjured up spirit of
Spiez demonstrated to the Germans that it was possible to achieve any-
thing as long as everyone held together and pulled on the same rope.93
However, the left-liberal press criticized this German chauvinism
The legitimacy of singing the first stanza led to a heated debate in which
chauvinist voices from yesteryear also participated. It was said that oth-
er countries had much bloodier national anthems, and national symbols
were used by every state. One letter to the editor to the Spiegel stated: if
someone does not want the first stanza, then we should get another na- |169
tional anthem. It is degrading to unlearn the words of the national an-
them. One could only come up with this sort of idea for the Germans.97
However, the most disgusting nationalist tones did not come from the
beery singers and euphoric people who went to the train platforms, but
rather from above from sport officials and politicians. In particular,
the president of the DFB, Dr. Peco Bauwens, did not refrain in his official
speech, which unfortunately only survives in fragments, in the Munich
Hofbruhaus, from making references back to the Third Reich. Accord-
ing to Bauwens, the German team represented the best of Germany
abroad, and was filled with the spirit of the good Germans.98 When
Bauwens began to praise the leader principle, Bavarian Radio Station
turned off the broadcast.
Another academic, Dr. Joachim Beser, the chief reporter for the
Welt, initially showed skepticism about the strength of the team from
the Federal Republic and did not show any scruples about using the lan-
guage of the last days of the Third Reich. This sport of football, in all of
its primitivism, possesses an uncanny symbolic power. Everyone felt it
in Geneva [against Yugoslavia]. Here, they defended themselves vigor-
ously and did not want to give in. Here, there were eleven who swore
that they would not be smoked out of their fortress. Every one of them
would have struck the ball with his tongue if that is what it took.99 Bau-
wens and Besser received considerable criticism. The Sddeutsche Zei-
tung, for example, described this as a Sieg Heil speech.100
Abroad, the German reaction to the World Cup title was met with
unease. In its reporting, the Manchester Guardian ambiguously compared
the attack by the German team to the old blitzkrieg.101 In the Daily Mir-
ror, the Labour parliamentarian Michael Foot warned that the Germans
were already becoming arrogant.102 The Daily Express had the headline
97. Heinrich, Tooor! Toor! Tor!, 85. 98. Ibid., 92. Also see Spiegel, July 14, 1954.
99. Heinrich, Tooor! Toor! Tor!, 94. 100. Ibid., 97.
101. Manchester Guardian, July 5, 1954.
102. Citation from the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, July 7, 1954.
Football and the Nation
Der Tagfor Germans and explained that Der Tag was a famous Ger-
man term for the outbreak of the Second World War. The caption for
this article was accompanied by the phrase, in German, Deutschland ber
alles.103 The Copenhagen newspaper Information made the point that
170 | only the lack of an overt hail victory kept this from having the feeling
of the 1936 Olympics. It went on to say, the Germans sang Deutschland,
Deutschland ber alles, indeed there was a roar, and it seemed as if this
victory cancelled out the one that they had failed to achieve from 1940
to 1945.104 Finally, the correspondent for Le Monde cited an acquain-
tance who saw in Sepp Herbergers strategy of only playing the second
team against Hungary in the early round, and then defeating them in
the final, a basic characteristic of the Germans, and warned of the paral-
lels with Adenauers policy of integration with the West.105
The effect of the world championship on the self-confidence of Ger-
man men and women remains contested until the present day. On the
one hand, the triumph in Bern, even if it did come with an admixture
of an ugly and invincible German chauvinism, did lead to a process of
stabilization in the young Federal Republic and helped make it possible
to avoid a basic rejection of the new system comparable with the views
of the majority of the German people toward the Weimar Republic. By
defeating the golden team from Hungary, the German squad demon-
strated that old German values such as readiness for action, diligence,
and comradeship, which had fallen into disrepute, also could be of great
use in the new world order. By contrast, the politicians in the other Ger-
man nation, the German Democratic Republic, had to experience the
defeat of a friendly socialist country, an allegory for the superiority
of the collectivist ideology, at the hands of the hated class enemy. The
functionaries consoled themselves that, as Vorwrts wrote, the ball that
landed in the net behind Grosicz in the 82nd minute neither made the
world fall down, nor did it improve the condition of West German impe-
rialism.106 The enemy Bonn government was charged with misusing the
victory for political purposes. Nevertheless, many East German working
men and women had the audacity to celebrate the victory of the Federal
team as their own as well, and to celebrate it more or less openly just
a year after the uprising on June 17. On the other hand, the German
economic and social historian Franz-Josef Brggemeier, taking account
of the numerous dissonant voices in the press, warned against overesti-
mating the importance of the football victory for the reawakening of a
German national sentiment.107 |171
And the heroes of Bern? Four years later, the now aged team was
knocked out in the semifinal by the hosts in Sweden. They decisively
lost the game for third place 36 against the strong French team that
had two superior strikers in Raymond Kopa and the scoring champion
Just Fontaine. The world champions also were not able to profit from
their historic victory. Certainly, they received the silver laurel from the
president of the Federal Republic as well as countless gifts from private
individuals.108 However, the first effort to earn money through endorse-
ments was immediately blocked by the bigoted DFB enforcers of ama-
teurism. The players received a modest bonus of a thousand marks for
their title. A world champion who played in all of the games received just
two thousand marks for a bonus. In recognition of Fritz Walters service,
decades later the Betzenberg stadium in Kaiserslautern was renamed
the Fritz Walter stadium. Under pressure from the press and the asso-
ciation, the captain refused lucrative offers to play abroad. Helmut Rahn
and Kohlmeyer drank too much, and the boss even had to spend some
time in jail. Ottmar Walter finally fell so far into debt that he had to give
up his filling station. None of the eleven had any success as a coach.
And the Hungarians? The trip home was a singular humiliation.
The players got off the train before arriving at the main station in Bu-
dapest in order avoid the scorn of the people. The experience in the
capital was almost like an uprising. Businesses were plundered and pho-
tographs of the failures were publicly burned. Thousands of protestors
marched in front of the editorial offices of the national sports newspa-
per, where they burned the most recent edition that dealt with the in-
comprehensible defeat. The main victim of the disappointment was the
hated coach and theoretician Gusztav Sebes, whose immediate dismissal
was demanded unanimously.109
107. Franz-Josef Brggemeier, Zurck auf dem Platz: Deutschland und die Fuballweltmeis-
terschaft 1954 (Munich: DVA, 2004).
108. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, July 5, 1954.
109. Gyrgy Dalos, Die ungarische Fussballkatastrophe von 1954, in his Ungarn: Vom
Football and the Nation
Roten Stern zur Stephanskrone (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1991), 1730; as well as Tamas Aczel and
Tibor Meray, The Revolt of Mind: A Case History of Intellectual Resistance behind the Iron Curtain
(New York: Praeger, 1959), 242.
Football and the Nation
ian football was now thoroughly outmoded. During the 1990s, Hungary
fell into the third class in national selections for the World Cup.
And Wankdorf?110 Wankdorf stadium in Bern became a pilgrimage
site for countless German football fans. During the late 1950s, it enjoyed
its golden age as the modern home of the Bernese Young Boys. Between |173
1956 and 1960, the Young Boys won the Swiss championship four times.
On April 15, 1959, sixty thousand spectators cheered the winning goal
by Geni Meier in a home victory in the semifinal of the European Cup
against Stade Reims. Although it was not otherwise spoiled for wins, the
Swiss national team remained undefeated at Wankdorf from 1965 un-
til 1975, and won a series of the their most beautiful victories here. The
team was ready for the World Cup runner-up Sweden in 1961 and the
up-and-coming team from the Netherlands in a World Cup qualifier in
1965. In both games, the goalie Elsener played like Toni Turek once had
done. Finally, the team defeated Italy in 1993 on a goal by Marc Hot-
tiger, setting the foundation for a qualification almost thirty years after
the teams last participation in the World Cup final round. This stadium,
packed with spectators, has witnessed many dramatic cup finals. Many
Swiss football fans came to realize what a great setting Wankdorf of-
fered. The distinctive twin clock towers with their large dials and minute
hands have been imprinted upon tens of thousands of football fans.
The last European final to take place in Wankdorf was in 1989 when
the FC Barcelona defeated Sampdoria Genoa 21 in the Cup Winners
Cup. The venerable stadium had noticeably begun to fall apart as no one
wished to invest the money to modernize it. The stands were threatening
to collapse, and it seemed more sensible to begin an entirely new con-
struction rather than attempt a renovation that might save this impor-
tant site of memory (Pierre Nora). While in London, serious thought
was given to keeping the twin towers of the landmark Wembley stadium
during the construction of the new building, in Bern a decision was made
to go for a tabula rasa. The German chancellor Gerhard Schrder empha-
sized the memorial value of this stadium while celebrating the hundred-
year anniversary of the German Football Association at Dresden. In a let-
ter sent on June 29, 2001, he wrote:111
110. Regarding the history of Wankdorf stadium, see Stadion Wankdorf: Geschichte und Ge-
schichten, eds. Charles Beuret and Mario Marti (Bern: Benteli, 2004).
111. Daniel Aeschlimann, Der Tag, an dem das Wankdorf weltberhmt wurde, Der Bund,
July 4, 2001.
Football and the Nation
There are places and buildings that have an exceptional importance in the his-
tory of a country, and which keep their symbolic meaning across many genera-
tions. We Germans are connected to the historical memories of Hambach castle,
St. Pauls church in Frankfurt, the Berlin Wall, and Weimar. For us Germans,
174 | Wankdorf stadium in Bern certainly is included among these places, which re-
main unforgotten.... It may be unavoidable that Wankdorf is to be torn down,
because something very different is demanded in a modern and up-to-date ath-
letic complex. However, Wankdorf stadium will always have a place in the mem-
ory of the Germans.
112. Rudolf Burger, and Alexander Sury, Nach dem 2:2 waren wir obenauf: Interview mit
Ottmar Walter, Der Bund, July 7, 2001.
113. According to the pertinent ethnological studies, communicative memory, which is only
transmitted orally, disappears in about eighty years. See, for example, J. Vansina, Oral Tradition
as History (Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985); Lebenserfahrung und Kollektives
Gedchtnis: Die Praxis der Oral History, ed. Lutz Niethammer (Frankfurt: Syndikat, 1985); and Ass-
mann, Das kulturelle Gedchtnis, 5052.
7|Football and Class
Struggle
1. See, for example, Andreas Luh, Betriebssport zwischen Arbeitgeberinteressen und Arbeit-
nehmerbedrfnissen: Eine historische Analyse vom Kaiserreich bis zur Gegenwart (Aachen: Meyer
& Meyer, 1998); Chemie und Sport am Rhein: Sport als Bestandteil betrieblicher Sozialpolitik und
unternehmerischer Marketingstrategie bei Bayer 19001985 (Bochum: N. Brockmeyer, 1992); Sebas-
tian Fasbender, Zwischen Arbeitersport und Arbeitssport: Werksport an Rhein und Ruhr 19211938
(Gttingen: Cuvillier, 1997); and Christian Koller, Zur Entwicklung des schweizerischen Fir-
menfussballs 19201955, Stadion 28 (2002): 24966.
2. Siegfried Gehrmann, Schalke 04: Ein brgerlicher Arbeiterverein, in Illustrierte Ge-
schichte des Arbeitersports, eds. Hans-Joachim Teichler and Gerhard Hauk (Bonn: Dietz, 1987),
15560.
3. See, for example, Sue B. Bruley, The Women and Men of 1926: A Gender and Social History
of the General Strike and Miners Lockout in South Wales (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2010),
175
Football and Class Struggle
6770; Christian Koller, Streikkultur: Performanzen und Diskurse des Arbeitskampfes im schweize-
risch-sterreichischen Vergleich (18601950) (Mnster-Vienna: Lit, 2009), 165 and 357; Kicken unter
Hammer und Sicheldie vergessene Geschichte des Schweizerischen Arbeiterfussball-Verbandes
(19301936), in berall ist der Ball rundDie Zweite Halbzeit: Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart des
Fussballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa, eds. Dittmar Dahlmann et al. (Essen: Klartext, 2008), 248.
4. With regard to this topic in general, see Robert F. B. Wheeler, Organisierter Sport und
organisierte Arbeit: Die Arbeitersportbewegung, in Arbeiterkultur, ed. Gerhard A. Ritter (Knig-
stein: Verlagsgruppe Athenum-Hain-Scriptor-Hanstein, 1979), 5873.
5. Matthias Marschik, Wir spielen nicht zum Vergngen: Arbeiterfussball in der Ersten Re-
publik (Vienna: Verlag fr Gesellschaftskritik, 1994), 119; Markus Giuliani. Starke Jugendfrei-
es Volk: Bundestaatliche Krpererziehung und gesellschaftliche Funktion von Sport in der Schweiz
(19181947) (Bern: Lang, 2001), 128.
Football and Class Struggle
still able to capture the attention of the working masses? As we will see,
there are no sweeping answers to these questions. Rather, there were
significant geographical and temporal variations.
|177
Workers Football in Central Europe
The history of workers football is closely connected with the develop-
ment of the labor movement in Germany and Austria. German workers
athletics had its origins in the late nineteenth century.6 The beginning
came with the departure of workers from the Deutsche Turnerschaft
(Association of German Gymnastics) (DT) in protest against its na-
tionalist course. Around the turn of the century, workers gymnastics
clubs were founded in rural regions building outward from the center
of the labor movement.7 The Arbeiter-Turnbund (Workers Gymnastics
Union; ATB) was founded in Gera in 1893. This gave rise to the Arbeiter
Turn- und Sportbund (Workers Gymnastics and Athletics Union; ATSB)
in 1919. In 1912, the various groups belonging to the workers cultural
movement joined together in an umbrella organization called the Cen-
tral Commission for Workers Sports and Bodily Health. Working-class
athletes comprised the strongest component in the union. In 1919, the
ATSB had 106,000 members, and 652,000 in 1923. By 1930, there were
750,000 male and female workers athletes.8 The ATB and then the ATSB
considered themselves as members of the socialist labor movement
alongside the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Free Trade Unions.
The arrival of football brought with it similar conflicts within the
workers sport movement as it did in the bourgeois athletic world.
Richard Koppisch wrote in 1901 in the Arbeiter-Turn-Zeitung: If the Eng-
lish are held up as [an] example for us, it must be pointed out that the ex-
cesses in the sport and its play have spread in the most flagrant possible
way there as well. The roughness and brutality, which are the hallmarks of
the English national character ... are brought about to a great degree by
6. For an overview of this topic, see Heinz Timmermann, Geschichte und Struktur der Arbei-
tersportbewegung 18931933 (Ahrensburg bei Hamburg: Ingrid Czwalina, 1973).
7. For a micro-study of rural workers sports, see Klaus Schnberger, Arbeitersportbewegung
in Dorf und Kleinstadt: Zur Arbeiterbewegungskultur im Oberamt Marbach 19001933 (Tbingen:
Tbinger Vereinigung fr Volkskunde, 1995).
8. Gehrmann, Fussball-Vereine-Politik, 145.
Football and Class Struggle
the inordinate intensity of this type of activity.9 As late as 1911, the ATB
considered football damaging to the health of workers since the lengthy
playing time put too high a burden on the heart and lungs.
However, during and immediately after the First World War, the
178 | number of working-class football players increased rapidly. In 1914 there
were only 77 football teams in the ATB. By 1919 there were already 1,593,10
with 8,000 by 1930.11 The twelfth national meeting of the ATSB in Leipzig
in 1919 endorsed the request by the working-class football players for an
independent structure and leadership for their sport. This was established
as a united football committee. At the thirteenth national meeting in Mu-
nich in 1921, football was recognized as an independent branch within
the ATSB.12 The membership in the ATSB-football division rose rapidly
in the postwar period (see table 7-1).13 Beginning in 1920, the working-
class football players had their own championship.14 The ATSB organized
its own national championship. This led to an international match in
October 1924 against the former wartime enemy France, before the Lo-
carno conference in 1925 led to a policy of easing tensions. The bour-
geois Football Union (DFB) was not able to organize a similar match un-
til 1931.15 The political character of this game was clearly emphasized in
players was 183 percent between 1920 and 1931, compared to 119 percent
with the DFB. However, in considering the raw numbers, it is clear that
the ATSB never succeeded in making a decisive breakthrough into the
DFBs realm. During the 1920s, the DFB was able to greet 557,000 new
180 | members into its ranks, while the ATSB gained just 88,000 new foot-
ball players. These numbers also show that the percentage of workers
football players in the total number of those playing organized football
lagged far behind the percentage of voters supporting the left-wing par-
ties. During the national elections in 1920, 41.6 percent voted for these
parties in total (21.6 percent for the majority Social Democrats, 18 per-
cent for the independent Social Democrats, and just 2 percent for the
Communists). In 1930, the total left-wing vote came to 37.6 percent
(24.5 percent Social Democrats, 13.1 percent Communists). If one as-
sumes that the voting behavior of football players was not significantly
different than that of the general population, one must conclude that
just a quarter to a third of the left-wing voting football players belonged
to ATSB clubs, and more than two-thirds played in the DFB. Siegfried
Gehrmanns study of the Ruhr region, a stronghold of the labor move-
ment and of football, paints a similar picture. In 1932, 88 percent of all
organized football players in Hamborn, 72 percent in Gelsenkirchen, and
82 percent in Essen played in the DFB.21 Even in the outspokenly red
districts, whose inhabitants worked largely in the mines and voted over-
whelmingly for the Communists in both national elections and on the
workers councils, only between 20 percent and 50 percent of the left-wing
voting football players participated in the workers sport movement.22
Siegfried Gehrmann sees four basic reasons underlying this bour-
geois dominance.23 First, the bourgeois clubs had a head start over the
ATSB clubs. Until the November revolution of 1918, government officials
were able to make use of legal means, drawing on the repressive law of
associations to hinder the establishment of workers athletic clubs. For
example, an athletic club could be declared a political club because they
sang certain songs and therefore be forbidden to accept youths as mem-
bers. Before 1918, therefore, many workers joined bourgeois clubs, to
which they remained loyal during the Weimer Republic.
in football, and the winners were DSV 1910 Dresden and FT Jessnitz.30
The strengthening agitation of the Communists and the threatening rise
of the National Socialists led the SPD to give up its formerly distant rela-
tionship with workers sport, and to see in the ATSB an important van-
guard organization. One thousand clubs and about 100,000 athletes de- |183
cided to side with the Communists and thus were lost to the ATSB.31 The
relationship between the personnel of the ATSB and the SPD grew closer
during the late 1920s. In 1932, the ATSB and the SPD joined together with
the Free Trade Unions and the National Banner Black-Red-Gold, a para-
military center-left group dominated by Social Democrats, into an Iron
Front against National Socialism.32
The ATSB was smashed just a few months after the National So-
cialists took power in January 1933. Following the ban on the workers
sport movement, the property of the ATSB clubs was raided.33 The DFB
watched the destruction of workers football with delight. As early as
March 1933, DFB issued a ruling that requests for membership by former
ATSB clubs should receive basically dismissive treatment because up
to this point, these clubs had only played the sport in pursuit of politi-
cal goals or for purposes of class conflict, while the DFB pursued athlet-
ics and the nurturing of the youth for the purpose of strengthening the
people and the state.34 Numerous workers athletes managed to trans-
fer individually to bourgeois clubs, where they sometimes formed con-
spiratorial groups. The National Socialist regime pursued these insur-
gents mercilessly. Many workers athletes were sentenced to death in the
Third Reich, given long prison sentences, or murdered without a trial.35
Austrian workers sports also had its origins in the nineteenth cen-
tury.36 People were doing gymnastics in the working-class educational
clubs in Vienna by 1892. This movement soon spread to Bohemia, Wie-
ner Neustadt, Mdling, and Linz.37 At first, the Social Democratic Party
was skeptical of this movement because gymnastics had a strong repu-
tation as a national German phenomenon. Other branches of workers
athletics also organized alongside the gymnasts, including hikers and
184 | mountain climbers (Friends of Nature) as well as cyclists.
The leaders of the Social Democratic Party viewed with suspicion
both the establishment of the clubs and the associations, which seemed
too apolitical to them, as well as the development of sport as a mass
spectacle. Otto Bauer, one of the chief exponents of Austrian social de-
mocracy and an important theoretician of so-called Austro-Marxism,38
complained in 1924 that the mass of the working-class youth use the
little bit more freedom and little bit more time for which the labor
movement had struggled in previous years and decades just to go to see
football matches. Bauer saw this as evidence that the class conscious-
ness of the working-class youth was not yet sufficiently developed:
Because the better and more noble sources of entertainment are not available
to the masses, either because they do not have enough money or lack sufficient
education, they seek their pleasure in the cinema or at football games. It would
be foolish to struggle against this. Instead, we wish to learn from this. What
is the allure of football ... ? Football matches draw on the joy that youth take
in struggle. So, let us seize on the joy that the young people find in struggle.
We want to awake in them the joy that comes from a greater, more powerful
competition. We want to arouse their interest in that which, in the end, is more
interesting than whether Rapid defeats Amateure, that is whether the working
classes defeat the capitalist classes for the cup in the match for history.39
Aside from Carinthia and Vorarlberg, all of the federal states had their
own championships and cup competitions for workers football up
through 1927.
The Austrian workers sport movement reached its high point in the
second half of the 1920s. The first Austrian workers gymnastics and ath-
letics festival took place in 1926.45 The second Workers Olympics took
place in Vienna in 1931, and 100,000 athletes from 21 states participat-
186 | ed.46 Following the establishment of professional football, working-class
athletics came to epitomize amateurism and weekend sports. The publi-
cation of the workers football association bore the programmatic title
of Amateur Football and included in its first edition: We will spare no
effort to make football again what it once was, namely the most beau-
tiful game of the youth.... We no longer wish to look on as our youth
sink into the state of submissive and reckless gladiators in the quest for
the wretched money that is thrown at them for their athletic achieve-
ments.47 The few remaining connections with bourgeois clubs were
banned by the VFO, and the clubs were advised to move their head-
quarters from pubs to working mens clubs. The working-class football
players were frequently involved in the propaganda activities of the par-
ty. For example, a mass demonstration of working-class athletes was
organized during the national election campaign in 1927.48 The number
of working-class athletes appears to have plateaued between 1926 and
1931. In comparison with the international situation, however, their per-
centage of the overall population was quite high at 4.4 percent.
The greatest period of Austrian workers sports had come to an end
by 1931. The catastrophic state of the economy led to talented players
moving over to clubs in the FB where the players often received fi-
nancial support, even on the amateur teams. No fewer than nine play-
ers from the wonder team of the 1930s originally came from working-
class clubs. Moreover, the mass of workers did not refrain from going
to see the more attractive games of the professional championship.49
During the increasingly tense political situation in Austria in the period
between 1930 and 1934, the Austrian workers sport movement became
much more militant. The military gymnasts and the Social Democratic
Party had already joined forces by 1925. After the disturbances of 1927,
the party, which was now on the defensive, mobilized all of its strength
in defense of democracy. The workers sport movement became in-
creasingly bound together with the paramilitary Republican Protective |187
Union.50 The football clubs were also supposed to begin military sports.
However, this directive was often followed reluctantly. Many workers
athletes were basically pacifist and rejected any form of armed violence.
The close connection with the Protective Union had the consequence
that the workers athletes faced increasing pressure from the police and
the right-wing Home Guard.
As soon as the democratic republic was transformed into a clerical-
fascist corporative state under the direction of Engelbert Dollfusss Fa-
therland Front in 1934, the workers sports organizations were crushed
alongside the political parties and the unions. Many former workers
athletes continued to operate illegally. The Fatherland Front was not
able to convince the former workers athletes to cooperate with the new-
ly established Austrian Gymnastics and Athletic Front.51
53. Stephen G. Jones, Sports, Politics and the Working Class: Organised Labour and Sport in
Inter-War Britain (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1988), 197.
54. Ibid., 74.
55. David Prynn, The Clarion Clubs: Ramblings and Holiday Associations in Britain since
the 1890s, Journal of Contemporary History 11 (1976): 6577.
56. Jones, Sports, 76.
57. The National Archives, CAB 24/159, Report on Revolutionary Organisations in the Unit-
ed Kingdom, February 15, 1923.
Football and Class Struggle
ernment refused to issue entry visas, fearing that the tour would be fo-
cused more on communist propaganda than on athletics.58
As was true in other areas of the labor movement, there were con-
flicts within workers sports between Social Democrats and Commu-
nists. In 1927 the London branch of the BWSF organized a tour for its |189
select football team through the Soviet Union, with six games in Mos-
cow, Leningrad, Kharkov, and Kiev. There were no fewer than 35,000
spectators at the game in Moscow. Subsequently, the Communists won
a majority in the directorate during the national BWSF congress in April
1928. The Social Democratic forces then left the BWSF and founded a
new organization in 1930, the National Workers Sports Association
(NWSA).59 Neither the BWSF nor the NWSA was able to gain mass sup-
port among the workers in the following period. The BWSF dissolved in
1935 when Moscow came up with the plan of no longer fighting against
the Social Democrats, but rather joining with them and the progressive
bourgeois forces to prevent the further spread of fascism (the so-called
popular front strategy). In 1931, the BWSF had six thousand members,
while the NWSA had a membership of nine thousand in 1935. By con-
trast, at this time 750,000 football players were organized in the FA and
the Cyclists Touring Club had more than 25,720 active members.60
58. The Parliamentary Debates (Official Report), Fifth Series (London, 1930), 238:349; and
Peter J. Beck, Scoring for Britain: International Football and International Politics, 19001939 (Lon-
don: F. Cass, 1999), 140.
59. Jones, Sports, 80.
60. Ibid., 197.
61. Andr Gounot, Sport rformiste ou sport rvolutionnaire: Les dbuts des Internatio-
nales sportives ouvrires, in Les origines du sport ouvrier en Europe, ed. Pierre Arnaud (Paris:
Harmattan, 1994), 21945.
Football and Class Struggle
62. Gehrmann, Fussball, 147. The standard work on the RSI is Andr Gounot, Die Rote Spor-
tinternationale 19211937: Kommunistische Massenpolitik im europischen Arbeitersport (Mnster:
Lit, 1998).
63. See Bericht ber den IV. Kongress zu Helsingfors, 5.8. August 1927, s. l. 1927, 51; and Inter-
national Institute of Social History, Labour and Socialist International Archives 2959/10 Exeku-
tivsitzung der S. A. I., September 1927: Beziehungen zur Luzerner Sport-Internationale.
Football and Class Struggle
The second workers Olympics took place in Red Vienna in 1931 with
great participation by the public. Qualitatively and quantitatively, this
marked the high point of the history of international workers sports.64
The games began with a childrens festival in which about 30,000 chil-
dren and youths participated. This marked a step in the creation of an |191
athletic infrastructure. The national delegations, some of which num-
bered more than a thousand people, marched in the newly constructed
Prater stadium during the opening ceremonies. Even fascist-ruled Italy
was invited, although it did not send a delegation. Consequently, all of
the flags were lowered in remembrance of the oppressed Italian work-
ers. In total, 25,000 male and female athletes from 27 nations partici-
pated in the games despite the worldwide economic crisis, competing in
18 sports and 117 competitions. Sixteen teams participated in the foot-
ball tournament. The football players also had an opportunity to partici-
pate in a three-event contest, which included a hundred-meter sprint,
long-tossing a ball, and running with the ball followed by a shot on goal.
The decisive match of the tournament, which the Austrian select team
won against their German comrades, was watched by 65,000 spectators.
There were also cultural events alongside the athletic competitions at
the Vienna Workers Olympics. The high point was a massive pageant, in
which 3,000 female and male athletes participated, that told the story of
the development of the labor movement and collapse of capitalism. At
the end of the performance, the head of a capitalist, which had been set
up in the middle of the stadium, was cracked in half. The closing ceremo-
nies were marked by a festival of lights in which the opera, parliament,
and the city hall on the Ringstrasse were lighted with thousands of in-
candescent bulbs. The parade, which had no fewer than 100,000 torch-
carrying participants, lasted a full five hours, and was conducted under
the slogan For World Disarmament and Universal Peace.
In the following years, the political horizon grew more hazy. In 1933
the Nazis destroyed the workers sport movement in Germany. Just one
year later, the Austrian fascists did the same in their country. Thus, the
two most important workers sports associations no longer existed. The
64. Reinhard, Der ASK und die Wiener Arbeiter-Olympiade 1931, 20721; and Matthias
Marschik, ... im Stadion dieses Jahrhunderts: Die 2. Arbeiterolympiade in Wien 1931, in Sport
als stdtisches Ereignis, 189210.
Football and Class Struggle
65. Lothar Skornig, Vor 50 Jahren: Die Moskauer Spartakiade 1928, Theorie und Praxis der
Krperkultur 27 (1978): 67078.
Football and Class Struggle
66. Die Rote Fahne, June 20, 1931; June 21, 1931; June 23, 1931; June 25, 1931; June 26, 1931;
June 27, 1931; June 28, 1931; July 1, 1931; July 2, 1931; July 3, 1931; July 4, 1931; July 5, 1931; July 7,
1931; and July 22, 1931.
67. W. S. Baker, Muscular Marxism and the Chicago Counter-Olympics of 1932, Interna-
tional Journal of the History of Sport 9 (1992): 397410.
68. Andr Gounot, Sport und Inszenierung des sozialistischen Aufbaus: Das Projekt der
Weltspartakiade in Moskau (19311934), in Sport zwischen Ost und West, 7591.
69. Horst Wetzel, Paris 1934Internationaler Sportleraufmarsch gegen imperialistischen
Krieg und Faschismus, Theorie und Praxis der Krperkultur 18 (1969): 96165; Andr Gounot, Le
rassemblement international des sportifs contre le fascisme et la guerre, in Sports et relations
internationales, 25772.
70. Krasnyj sport, August 12, 1934.
71. See, for example, Richard Mandell, Hitlers Olympiade: Berlin 1936 (Munich: Heyne, 1980);
Friedrich Bohlen, Die XI. Olympischen Spiele: Berlin 1936: Instrument der innen- und aussenpolitischen
Football and Class Struggle
ever, neither of the two organizations was responsible for the organi-
zation of the Peoples Olympics in Barcelona that was directed against
Berlin.72 The organizers came from the circles of the Catalonian left, who
traditionally were drawn to left liberalism or anarcho-syndicalism rather
194 | than to Marxism. These games, which were organized in the course of
just three months and had an expected participation of 6,000 athletes
from 23 states and colonies, were supposed to include 17 sports, among
which were football and rugby. In some states, such as France, athletes
from bourgeois clubs and associations registered to participate. The
French Popular Front government, a coalition of socialists and left-wing
bourgeois radicals, which also was supported by the Communist Party,
provided a government subsidy of 500,000 francs for the event.73 How-
ever, two days before the planned opening of the games, General Franco
began his coup with army units stationed in Spanish Morocco against
the Popular Front government in Madrid and set off the Spanish civil
war. The starting shot, which was supposed to begin a peaceful testing
of strength in the stadium, was taken away by the fascists and trans-
formed into the rattle of machine guns, thunder of cannons, and the ex-
plosion of fighter bombers.74 On the anticipated opening day, Barcelona
was the scene of bloody street battles between rebellious army units and
civilian security forces as well as quickly mobilized workers militias. The
Peoples Olympics, which were planned as a festival of peace and broth-
erhood, could not be held.
Propaganda und Systemsicherung des faschistischen Regimes (Cologne: Pahl-Rugenstein, 1979); Arndt
Krger, Die Olympischen Spiele 1936 und die Weltmeinung: Ihre aussenpolitische Bedeutung unter be-
sonderer Bercksichtigung der USA (Berlin: Bartels & Wernitz, 1972); Krger with William J. Murray,
The Nazi Olympics: Sport, Politics and Appeasement in the 1930s (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
2003); S. D. Bachrach, The Nazi Olympics: Berlin 1936 (Boston: Little, Brown, 2000); Reinhard Rrup
(ed.), 1936: Die Olympischen Spiele und der Nationalsozialismus: Eine Dokumentation (Berlin: Argon-
Verlag, 1996); and Guy Walters, Berlin Games: How Hitler Stole the Olympic Dream (London: Hodder
& Stoughton, 2006).
72. Xavier Pujadas and Carles Santacana, Laltra Olimpiada 36, Barcelona 1990; Le
mythe des jeux populaires de Barcelone, in Arnaud, Les origines du sport ouvrier en Europe,
26777; The Peoples Olympiad, Barcelona 1936, International Review for the Sociology of Sport 27
(1992): 13949; Andr Gounot, Barcelona gegen Berlin: Das Projekt der Volksolympiade 1936, in
Der deutsche Sport auf dem Weg in die Moderne, ed. Michael Krger (Mnster: Lit, 2009), 11930.
73. Volksolympiade gegen Hitlerolympiade: Die Volksolympiade von Barcelona, Rund-
schau 5 (1936): 1176.
74. Arbeitersportler aus 20 Lndern marschieren in Antwerpen auf!, Rundschau 6 (1937):
1128.
Football and Class Struggle
The Soviet athletes had excellent results in most of the sports. They set
three world records and one European record, and also convincingly
won the football tournament. Indeed, there were some among the So-
cial Democratic workers athletes who were skeptical whether the Soviet
athletes could be considered amateurs, and thought it strange that two
new additional Soviet players were flown in for the final football match
against Norway. However, following the destruction of workers sports
in Germany and Austria, the Antwerp Workers Olympics was just a
shadow of the competitions from 1925 and 1931.77
The Antwerp Workers Olympics was the last event of its kind. The
Red Sport International was secretly dissolved in the run-up to the games.
The Socialist Workers Sport International collapsed following the begin-
ning of the Second World War. Its successor, which was founded in 1946,
the International Labour Sport Federation (CSIT), remained relatively
unimportant. Nevertheless, international workers football games contin-
ued to take place under its umbrella until the 1970s. Following the Sec-
ond World War, there were no noteworthy efforts to reestablish workers
75. Ibid.
76. Die Ankunft der spanischen Olympiade-Delegation in Antwerpen, Rundschau 6
(1937): 1170.
77. Jan Tolleneer et al., Antwerpen 1937: Die dritte Arbeiter-Olympiade, in Illustrierte Ge-
schichte des Arbeitersports, 22325.
Football and Class Struggle
Conclusion
A comparative examination of the workers sport movement in general
and of workers football in particular does not provide a uniform pic-
ture. In both Germany and Austria, the introduction of workers sport-
ing clubs before the First World War was the result of a demand from
below and particularly a desire to be differentiated from the nationalist
gymnastics movement. The workers sport clubs were less a site of politi-
cization than they were a means of stabilizing their own social milieu,
particularly in light of the experience of being excluded from organiza-
tions devoted to bourgeois social relations.78 Political parties and unions
played no role in this foundational stage. Rather, at first, the leading so-
cialist politicians had no understanding of workers sports, and some-
times were even opposed to them. This only changed during the inter-
war period. In particular, pressure from the right as well as from the left
led the Social Democratic parties increasingly to think of the workers
sport clubs as party organizations that could be put to political use. This
was even more true of the communist sport clubs that frequently were
founded for this very purpose.
79. Following M. Rainer Lepsius, Parteiensystem und Sozialstruktur: Zum Problem der
Demokratisierung der deutschen Gesellschaft, in Die deutschen Parteien vor 1918, ed. Gerhard
Ritter (Cologne: Kiepenheuer und Witsch, 1973), 68. Also see Klaus Tenfelde, Historische Mili-
eusErblichkeit und Konkurrenz, in Nation und Gesellschaft in Deutschland: Historische Essays,
eds. Manfred Hettling and Paul Nolte (Munich: Beck, 1996), 24768.
80. Gehrmann, Fussball, 19597.
81. Detlev J. K. Peukert, Die Weimarer Republik: Krisenjahre der Klassischen Moderne (Frank-
furt: Suhrkamp, 1987), 149.
82. These factors are emphasized, for example, by Martin H. Geyer, Verkehrte Welt: Revo-
lution, Inflation und Moderne, Mnchen 19141924 (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1998).
Also see Gerald D. Feldman, Die Inflation und die politische Kultur der Weimarer Republik, in
Nation und Gesellschaft in Deutschland: Historische Essays, 26981.
83. On this point, see Maase, Vergngen, 79114.
84. For the relationship between social milieus and political culture, see Dietmar Schirmer,
Football and Class Struggle
Politisch-kulturelle Deutungsmuster: Vorstellungen von der Welt der Politik in der Weimarer
Republik, in Politische Identitt und nationale Gedenktage: Zur politischen Kultur in der Weimarer
Republik, eds. Detlev Lehnert and Klaus Megerle (Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1989), 3160.
85. Maase, Vergngen, 7989.
86. Fundamental regarding Austrian workers culture is Dieter Langewiesche, Arbeiterkul-
tur in sterreich: Aspekte, Tendenzen und Thesen, in Arbeiterkultur, 4057.
Football and Class Struggle
deeply ingrained societal segmentation. Thus, Austria was the only state
in which the workers football players did not form a counter organiza-
tion to the official association. Rather the reverse was the case as the
bourgeois clubs left the association, which had become socialist, and
had to found their own football union. The Viennese cultural scientist |199
Matthias Marschik correctly stressed that even in Red Vienna it is pos-
sible to see two other lines of development alongside social democratic
football. The first of these was the mass culture of professional sports,
which was established with elements from among the bohemians, and
led by bourgeois forces, but that also attracted the working classes. The
second line of development existed below and athwart the dominant
working-class culture and was marked by categories such as loyalty to
ones club and ties to ones district in which workers did not shy away
from contact with bourgeois football.87
The headline of the American magazine Foreign Affairs in July 1936 was
The Dictators Discover Sports. The focus was on the use of the Olympic
summer games in Berlin by the Nazis for propaganda purposes.1 In fact,
throughout the twentieth century, dictators of all stripes attempted to
make sports in general and football in particular useful for their own pur-
poses. However, football has always proved to be somewhat problematic
in this regard. The relative transparency of the game did not always lead
to the results for which one might hope from a propaganda perspective.
Its appeal drew masses to the stadiums, but they could not be controlled
easily, and games were, in a sense, in competition with the mass political
events that were organized from above. The autonomous character of the
game also threatened dictatorships, which sought organizationally and
ideologically to monopolize the leisure time of the people as the game
served to counteract the permanent mobilization of the masses.
This chapter will explore the relationship of the mass cultural phe-
nomenon of football to various types of systems characterized as totali-
tarian or authoritarian with a focus on communist (Soviet Union and
GDR), fascist (Italy, Germany, and Spain), and military (Brazil and Argen-
tina) dictatorships. Thus, the discussion will turn on the nature of the
game in the context of the three poles of modern mass culture, namely
culture, politics, and economy, in conditions that are in stark contrast
to the ideal type of the liberal-capitalist west. In sum, did dictators see
king football as a competitor for the favor of the (physically assembled)
masses, or as an aid in a strategy of providing bread and circuses?2
1. J. R. Tunis, The Dictators Discover Sport, Foreign Affairs 14, no. 4 (1936): 60617.
2. Also see Christian Koller, Ein Knig und drei Diktatoren: Profifussball und Totalita-
200
Football and Dictatorship
rismus in der Zwischenkriegszeit, Stadion 37 (2011): 25983; and James Riordan, Sport under
Communism and Fascism: Reflections on Similarities and Differences, Stadion 28 (2002): 26774.
3. See, for example, James Riordan, Sport in Soviet Society: Development of Sport and Physi-
cal Education in Russia and the USSR (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977), 68123; Her-
mann Gross, Krpererziehung und Sport in der Sowjetunion: Entscheidende Faktoren ihrer raschen
Entwicklung (Graz: Institut und Wissenschaftlicher Kreis fr Leibeserziehung der Universitt
Graz, 1965), 2537; Peter Sedlak, Leibesbungen und Sport in der Sowjetunion, in Geschichte
der Leibesbungen, ed. Horst Ueberhorst (Berlin: Bartels & Wernitz, 1972), 4:9299; and Stefan
Plaggenborg, Revolutionskultur: Menschenbilder und kulturelle Praxis in Sowjetrussland zwischen
Oktoberrevolution und Stalinismus (Cologne: Bhlau, 1996), 6295.
4. Robert Edelman, Spartak Moscow: A History of the Peoples Team in the Workers State
(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2009).
Football and Dictatorship
5. With regard to Soviet football under Stalin, see Robert Edelman, Sowjetischer Fuball,
19171941, in Fuball zwischen den Kriegen: Europa 19181939, 299326; The Professionalization
of Soviet Sport. The Case of the Soccer Union, Journal of Sport History 17 (1990): 4454; Spar-
tak Moscow, 61194; Serious Fun, 4572 and 81110; A Small Way of Saying No. Moscow Work-
ing Men, Spartak Soccer, and the Communist Party, 19001945, American Historical Review 107
(2002): 144174; Thomas Heidbrink, Das Lieblingsspiel der Massen: Fuball in der Sowjetunion
vom Ende der 1920er Jahre bis zum Gewinn des Europacups der Nationen 1960, in berall ist der
Ball rund: Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart des Fuballs in Ost- und Sdosteuropa, 4450; and Barbara
Keys, Soviet Sport and Transnational Mass Culture in the 1930s, Journal of Contemporary His-
tory 38 (2003): 41334.
6. Richard Stites, Russian Popular Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992),
3752; Anne Gorsuch, Youth in Revolutionary Russia: Enthusiasts, Bohemians, Delinquents (Bloom-
ington: Indiana University Press 2000), 116; Frederick Starr, Red and Hot: The Fate of Jazz in the
Soviet Union (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984), 5860; Alan Ball, Russias Last Capitalists:
The Nepmen, 19211929 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997).
7. Edelman, Spartak Moscow, 5261, and Sowjetischer Fuball, 303.
8. Edelman, Serious Fun, 52; Spartak Moscow, 66; Sowjetischer Fuball, 303 and 307.
9. Edelman, Spartak Moscow, 67.
Football and Dictatorship
by the strong professional team Racing Paris on New Years Day 1936.15
After their return, Nikolaj Starostin, an official in the top team Spartak
Moscow, and his sports colleagues successfully used this partial success
to agitate for a reorganization of Soviet football along the lines of the
204 | professionalism practiced in France. They were able to secure the sup-
port of Aleksandr Kosarev, the head of the communist youth association
Komsomol.
The interplay of the various interest groups in the institutionaliza-
tion of the national league was made clear in the debates regarding its
composition. At first, the league was a small competition concentrated
largely in Moscow and Leningrad. In 1937, however, a number of lead-
ing politicians demanded a massive expansion of the league for the pur-
poses of nation building in which all of the Soviet republics would be
represented. Football officials countered that the best teams should be
selected on the basis of their performance. The end result was an expan-
sion of the league in a manner that did not satisfy the demands of either
those advocating for nation building or those emphasizing sportive per-
formance. Instead, the number of Moscow clubs from politically influen-
tial institutions was massively increased.16
Stalin himself was not particularly interested in football. However,
in the first year of the national league, the Komsomol chief Kosarev sug-
gested that a football demonstration match should be held in the con-
text of the annual sports parade in Red Square.17 Stalin watched the
45minute match, which was held on a rolled carpet of sod, from Lenins
mausoleum. Kosarev stood behind him so that he could immediately
give the signal to end the game in case the highest comrade grew bored
despite the seven goals that, as agreed beforehand, were scored. The
game was a success, and was repeated in subsequent years.18
15. Edelman, Spartak Moscow, 7984; Serious Fun, 51; Victor Peppard and James Riordan,
Playing Politics: Soviet Sport Diplomacy to 1992. Greenwich-London: JAI Press, 1992, 41; Heidbrink,
Das Lieblingsspiel der Massen, 48; Christian Koller, Fussball und internationale Beziehungen
1918 bis 1950Grossbritannien, Deutschland und die Sowjetunion im Vergleich, in Sport zwi-
schen Ost und West: Beitrge zur Sportgeschichte Osteuropas im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, 70.
16. Edelman, Sowjetischer Fuball, 321.
17. On this point, see Malte Rolf, Die schnen Krper des Kommunismus: Sportparaden
in der Sowjetunion der dreiiger Jahre, in Sport zwischen Ost und West: Beitrge zur Sportge-
schichte Osteuropas im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, 31025.
18. Edelman, Spartak Moscow, 101.
Football and Dictatorship
22. See Heinz Machatscheck, Sportgeboren im Feuer der Revolution: Krperkultur und Sport
in der UdSSR (East Berlin, 1966), 2023; A.[leksej] O.[sipovi] Romanov, Medunarodnoe sporti-
vnoe dvienie (Moscow, 1973), 192; Lothar Skornig, Chronik der deutsch-sowjetischen Sport-
beziehungen bis 1937, Theorie und Praxis der Krperkultur 16 (1967): 88890; Riordan, Politique
trangre, 138; Sport in Soviet Society, 352; Peppard and Riordan, Playing Politics, 2941; Beck, Scor-
ing for Britain, 140; Ghanbarian-Baleva, Ein englischer Sport, 168; Heidbrink, Lieblingsspiel,
47; Edelman, Serious Fun, 49; Christian Koller, Proletarische Verbrderung auf exterritorialem
Gebiet: SchweizSowjetunion 2:5 (22.8.1934), Sternstunden des Schweizer Fussballs, ed. Chris-
tian Koller (Mnster-Vienna: Lit, 2008), 5161.
Football and Dictatorship
teams from Baku and Tehran.27 In fact, an eastern Spartacus Games was
planned for the summer of 1926 in Baku, with participation expected
from Turkey, Afghanistan, Persia, Palestine, Morocco, and China. Howev-
er, the project failed for financial reasons.28 By contrast, despite the trea-
208 | ty of Rapallo (1922), there were no games against bourgeois teams from
Germany during the entire 1920s and 1930s since this conflicted with
the efforts of the communists to take control over the German workers
sport movement.
Following the seizure of power by the National Socialists in Ger-
many, the Soviet Union engaged in a policy of forging closer relations
with the western democracies up through 1939. The declared goal was
a system of collective security. The Soviet Union had already signed a
nonaggression and neutrality treaty with France on November 29, 1932.
Renewed diplomatic relations with the United States followed in No-
vember 1933, along with entry into the League of Nations in 1934. Trea-
ties of mutual assistance were signed with Czechoslovakia and France in
May 1935. In early 1934, the Comintern revised the social-fascism theory
that designated Social Democrats as the main enemy of communism. In
the summer of 1935, the sixth congress of the Comintern decided on a
transition to the popular front strategy.29
Soviet international sports policies changed correspondingly, which
was made manifest by the Soviet participation in the Parisian athletes
demonstration in 1934 and Workers Olympics of 1937, noted above. At
the same time there were increased efforts to work together with bour-
geois sport. By 1934 Soviet teams had played against high-ranking
bourgeois teams in France, Norway, and Sweden. These contacts were
intensified in 1935.30 The highpoint was the game, noted above, between
the top French team Racing Paris and a Moscow select team in front
of 60,000 spectators on New Years Day 1936 in Paris.31 In May 1934
Czechoslovakia gave diplomatic recognition to the Soviet Union. Shortly
thereafter, a Soviet team visited Czechoslovakia at the initiative of the
27. Riordan, Politique trangre, 140; Peppard and Riordan, Playing Politics, 101.
28. Gounot, Exigences, 253.
29. Pierre Brou, Histoire de lInternationale Communiste 19191943 (Paris: Fayard, 1997),
64973.
30. Gounot, Exigences, 270; Peppard and Riordan, Playing Politics, 41.
31. Edelman, Serious Fun, 51.
Football and Dictatorship
Czech Communist Party and played against both Red Sport teams and
teams that were members of the national association, which was itself a
member of FIFA. Following the negotiation of the Soviet-Czech mutual
aid pact in May 1935, a select team from Prague traveled to the Soviet
Union.32 |209
In 1935 the Soviet Union also established contacts with various in-
ternational sports associations, including FIFA. However, the Soviet
Union did not enter the world football association because, as an inter-
nal document stated, FIFA was led by anti-Soviet fascists. The only ob-
jective was to gain permission to play matches against teams from the
leading football nations.33 When FIFAs hopes of finally bringing the So-
viet Union into its ranks failed, the organization began to tighten the
screws. In the context of the FIFA congress in Berlin in 1936, Turkey was
informed that no further exceptions would be granted in the future for
games against Soviet teams.34 The world football association also took
this action in other similar cases.
The conclusion of the German-Soviet nonaggression pact on August
21, 1939, which was given further precision on September 28 with a fron-
tier and friendship agreement that would provide a secure foundation
for the continued development of friendly relations, brought Soviet for-
eign policy into a new phase.35 This also had consequences for athletic
matters. Parallel with the adjustment of propaganda in an antiwestern
direction, with the elimination of anti-fascist tendencies and the valo-
rization of Germany in Soviet cultural life, there was also a sudden dis-
continuation of contacts with western workers sport organizations and
with bourgeois sport in the western democracies.36
The German attack on the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941
32. Eisenberg, FIFA, 275; Riordan, Politique trangre, 134 and 140; Peppard and Riordan,
Playing Politics, 43; and Heidbrink, Lieblingsspiel, 48.
33. Gounot, Exigences, 272; Keys, Soviet Sport, 42427.
34. Beck, Scoring for Britain, 231.
35. Akten zur Deutschen Auswrtigen Politik 19181945, Serie D, vol. 8.1 (Frankfurt: Keppler-
Verlag, 1961), 128.
36. Wolfgang Leonhard, Der Schock des Hitler-Stalin-Paktes: Erinnerungen aus der Sowjet-
union, Westeuropa und USA (Freiburg: Herder, 1986), 6974; Gustav Hilger, Wir und der Kreml.
Deutsch-sowjetische Beziehungen 19181941. Erinnerungen eines deutschen Diplomaten (Bonn:
Athenum, 1964), 292; Bianka Pietrow, Stalinismus-Sicherheit-Offensive: Das Dritte Reich in der
Konzeption der sowjetischen Aussenpolitik 19331941 (Melsungen: Schwartz, 1983), 16268.
Football and Dictatorship
37. See Jrg Ganzenmller, Das belagerte Leningrad 1941 bis 1944: Die Stadt in den Strategien
von Angreifern und Verteidigern (Paderborn: Schningh, 2007).
38. Alexander Chertov, Fussball whrend der Blockade: Leningrad 19411944, in ber-
all ist der Ball rund: Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart des Fussballs in Ost- und SdosteuropaisDie
Zweite Halbzeit, 4564.
39. Peppard and Riordan, Playing Politics, 51; and Edelman, Serious Fun, 82.
40. Riordan, Strange Story, 682.
41. Downing, Passovotchka; P. Sobolev, Sport in der UdSSR (Moscow: Foreign Languages Pub-
lishing House, 1958), 63; Riordan, Sowjetischer Fussball, 247; Sport in Soviet Society, 366; with
Peppard, Playing Politics, 5358; Edelman, Serious Fun, 8791; Heidbrink, Lieblingsspiel, 50.
42. Edelman, Serious Fun, 51.
43. Concerning the political character of these games, see Nicholas C. Niggli, Diplomatie
Football and Dictatorship
sportive et relations internationales: Helsinki 1952, les Jeux Olympiques de la Guerre froide?,
Relations Internationales 112 (2002): 46785.
44. Heidbrink, Lieblingsspiel, 5254.
45. Times (London), November 23, 1954.
46. Times, November 4, 1954, and November 19, 1954; Manchester Guardian, November 12,
1954; as well as Edelman, Spartak Moscow, 217.
47. The National Archives FO 371/111792, Exchanges between the Soviet Union and the UK
in the field of sport: Visit to Moscow by Arsenal Football Club; as well as Observer, May 23, 1954,
and October 10, 1954; Times, June 13, 1955; and Manchester Guardian, August 2, 1955; August 8,
1955; and February 15, 1956.
48. Guardian, August 24, 1968; August 27, 1968; September 5, 1968; September 17, 1968; and
Times, September 17, 1968.
Football and Dictatorship
49. Bernhard Hachleitner, Das Stadion als Gefangnis, in Das Stadion: Geschichte, Architek-
tur, Politik, konomie, eds. Matthias Marschik et al. (Vienna: Turia & Kant, 2005), 26770.
50. L. H. Derick, The Political Olympics: Moscow, Afghanistan, and the 1980 U.S. Boycott (New
York: Praeger Frederick, 1990); Thomas Renkl, Der Boykott der Olympischen Spiele 1980 und
die ffentliche Meinung, PhD diss., FU Berlin, 1983.
Football and Dictatorship
fan culture in the Soviet Union as it did in the West. When the Ukrai-
nian club Dynamo Kiev broke through the traditional phalanx of Moscow
clubs in the 1960s and went on to win numerous Soviet championships
and even twice won the European Cup Winners Cup in 1975 and 1986,
there was great joy in Ukraine. However, thanks to television broadcasts, |213
the club developed fans throughout the entire union, and particularly in
the non-Russian periphery.51 The development of identities in which the
autonomous world of football mixed with political, social, and cultural
factors were just as complex in the fan culture that existed under the con-
straints of Soviet real socialism as they were in the west.
Beginning in the late 1940s, the states of the developing Eastern Bloc
adopted many elements of the Soviet sport system. Just as had been true
in the Soviet Union of the 1920s, bourgeois sport clubs were dissolved
or had their names Sovietized, with the clubs subsequently placed un-
der the authority of production centers or administrative units. Central
sports organizations also developed, such as the army (CSKA, Vorwrts),
and the internal security agencies (Dynamo). A distinctive element in the
institutional development of the sport systems in the Eastern Bloc states
was the development of both sports schools and mass participation in
sports with a large number of corresponding competitions, and the sys-
tematic cultivation of talented players from the youngest possible age.
The German Democratic Republic, which struggled for international
recognition, undertook the most intensive efforts of any of the Eastern
Bloc states to promote sports. It soon became known as a sport won-
derland, taking third place in the Olympic medal count behind the two
superpowers. The rigidity and totality of the sporting system in the GDR
was exceptional.52 The Soviet occupation authorities dissolved all sports
clubs in their zone by 1945. The following years saw the reestablish-
ment of athletic institutions under communist direction. In 1948, the
Deutsche Sportausschuss (German Sports Committee, DS) was founded
51. Manfred Zeller, Our Own Internationale, 1966: Dynamo Kiev Fans between Local
Identity and Transnational Imagination, KritikaExplorations in Russian and Eurasian History
12 (2011): 5382.
52. On the GDR sports system see, for example, Grit Hartmann, Goldkinder: Die DDR im
Spiegel ihres Spitzensports. Leipzig: Forum-Verlag, 1998; Andreas Ritter, Wandlungen in der Steue-
rung des DDR-Hochleistungssports in den 1960er und 1970er Jahren (Potsdam: Universitts-Verlag,
2003); and Schlsseldokumente zum DDR-Sport, ed. Giselher Spitzer et al. (Aachen: Meyer & Mey-
er Sport, 1998).
Football and Dictatorship
quent. In 1953, the players for ASK Vorwrts Leipzig, a team of the bar-
racked Peoples Police, received the order to move to Berlin. Just like the
men in uniform, the players also had to follow orders without a murmur.
For example, in 1954, the top Saxon sport club Empor Lauter was forcibly
removed to Rostock. As was true in the Soviet Union, the de facto profes- |215
sional top league was far removed from socialist ideals. At the same time,
it was subject to supervision and manipulation by the Stasi (secret po-
lice), which sought to benefit its own team BFC Dynamo Berlin. In fact,
Dynamo won ten GDR championships in a row from 1979 to 1988.53
Although football was exceptionally popular in the GDR, the sport
did not produce international success according to plan in the same
manner as other sports did. This was particularly painful for sport of-
ficials, given the strength of the German Federal Republic. According to
an article that appeared in 1983 in the paper of the Leipzig branch of the
Socialist Unity Party (SED), as the most popular mass sport football
should play an appropriate role in cementing the position of the GDR
among the leading nations of the earth and its superiority, along with
the USSR, over the important imperialistic countries.54
However, the increasing demands placed on the youth beginning
in the late 1960s led to some success in the following decades. In 1973
Dynamo Dresden reached the semifinal of the European Cup Winners
Cup. In the following year, 1. FC Magdeburg won the UEFA Cup Win-
ners Cup. In 1972 the GDR team won the bronze medal at the Olympic
games, and the gold medal four years later. In 1974 the GDR qualified for
a World Cup final round for the first time.
The World Cup in the Federal Republic led to the only inter-German
match in football history and to the greatest triumph of GDR football,
which took place on June 22, 1974.55 Just a few weeks after West German
53. Dittmar Dahlmann, Fuball als beschlossene Sache: Sport und Herrschaft in der
DDR, in berall ist der Ball rund. Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart des Fuballs in Ost- und Sdosteu-
ropaNachspielzeit, 1754.
54. Citation following Ingolf Pleil, Mielke: Macht und Meisterschaft: Die Bearbeitung der
Sportgemeinschaft Dynamo Dresden 19781989 (Berlin: Links, 2001), 217. Also see Sparwasser und
Mauerblmchen: Die Geschichte des Fussballs in der DDR 19491991, ed. Horst Friedemann (Essen:
Klartext, 1996).
55. Thomas Blees, 90 Minuten Klassenkampf: Das Lnderspiel BRD-DDR 1974 (Frankfurt:
Fischer, 1999).
Football and Dictatorship
Chancellor Willy Brandt, a great hope of the reformist left, had been
forced to resign because of the scandal surrounding the East German
spy Guillaume, two teams, which embodied two political and economic
systems, met in the Hamburg Peoples Park stadium. Even as late as 1971,
216 | when East German fans traveled to see the team of the Federal Republic
play an international match in Poland, they were not there to support
their own side. No fewer than 204 citizens of the GDR, according to
the Ministry for State Security, offered their loud support to the Federal
Republic. Many of them even dared to wait for the team with banners
stating Chemnitz greets the German team and the Kaiser. Thus offi-
cials were very careful in handing out the 10,000 tickets that the GDR
had ordered for the World Cup. Only principled citizens were permitted
to travel to the games, people who have earned particular distinction
and recognition for their development and defense of the German Dem-
ocratic Republic,56 as it stated in a directive issued by the secretariat of
the central committee of the SED.
The Federal Republic was the odds-on favorite, which led the GDR
to adopt a careful official tone before the game. What good would it do
to present the game as a battle between systems if, as was expected, the
East German team lost? Rudolf Hellmann, a member of the central com-
mittee of the SED, recalled twenty-five years later that for us at that
time it was actually a question of class.57 There was no desire to put
great weight on the match. Instead, the more aggressive tone came from
certain players from the German Federal Republic. Captain and sweep-
er Franz Beckenbauer said that he would see to it that the communists
would not get anywhere. Beckenbauers club-mate Uli Hoeness stated
that many people were infected by the system in the GDR, that is, they
were sick.58
The complicated problem of using the terms Germany and Ger-
man, which was brought about by the Bonn governments Hallstein doc-
trine of stubborn diplomatic nonrecognition of the GDR, was discussed
in detail by the reporter Werner Schneider, who provided commentary
for the Second German Television Network (ZDF):59
Now, before we turn to the game, please allow me to say a few words about a par-
ticular matter. We all understand that we cannot please everyone in our choice of
names for the two German teams in this game. Alfred Tetzlaff, the creep on tele-
vision, you know his family history, would certainly only accept the word zone.
Others still write GDR inside quotation marks,60 or would prefer to hear East |217
Germany against West Germany. Well, we have made inquiries of renowned
scholars from German universities, including political scientists, Germanists,
and so on, and they are almost unanimous in their view that one should abide by
the official FIFA rules in this situation. That means plainly and simply, the GDR
is playing against the Federal Republic of Germany this evening, just as it states
on the stadium scoreboard.
For Heinz-Florian Oertel, a reporter from the GDR, the matter was much
simpler. Officialdom in the GDR was pleased by being named on the sta-
dium scoreboard, which was in itself a diplomatic success. Oertel prag-
matically distinguished between the team of the FRG and the GDR
national eleven.
The game itself was evenly matched. The prolific scorer Gerd Mller
for once struck only the posts. On the other side, Reinhard Lauck missed
a great chance. The team from the GDR seemed to have better condition-
ing and eked out a slight advantage when, in the famous seventy-eighth
minute, the substitute Erich Hamann from Vorwrts Frankfurt an der
Oder took a throw from the goalie Croy, drove the ball to the right side
of the penalty area, and passed it sharply to Jrgen Sparwasser, who
dribbled around Horst-Dieter Httges, from Bremen, and the central de-
fender Berti Vogts before he fooled the goalie Sepp Maier and shot the
ball halfway up into the right corner from six meters out.
The game was over, and the GDR tourists, who were traveling
home by train, mockingly held up copies of the tabloid Bild, with the
headline: Why we will win today.61 The dining car of the Mitropa later
sent a bill to the tour guide Helga Heinecke for just over 84,000 East Ger-
man marks, which corresponds to 56 beers per fan. If this number seems
to be too high, we can nevertheless conclude that the party officials had
a rousing celebration. In total, the officials had to report five fugitives
from the republic, and three deserving old cadres died of heart attacks.
60. This is a reference to media outlets belonging to the Springer company, including the
tabloid Bild.
61. Ibid., 111.
Football and Dictatorship
The leadership of the party, which had fearfully awaited the outcome of
the game, was gleeful in its aftermath. Neues Deutschland mentioned the
victory several times on its front page. The GDR then lost two games
against the Netherlands and Brazil, and tied Argentina, which knocked
218 | the team out of the tournament.
The defeat against the GDR was beneficial to us, recalled the cap-
tain Franz Beckbauer a quarter century later. Today, we must thank our
friends in Dresden and Leipzig that they gave us this shot across our bow
in time.62 As second in their group, the Federal Republic then moved
on to what seemed to be an easier group. In the decisive water fight in
Frankfurt the hard-running and powerful Polish team was defeated with
a great deal of luck. In the final, the FRG again won with a great deal of
luck against the strongest team in the tournament, namely the Nether-
lands. Their playmaker was the celebrated football player Johan Cruyff,
whose fast style of play was carried on by the Van de Kerkhof twins from
Eindhoven, Ren and Willy, as well as two other artists, the circumspect
Johan Neeskens and the elegant defender Ruud Krool.
While the West German football players were properly compensat-
ed as world champions and were also successful in their later careers,
things became calmer for the winners of the inter-German meeting fol-
lowing the end of the GDR. A West German mineral spring attempted to
make money with the name of the goal scorer Jrgen Sparwasser, who
said that overall the goal had been bad for him. The victory had been a
poke in the eye of the opponents of the regime, and it was whispered
behind closed doors that Sparwasser had been rewarded with a luxury
car, a villa, and money for the deciding goal. In fact, it was money that
encouraged some players to flee the republic. In an interview with the
journalist Thomas Blees in 1999, Sparwasser, a former member of the
SED, explained that we received, I believe, 2000 marks from the DTSB
for the victory in the European Cup Winners Cup with 1. FC Magdeburg
in 1974, and a mark of appreciation from the city in the form of a cutlery
holder made in 1956. During the celebration outside afterwards, we used
them as targets for throwing knives.
The basic pay for players in the top league was 1,500 to 2,000 GDR
marks. One player, who like many others acted as an informal agent for
the Stasi, reported that after the members of the national team played a
match in Iceland, they received $20 in pocket money and soda after din-
ner and complained about their low rate of pay. They had learned long
before from television how much more their West German colleagues
earned, and what kinds of goods they could purchase with their money. |219
Beckenbauer, as the highest paid player, earned about 600,000 German
marks a year, while some like Netzer earned only half this much with
Borussia Mnchengladbach and promptly moved to Spain.63
Despite the intensive oversight and repression of team members,
many GDR players managed to escape during foreign matches, including
Norbert Nachtweih, Jrg Berger, the goalie Jrgen Pahl, Falko Gtz, Di-
eter Schlegel, Frank Lippmann, and Lutz Eigendorf, whose death in a car
accident in March 1983 gave rise to rumors. Heribert Schwan said that
the Stasi had murdered Eigendorf, although he lacked proof for this.
Nevertheless, Schwan was able to show just how thick the net of inform-
ers around Eigendorf was before his accidental death.64
In 1988, Sparwasser also defected, taking advantage of participat-
ing in a veterans tournament. In his farewell letter to his comrades, the
goal scorer wrote the following: We beg your pardon, that is Christa
[his wife] and I, Christa is also here in the FRG. We have decided not
to return to the GDR. We realize that you will not understand.... It is
difficult and it is painful to separate from you, but there was no other
choice for us.... Again, please forgive us. Jrgen.65 A year before the
iron curtain was raised, the player whose goal remains the best memory
of many East Germans fled to the FRG. Sparwasser, who had made the
triumph in Hamburg possible, fled and for a short time became an non-
person. He was subjected to a damnatio memoriae, expunged from official
memory.
Shortly thereafter came the collapse of communism in eastern Eu-
rope, as well as the fall of the Soviet sport system along with the integra-
tion of the former East Bloc states into the top tier of commercialized
football. As early as the 198889 season, the Ukrainian Sergij Baltaa
became the first Soviet football player to join the English professional
league. During the early 1990s, the top clubs in the successor states of
the Soviet Union and the former Eastern Bloc had to rapidly reorient
themselves toward the practices of capitalist sports business.
220 |
66. Marco Impiglia, Fuball in Italien in der Zwischenkriegszeit, in Fuball zwischen den
Kriegen: Europa 19181939, 16872.
67. The basic work on the sports policies of Fascist Italy is Felice Fabrizio, Sport e fascismo:
La politica sportiva del regime 19241936 (Rimini: Guaraldi, 1976). For a particular focus on football,
see Simon Martin, Football and Fascism: The National Game Under Mussolini (Oxford: Berg, 2004).
68. Impiglia, Fuball, 151; and Martin, Football and Fascism, 5178.
Football and Dictatorship
making decisions and a league organization that at least served the idea
of nation buildingwas a pressing concern of the regime because of its
ideological desire to eliminate an undesired move toward having profes-
sional players. In the beginning, however, the use of appointments was
not universal and only affected the officials in the associations, while the |221
leadership of the individual clubs continued to be chosen through secret
ballots up until 1937.69
Subsequently, the stance of Mussolinis regime toward football re-
mained diffuse. The sport policies of the fascists were marked by an am-
bivalence between the goal of developing top flight sports that were able
to compete at the international level, which required at least a disguised
professionalism, and the activation of the masses through the promo-
tion of public health and particularly the capacity for military service,
which suggested an official stress on the principle of amateurism.70 Dif-
ferent leading officials, therefore, held divergent views. In the late 1920s,
Augusto Turati, secretary of the Fascist Party from 1926 to 1930 and
president of the Italian Olympic committee from 1928 to 1930, as well
as other leading fascists frequently demanded efforts to moralize foot-
ball, which was perceived as far too commercialized.71 Turati even in-
vented his own game called volata, which was supposed to be have been
based on the old Roman ball game harpastum, and which was supposed
to replace British football. However, this game could not even make
headway in the fascist leisure-time organizations and disappeared after
Turatis political fall in 1933.72 On the other side was Leandro Arpinati, a
personal friend of Mussolini from before the war and an original fascist,
who, during his time as head of the Italian football association (192633)
and of the Italian Olympic committee (193133), pushed for his vision
of a sport system that was largely autonomous from the state as well as
for an improvement in the financial position of the top clubs. He also
carried through a reorganization of the national league that tended to
promote its professionalization.73
82. See, for example, Lorenz Peiffer, Sport im Nationalsozialismus: Zum aktuellen Stand der
sporthistorischen Forschung: Eine kommentierte Bibliografie (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2009).
83. Havemann, Fuball unterm Hakenkreuz, 15872; Werner Skrentny, Die Bltezeit des j-
dischen Sports in Deutschland: Makkabi und Sportbund Schild, 1933 bis 1938, in Davidstern und
Lederball. Die Geschichte der Juden im deutschen und internationalen Fuball, 170201; and Fischer
and Lindner, Strmer fr Hitler, 19294.
84. Ian Kershaw, Working towards the Fhrer: Reflections on the Nature of the Hitler Dic-
tatorship, in The Third Reich, ed. Christian Leitz (London: Wiley-Blackwell, 1999), 23152.
85. Markwart Herzog, Blitzkrieg im Fuballstadion: Der Spielsystemstreit zwischen dem NS-
Sportfunktionr Karl Oberhuber und Reichstrainer Sepp Herberger (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2012).
86. Hardy Grne, 1933 bis 1945: Siege fr den Fhrer, in Die Geschichte der Fuball-
Nationalmannschaft, ed. Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2004), 99106.
Football and Dictatorship
87. See Fischer and Lindner, Strmer fr Hitler, 119; Hans-Joachim Teichler, Internationale
Sportpolitik im Dritten Reich (Schorndorf: Hofmann, 1991), 366; Grne, 1933 bis 1945, 114 and 116.
88. See Peter Httenberger, Nationalsozialistische Polykratie, Geschichte und Gesellschaft
2 (1976): 41742; Klaus Hildebrand, Monokratie oder Polykratie? Hitlers Herrschaft und das
Dritte Reich, in Der Fhrerstaat: Mythos und Realitt: Studien zu Struktur und Politik des Dritten
Reiches, eds. Gerhard Hirschfeld et al. (Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1981), 7397; Hans-Ulrich Thamer,
MonokratiePolykratie: Historiographischer berblick ber eine kontroverse Debatte, in
Das organisierte Chaos: mterdarwinismus und Gesinnungsethik: Determinanten nationalso-
zialistischer Besatzungsherrschaft, eds. Gerhard Otto and Johannes Houwink ten Cate (Berlin:
Metropol, 1999), 2154.
89. Havemann, Fuball unterm Hakenkreuz, 226.
90. Grne, 1933 bis 1945, 10912.
Football and Dictatorship
94. Eisenberg, FIFA, 276; Riordan, Politique trangre, 134; Peppard and Riordan, Playing
Politics, 43; and Edelman, Serious Fun, 63.
Football and Dictatorship
101. Tony Mason, Passion of the People? Football in South America (London: Verso, 1995), 64.
Football and Dictatorship
ed democratically. The team also put demands for free elections on their
jerseys and became a model for social movements, which now began to
express themselves.
Football had played an important role in the creation of a national
234 | identity in the immigrant society of Argentina since the early twentieth
century. It was supported by the state and used for political purposes.
At the same time, however, football clubs also were places for civic open-
ness and democratic agreement. Although Argentinians in the interwar
period thought of their creole playing style as particularly dominant,
as their team came in second place behind Uruguay in the Olympic foot-
ball tournament in 1928 and in the first World Cup in 1930, the following
decades brought disillusionment in the form of long-lasting failure. On
the political level, this period saw multiple transitions between demo-
cratic government, military regimes (with nine coups in the period be-
tween 1930 and 1970), and two presidencies of the charismatic national-
ist Juan Pern (194655 and 197374).
In 1976, as the country suffered through a deep economic crisis and
terrorist attacks from both left and right escalated, the Argentinian
military staged yet another coup and established Jorge Rafael Videla as
the head of a military junta. The following years were marked by politi-
cal internment, torture, and the murder of between 15,000 and 30,000
members of the opposition. The economically liberal recovery plan did
not have the hoped-for success, as Argentinian industrial production
shrank about 20 percent between 1976 and 1983, and foreign debt ex-
ploded to $50 billion. The occupation of the British Falkland Islands and
the subsequent military defeat led in 1983 to the collapse of the military
dictatorship.
When it took power, the military junta was concerned with crush-
ing the left-wing underground and stabilizing the economic situation
but also with ending the phase of football failure. This was particularly
important since the junta had inherited the hosting of the 1978 World
Cup from the previous government.102 The irreproachable organization
of the games was supposed to make the outside world forget reports of
torture and the murder of political opponents and give the impression
102. For the following, also see Ackermann, Fussball und nationale Identitt, 280332.
Football and Dictatorship
103. See Beat Jung, Csar Luis Menotti: Der Mythos vom linken Fussball, in Strategen
des Spiels: Die legendren Fussballtrainer, ed. Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling (Gttingen: Werkstatt,
2005), 20313.
Football and Dictatorship
was necessary for them to intervene in order to secure the world title for
the hosts. In the final game of the intermediate stage, the Argentinians
needed a victory of at least four goals over the already knocked out Peru-
vian team in order to move past the Brazilian team, which had the same
236 | number of points as the Argentinians, and thus make it into the final
game. The 60 victory by the hosts as well as several irregularities led to
speculation afterwards that the game had been fixed.104 Apparently, the
Argentinian junta had used middlemen and the large transfer of grain
supplies to Lima to influence individual players and the Peruvian coach.
General Videla also visited the Peruvian team in their dressing room be-
fore the game, and appealed for Peruvian solidarity with Argentina. In
addition, the Peruvian coach placed several players on the reserve bench
who had played well in earlier games.
While, after the final game, the coach Menotti as well as the Dutch
players refused to shake hands with generals of the junta, the leaders
of FIFA celebrated with the dictators what was, in their eyes, the High
Mass of world football. The military regime thoroughly savored the tri-
umph, which seemed to make plausible the rhetoric of Argentina as a
great nation and its rebirth under the rule of the generals. However,
the continuing economic collapse and the misguided Falklands adven-
ture quickly eroded the foundation for these claims.
Conclusion
If we consider the diverse findings treated here, it is clear that king foot-
ball was a chameleon that was able to take on a range of mass cultural
forms in the most variable types of systems, whether in liberal capitalist
democracies, communist one-party states, or right-wing dictatorships.
Within the context of these differences, each dictatorship was confronted
by the ambivalent situation that mass spectator football was exception-
ally popular and offered alternative foci for identification (stars and
clubs), but because of the relative transparency of the outcome of games
offered only limited options for use in propaganda. The physical pres-
ence of the dictator in the stadium always brought with it the risk of a
fiasco. This is in contrast to the claims for power that come from the syn-
chronized movement of trained bodies performing in symbolic sporting
events, such as the German gymnastics festivals or the athletic parades
on the Soviet Day of Physical Culture. In addition, spectator football cre-
ated rare gatherings of unruly masses of people in public spaces in which |237
oppositional views sometimes could be articulated. These areas of am-
bivalence led to a situation in which the form taken by mass spectator
football was the result of an open-ended process of negotiation within
specific contexts among various interest groups, which included the lead-
ership of individual clubs and association officials as well as circles from
the ruling powers that were interested in sport. These latter included ide-
ological, economic, and propaganda interests, as well as the interests of
well-connected individuals.
9|Football and
War
Inter armes silent musaethe muses are silent in times of war. This idea,
which was widespread in antiquity, was no longer completely valid in the
twentieth century, a mass age and an age of total war. The masses
continued to demand entertainment particularly in times of war, wish-
ing a diversion from the experience of war while behind the lines. Thus,
the arts could no longer remain silent, but they had to be subordinated
to the needs of war and to proclaim what was desired by the leadership,
and thus were instrumentalized for propagandistic purposes.
There is no doubt that football belonged to those arts that had a close
affinity to war. Indeed, George Orwells dictum that sport is war minus
the shooting fits football particularly well.1 Football jargon is filled with
expressions that are borrowed from military language, such as a match
that is fought, a ball that is shot, the other side that is defeated or capitu-
lated, as well as strategy, battle, and loss. These analogies go back to the
pioneers of football. For example, a treatise from 1882, which promot-
ed the introduction of the English sport in Germany, had the following
description:
Two teams, usually composed of eleven combatants, stand on the field of battle.
The goal is to bring a large leather ball into enemy territory using the feet and,
if possible, to bring it into the enemys sanctuary, which is a stand marked out
by two poles. If this happens in a proper manner, then the team wins a stand.
The number of stands that are won or lost determine victory and defeat. In
order to understand the following rules we note that each team stands under
the leadership of a captain, who distributes his forces over the field. He will
put one or two skilled, tireless, and offensively capable players in the first rank
238
Football and War
near where the ball is expected. The remainder of his army remains behind. He
should keep himself in the rear-guard so that in case of emergency, he can meet
the threatening danger.2
The expression war in the stadium was used not only to denote events
on the field, but also frequently for the violent behavior of the specta- |239
tors.3
On the other side, Sebastian Haffner, who experienced the First
World War as a child, recalled it in 1939 as a kind of enormous football
game:
What counted was the spell of the military game, in which mysterious rules of
numbers of prisoners, the conquest of territory, captured defenses, and sunken
ships played the role of goals scored in football or points scored in boxing. I
never grew tired of compiling tables of points in my mind.... It was a dark, mys-
terious game, with a never-ending and immoral excitement that obliterated ev-
erything that made real life dull, bringing one into a narcotic state, like roulette
or smoking opium.4
2. F. W. Racquet, Moderne englische Spiele: Zum Zweck der Einfhrung in Deutschland (Gttin-
gen, 1882), 50, cited in Heinrich, Fussballbund, 35.
3. See, for example, Morris, Spiel, 262; Thomas Gehrmann, Fussballrandale: Hooligans in
Deutschland (Essen: Klartext, 1990), 200.
4. Haffner, Geschichte eines Deutschen, 20.
5. Goebbels-Reden, vol. 2: 19391945, ed. Helmut Heiber (Dsseldorf: Droste, 1972), 145.
Football and War
Indeed, a real military conflict has gone down in history as the Foot-
ball War. The meeting between El Salvador and Honduras in the context
of a qualification match for the 1970 World Cup catalyzed the release of
pent-up tensions between the two neighboring states in 1969. Immedi-
240 | ately following El Salvadors 30 victory, both states set troops in motion,
bombarded strategic locations in the neighboring country, and broke off
diplomatic relations.6 At the beginning of the 1930s, German football of-
ficials appear to have thought of the First World War as having been a
great experiment that proved running a great deal was not damaging
to the heart, a charge that always had been used to impugn football, but
rather served to strengthen the heart.7
Soldiers always played football on and behind the front during the
twentieth century. The examples from the First World War have become
famous. During the period of trench warfare on the western front, Brit-
ish units sometimes kicked footballs during the deadly rush through no
mans land to reach the enemy side.8 Football proved itself to be an effec-
tive alternative to a brandished pistol, which officers otherwise used to
drive their soldiers into the hail of enemy bullets. An anonymous patriot
wrote about such an event in the following verse:
On through the heat of slaughter
Where gallant comrades fall
Where blood is poured like water
They drive the trickling ball
The fear of death before them
Is but an empty name
True to the land that bore them
The Surreys play the game.9
6. See William H. Durham, Scarcity and Survival in Central America: Ecological Origins of the
Soccer War (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1979); Thomas P. Anderson, The War of
the Dispossessed: Honduras and El Salvador, 1969 (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1981);
Ryszard Kapucinski, Der Fussballkrieg: Berichte aus der Dritten Welt (Frankfurt: Fischer Taschen-
buch, 1990), 25188; as well as Fussball-Weltmeisterschaft 1970, eds. Ernst Huberty and Willy B.
Wange (Zurich: Lingen, 1970), 279.
7. Otto Nerz and Carl Koppehel, Der Kampf um den Ball: Das Buch vom Fussball (Berlin: Pris-
men Verlag, 1933), 172.
8. On this point, see J. G. Fuller, Troops Morale and Popular Culture in the British and Dominion
Armies 19141918 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990), 137; Veitch, Play Up, 363; Morris, Spiel, 160.
9. Cited in Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1975), 27.
Football and War
There are also always those rumors about the fraternization that suppos-
edly took place at various places on the front lines around the time of the
first war-time Christmas in 1914. Supposedly, it was not only cigarettes,
alcohol, and the bodies of fallen comrades that were exchanged, but also
that there were football games between German and allied soldiers in |241
no mans land.10 Soldiers also played football behind the front lines, and
this has been substantiated by firsthand accounts of participants in the
war. The British general Jack noted in his journal that no British Troops
ever travel without footballs or the energy to kick them.11 At first, Brit-
ish officers were skeptical of these athletic activities because they feared
that the soldiers would become unnecessarily exhausted.12 Soon, how-
ever, there were organized competitions both within and between army
units as, for example, in the corps tournament in Gallipoli.13 Important
games were watched by 1,500 to 3,000 spectators. While the British
brought the game from their homeland to the front, many French and
German soldiers played football for the first time in the years 191418,
and many of those who survived did not want to do without the sport
after the war was over. At the end of 1918, the German War Ministry
saw football as a proven means of keeping the German units, which no
longer were under arms, from becoming involved in political activities
during this period of revolutionary turmoil.14
In this chapter, we will focus largely on one aspect of the relation-
ship between war and football, namely the possibilities of using football
to strengthen morale. The economic historian Alan S. Milward used the
term strategic synthesis to denote the interplay of political, economic,
military, social, and psychological factors that were necessary for the
successful conduct of war.15 The economic sphere included issues such
10. See Michael Jrgs, Der kleine Frieden im Groen Krieg: Westfront 1914: Als Deutsche,
Franzosen und Briten gemeinsam Weihnachten feierten (Munich: Bertelsmann, 2003); and Niels
Van Echtelt, The Forgotten Front: The Multicultural War of 19141918 in Eyewitness Accounts
from Flanders, in World War I: Five Continents in Flanders, eds. Dominiek Dendooven and Piet
Chielens (Tielt: Lannoo publishers, 2008), 169.
11. General Jacks Diary, ed. J. Terraine (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1964), 227.
12. Ibid., 91.
13. R. R. Thompson, The Fifty-Second (Lowland) Division 19141918 (Glasgow: Maclehose,
Jackson & Co., 1923), 156.
14. Eggers, Fussball, 15961.
15. Alan S. Milward, Der Zweite Weltkrieg: Krieg, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft 19391945 (Lon-
don: Lane, 1977), 3878.
Football and War
26. See John Ross Schleppi, A History of Professional Association Football in England
during the Second World War, PhD diss., University of Ohio, 1972; Anton Rippon, Gas Masks
for Goal Posts: Football in Britain During the Second World War (Stroud: The History Press, 2007);
Tim Purcell and Mike Gething, Wartime Wanderers: A Football Team at War (London: Mainstream
Publishing, 2001); Simon Kuper, Ajax, the Dutch, the War: Football in Europe during the Second
World War (London: Orion, 2003); Derek Birley, Playing the Game: Sport and British Society,
19101945 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995), 31733; Pierre Lanfranchi and Mat-
thew Taylor, Professional Football in World War Two Britain, in War Culture: Social Change and
Changing Experiences in World War Two, eds. P. Kirkham and D. Thoms (London: Lawrence & Wis-
hart, 1995), 18797; and Norman Baker, A More Even Playing Field? Sport During and After the
War, in Millions Like Us? British Culture in the Second World War, eds. Nick Hayes and Jeff Hill
(Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1999), 12555.
27. Matthew Taylor, The Association Game: A History of British Football (Harlow: Pearson
Education, 2008), 186; and Rippon, Gas Masks, 2023.
Football and War
their military service. However, the fans were well informed about who
was stationed where and who was playing. Clubs that were located near
army camps often had the best teams, as was the case with Darlington,
which was able to draw on the reliable strength of the Wolverhampton
246 | Wanderers.
Wailing sirens often interrupted games, particularly in the south of
the country. As players and spectators had to seek out shelters, a match
could last three hours. This was naturally a great deal of time for some-
one to take in light of the complex organization of a difficult work day.28
Admittedly, air attacks were greatly reduced after the victory in the Bat-
tle of Britain. However, rocket attacks and general fear did spoil the fun
for fans.29 Many stadiums were destroyed by bombs, or at least damaged
to such an extent that they could not be reopened. The grass was also
frequently unplayable.30
Noteworthy games such as the War Cup Final in the Empire stadium
in London or the games between England, Scotland, Wales, and North-
ern Ireland were staged for propaganda purposes and were carried live
on the radio. These games were attended by members of the royal family,
high nobility, politicians, and members of the military, such as the popu-
lar marshal Montgomery.31 In October 1941, 70,000 spectators watched
a scoreless match between Scotland and England. Spitfires watched the
air over the stadium, whose occupants included the exiled kings George
of Greece and Haakon of Norway.32 The not insignificant sums taken in
admission for such games were given, partly for public relations pur-
poses, to the Red Cross.33 In 1944 and 1945 some British select teams
participated in benefit games on behalf of the Aid to Russia Fund, the
president of which was Winston Churchills wife, Clementine.34
A number of football players fought for Great Britain, including on
the very front lines, and gained distinction for their bravery. Many did
not return home, and others were badly wounded.35 However, numer-
ous football players also enjoyed privileges. Many volunteered to serve
in industries that were critical for the war effort, such as munitions
factories or mines. Many of the best players were promoted as physical
training instructors (PTIs) in the Royal Army or Royal Air Force. In 1940
no fewer than 154 football players served as PTIs far from the shooting.
Others, like Matt Busby, were staff officers with the task of supporting |247
the troops and improving their morale. He was responsible for the selec-
tion, the choice of tactics, and the training of the men whom he had re-
cruited.36 Tom Finney gave the following account to the historian Simon
Kuper:
When I was called up I thought, well, Im not going to see much football. I knew
we were going to a good climate but I didnt know where until we arrived. And of
course it was Suez, Egypt. I was stationed at a base depot there, and playing an
awful lot of football really. And athletics, and generally, you know, it was a real
surprise to me. Because they had a very good side there, called the Wanderers,
which was pretty well a semi-professional team really.37
Thus, even if the FA Cup was not played again until the 194546
season and the professional league did not start up play again until the
summer of 1946, the Second World War was far from a football-free pe-
riod in Great Britain. However, the extent to which wartime football ac-
tually served to strengthen morale and the will of the British population
to persevere remains a contested question.
had universal military conscription from the beginning of the war, and
so did not have to concern itself with recruitment in a manner similar to
Great Britain.
The position of the DFB with regard to war was clearly outlined in
248 | the German Football Yearbook for 1913:
The times march along with weapons clanging, crushing with a steel fist what
has become rotten and old, and fertilizing the land to overflowing with blood
and bone. Clarion calls greet the advance that forces the wheel of fate forward.
The struggle that takes place on the battlefield, and in the same manner in the
factory, and the mine, in the house and in the field, is a fact of life, that no one
will resolve if he simply wishes to bind up the wild spirits. Development, life
means struggle, mother nature shows this everywhere! History has seen peoples
rise and fall, and it was always victory that brought them forward, and always
cowardly fear before the match that brought the fall. Man can only improve his
character in regular conflict with others, who are better and stronger. But the
fools in our own land call out: war to the war! It would be dangerous if their
calls were to find success among the people. If we went back on our iron decision
for weapons, then we would certainly be destroyed. Or have recent events not
taught us what threats await emasculated peoples, that the law of jungle is in ef-
fect, and that this is eternal, because it brings life? We will be happy in Germany
if a strong desire for struggle returns, and we give our welcome to the greatest
prophet of this new age, namely sport.38
When war broke out in August 1914, General Field Marshal Freiherr
von der Goltz, the founder of the Young Germany Union to which the
DFB had belonged since its foundation in 1911, wrote to the German
youth: Young Germany has long been accustomed to the idea that it
would be summoned to the defense of the fatherland. Now it appears
that this is to be fulfilled sooner than we thought. Young Germany takes
pleasure in this, and employs all of its strength to show that it is worthy
of this task!39 The DFB itself did not refrain from this emotionalism:
Year in and year out we have struggled during the more than two de-
cades of German football history. Now comes the great, true struggle.
Now is the time to show courage and will to the utmost. It may be that
38. Alfred Rahn, Von vlkischer Arbeit des Sports im deutschen Land, Deutsches Fussball-
Jahrbuch 1913, cited in Heinrich, Fussballbund, 42.
39. Freiherr von der Goltz, An die deutsche Jugend, Der Jungdeutschland-Bund 3 (1914):
241, cited in Heinrich, Fussballbund, 42.
Football and War
altered.45 DFB officials were still convinced after the great war that the
military had profited from the athletic development of its members. At
the same time, during the war they had come a decisive step closer to
the most important goal that they had set, namely, the development of
250 | football as the most popular German sport.
Football achieved its breakthrough as a mass sport in Germany dur-
ing the interwar period. When war broke out in 1939, it was no longer the
case, as it had been in 1914, that football was the pastime of a relatively
small elite. Rather, it quite clearly had become the top spectator sport.
Correspondingly, it was a public matter whether the popular players, in
contrast to the population, enjoyed special privileges in wartime. The
Nazi regime was therefore concerned to avoid the development of any
rumors that top players received beneficial treatment. Consequently, in
193940 most of the national football players were conscripted into the
German army. The national sports official Christian Busch commented
on the situation as follows: Our men no longer step on the field for in-
ternational competitions, no longer do they participate in great festivals
... rather they go where the Fhrer and the high command of the army
summon them.46
The championship competition was stopped suddenly on Septem-
ber 1, 1939. Just a few weeks laterPoland had been conquered in the
meantimethe ban on competitions was loosened so that city cham-
pionships and regional cup matches could again be played. In Novem-
ber the national minister for sport, Hans von Tschammer und Osten,
ordered that national championship play be restarted.47 Following the
successful Blitzkrieg against the eastern neighbor, the regime was deter-
mined to give the population a sense that normalcy was returning.
Up through 1942 the German national team played numerous
friendly matches against neutral, allied, and defeated states. Just after
the beginning of the war, the Berlin 12 Uhr Blatt programmatically de-
clared: Certainly, in light of the current situation, many of the planned
international matches have to be cancelled. But in the future, athletic
meetings will still take place with those nations that have not been
45. Tauber, Vom Schtzengraben, 273. Also see Eisenberg, English Sports, 321.
46. Fischer, Strmer, 113.
47. Ibid., 215.
Football and War
this was a home match in Berlin, regarding which the state secretary Lu-
ther wrote from the Foreign Ministry: 100,000 people left the stadium
depressed. For these people, a win in the match was more important than
the capture of some city in the east. For the sake of the atmosphere in the
252 | country, it is necessary to prevent these kinds of events.54
The final wartime international match took place in November 1942
in Bratislava against Slovakia and ended in a 52 victory for Germany.
The Germans, who under the best of circumstances received a cool re-
ception in away matches, but rather more often were treated with hostil-
ity, faced undisguised hatred in the Slovakian metropolitan center, and
there were even riots, as was also earlier the case in Denmark.55 After
the defeat at Stalingrad on February 20, 1943, the Third Reich ended all
international matches.
By contrast, championship play in the country continued until 1944.
The final game of the championship in the 194142 season between
Schalke 04 and First Vienna FC was watched by 100,000 spectators in
Berlins Olympic stadium. The motives for continuing play in the middle
of a World War are obvious. In February 1942 the national sport leader
von Tschammer und Osten wrote regarding this issue: It is critical to the
war to incorporate sport events and competitions into the overall con-
duct of the war. Sport events and competitions of a local and neighborly
character up through the district level are to be continued for the mainte-
nance of the will to work and to carry on.56 But the number of available
players continued to decrease. In 1940 there were still 14,000 teams that
participated in competitions, which was down from 30,000 in 1937. How-
ever, beginning in 194243, the situation became increasingly precarious.
The teams had to continually change the composition of their rosters.57
The sixteen district leagues were discontinued in the 194445 sea-
son because of limited opportunities for travel. The remaining six hun-
dred clubs and wartime sport collectives were divided into a hundred
regional echelons. The playing strength of the clubs became increasingly
uneven and led to an exceptionally large number of double-digit differ-
entials in the final scores.58 The mobilization of the Volkssturm (home
guard), which comprised the entire male population between the ages
of 16 and 60, in September 1944 did not yet lead to the definitive end
of championship and cup play. However, because of air attacks and the
capture of German territory by allied forces, ever more games had to be
moved or simply cancelled.59 As late as the beginning of January 1945 |253
there were still representative games between select teams from the
north, south, east, and west.60 On March 31, 1945, the National Social-
ist Party organ, the Vlkischer Beobachter, placed sport in the service of
Goebbelss campaign for perseverance, claiming that the continued play-
ing of sports should be interpreted in the following manner: This is less
a demonstration of joy in track and field, or football games, or sport in
general, than it is a sign of the vitality of a fighting community. A peo-
ple, however, that continues to seek and find strength, excitement, and
impetus in sport, will and must stand its ground.61 In mid-April, TSV
Mnchen 1860 won the final game for the Munich Tschammer cup.62
The last known football game of the Third Reich took place on April 23,
1945, a week before Hitlers suicide in the Fhrer bunker in Berlin. FC
Bayern Mnchen defeated its city rival TSV 1860 in a friendly match,
32.63 On April 27, just two weeks before Germanys unconditional sur-
render, the Vlkischer Beobachter reported in its penultimate edition on
the beginning of the Bavarian spring championship, which was to com-
mence on April 29. This competition could no longer be held.64
59. See, for example, Vlkischer Beobachter (Munich edition), January 4, 1945; January 16,
1945; March 19, 1945; March 21, 1945; March 28, 1945; March 31, 1945; and April 27, 1945.
60. Vlkischer Beobachter (Berlin edition), January 6, 1945.
61. Vlkischer Beobachter (Munich edition), March 31, 1945.
62. Vlkischer Beobachter (Munich edition), April 14, 1945 and April 17, 1945.
63. See Vlkischer Beobachter (Munich edition), April 21, 1945; as well as Fischer, Strmer, 225.
64. Vlkischer Beobachter (Munich edition), April 27, 1945.
Football and War
the physical nurturing of our soldiers had a role in it.68 The question
of giving the players leave to participate in championship competitions
remained an issue, but it was normally not a major problem.69
A bigger issue was the problem of where to hold the matches. Of
the 923,500 square meters of land owned by the football clubs in 1914, |255
420,000 had to be used for agricultural purposes for the entire year, and
a further 430,000 had to be made available from early in the year until
autumn. More than half of the clubs in the Football Association thus had
no place to play.70 In the autumn of 1914, the stadium of FC Old Boys
Basel was even used as a makeshift transit point to help Italians, who
had fled from the warring states, to continue their journeys.71 The prob-
lems of space, and the mobilization of most active players for military
service led to an interruption in footballs successful trajectory. In the pe-
riod before the war the number of members in the Football Association
rose very rapidly. However their numbers decreased during the war, from
15,256 to 13,564.72
Within weeks of the outbreak of war, there were games between
military teams and between military teams and clubs.73 The Football As-
sociation, which included several officers in its leadership, actively sup-
ported the playing of football in the army by organizing benefit games to
support the distribution of footballs to active duty units.74 The associa-
tion also organized games where money was collected for needy and out-
of-work soldiers, for their families, for Swiss expatriates in emergency
situations, and for the Red Cross. These games further improved the im-
age of the sport with both the population and with the authorities.75
International matches also did not come to a complete end. There
68. Jrg Schmid, Schweizer Cup und Lnderspiele: Nationalismus im Schweizer Fussballsport
(MA thesis, University of Zurich, 1986), 42.
69. Gazette de Lausanne, November 12, 1915, and December 7, 1915.
70. Schmid, Schweizer-Cup, 45.
71. Die Schweizerische Grenzbesetzung 1914. Basel: Frobenius, 1916, 9.
72. Ruoff, Das goldene Buch des Schweizer Fussballs, 239; Baumeister, 50 Jahre Fussballclub
Zrich 18961946, 2123; Giuliani, Jugend, 120.
73. See, for example, Gazette de Lausanne, November 6, 1914; October 9, 1914; December
10, 1914; January 25, 1915; February 12, 1915; July 7, 1915; August 16, 1915; May 3, 1916; May 13,
1916; May 18, 1916; and August 3, 1917.
74. Gazette de Lausanne, June 30, 1915; September 4, 1916; and May 26, 1918.
75. See, for example, Gazette de Lausanne, June 26, 1915, and April 26, 1917; Journal de Gen-
ve, June 26, 1915; April 6, 1916; April 10, 1916; April 20, 1916; April 23, 1916; and July 24, 1916.
Football and War
76. Cited in Christian Koller, 1898 bis 1919: Uneben und oft zerfahren, in Die Nati:
Die Geschichte der Schweizer Fussball-Nationalmannschaft, ed. Beat Jung (Gttingen: Werkstatt,
2006), 34.
77. See, for example, Gazette de Lausanne, December 24, 1917 and December 28, 1917.
78. Koller, 1898 bis 1919, 3234.
79. Gazette de Lausanne, April 15, 1915; May 15, 1915; May 17, 1915; September 15, 1916; and
September 18, 1916.
80. Journal de Genve, May 28, 1915.
Football and War
81. Gazette de Lausanne, March 12, 1915; May 3, 1915; May 19, 1915; May 22, 1915; May 24, 1915;
and May 25, 1915; Journal de Genve, May 23, 1915; May 24, 1915; and May 25, 1915.
82. Gazette de Lausanne, May 6, 1916.
83. Journal de Genve, May 8, 1916.
84. Gazette de Lausanne, December 19, 1914.
85. Gazette de Lausanne, October 9, 1916; January 5, 1917; and April 9, 1918.
86. See Koller, Schweizer Fussball.
87. See, for example, Sport, June 17, 1938; as well as Koller and Brndle, Eidgenossen.
88. Gazette de Lausanne, September 8, 1939; September 15, 1939; October 2, 1939; October 11,
1939; and January 15, 1940; Journal de Genve, September 14, 1939; October 22, 1939; and July 24,
1940; as well as Fritz Pieth, Sport in der Schweiz: Sein Weg in die Gegenwart. Olten: Walter, 1979, 140;
Andreas Schoch, Die Schweizer Fussball-Nationalmannschaft 19041945: Fussball-Spitzensport
und dessen politische Instrumentalisierung, MA thesis, University of Zurich, 2004, 79.
Football and War
tion that the opponents began to change. In April 1945 there was a game
against the now-free France with the French ambassador in attendance.
This was the only game played by the A-national team against an allied
power.99
260 | All of these games were organized by the Football Association, but
under the indirect oversight of the federal authorities. The Swiss federal
government expressly endorsed sport contacts with the Third Reich in a
circular letter sent to athletic associations in March 1941, also in light
of the prospective shaping of international relations, and lamented that
these contacts had come to almost a complete halt since the outbreak of
the war.100 However, this position was revised in October 1942 as the
government now urged restraint in regard to athletic contacts with
Germany and claimed a right of veto. The authorities also granted the
Football Association a free hand in choosing the players for the national
team, including some rather controversial decisions. On the one hand,
the German Jew Hans-Peter Friedlnder had become a Swiss citizen in
1940 after living there for fifteen years and thus could make his debut
on the national team in 1942. On the other hand, the Austrian Karl Rap-
pan was reappointed to his position as national coach in 1942, although
the federal prosecutors office was aware of his membership in the Nazi
Party.101
The home games of the national team were played in the presence
of prominent politicians and military officers, and the players, most of
whom traveled in uniform, were greeted personally at several games
by General Guisan.102 The high point from an athletic perspective, but
also in the context of ongoing diplomatic affairs, was the game against
Germany on April 20, 1941. The Swiss won a surprising 21 victory in
the Bern Wankdorf stadium. Thirteen chartered trains brought about
99. Tages-Anzeiger, April 7, 1945; Sport, April 9, 1945; Gazette de Lausanne, April 9, 1945, and
April 10, 1945; Journal de Genve, January 20, 1945, and April 9, 1945.
100. Swiss Federal Archives E27: 8559 circular letter from member of federal councillor
K. Kobelt to the SLL, to the Swiss shooting federation, to the federal wrestling association and
the committee for multisport race in the army, March 5, 1941.
101. Beat Jung, Karl Rappanein Nazi fr die Nati, in Die Nati: Die Geschichte der Schwei-
zer Fussball-Nationalmannschaft, 119.
102. Gazette de Lausanne, November 3, 1939; Severino Minelli, Meine 14 Jahre bei der
Schweizer Fussball-Nationalelf 19301943, Ksnachter Jahresbltter (1968): 60; Jacques Ducret,
Das Goldene Buch des Schweizer Fussballs (Lausanne: LAge dhomme, 1994), 109.
Football and War
15,000 people to Bern, so that in the end 38,000 spectators watched the
game. Officially, the friendly character of the game was stressed. In addi-
tion to the general, a member of the federal government, two members
of the Bernese cantonal government, the mayor of Bern, and numerous
high-ranking staff officers also attended the match. The representatives |261
on the German side included a member of the embassy staff, a military
attach, and the mayor of Stuttgart.103 The Swiss victory on the Fhrers
birthday not only sent the German propaganda minister Goebbels into
a rage, it also led to delirious joy throughout Switzerland, which recalled
the scene following the victory against the same opponent in the 1938
World Cup. In the lead-up to the match, media outlets were forbidden by
the Federal Commission for Radio and Press to make any political com-
ments. Because of violations of these conditions, the social democratic
Berner Tagwacht and the west Swiss specialized journal Le Sport Suisse
were temporarily banned.104
The games against Germany and Italy served as demonstrations
of the friendly relations with the two states, with which extensive eco-
nomic contacts were maintained during the war but which also posed a
threat to Swiss independence and whose political systems were reject-
ed by broad sections of the Swiss population. By contrast, the matches
against neutral Sweden in November 1942 in Zurich and in June 1943
in Stockholm were actually friendly games against a country with which
Switzerland felt strong political ties. Thus the Neue Zrcher Zeitung not-
ed the friendly demonstration of a neutral point of view, and the Sport
mentioned alleged age-old Germanic bonds of blood that ostensibly
persisted between the Swiss and the Swedes.105 At the banquet after
the game in Zurich, the Swedish representative Westrup stressed the
agreement between views that prevailed in Sweden and in Switzerland
regarding war and peace and said that current events, which have been
103. Sport, April 18, 1941; April 21, 1941; April 23, 1941; and April 25, 1941; Berner Tagwacht,
April 21, 1941; Neue Zrcher Zeitung, April 21, 1941; as well as Christian Koller, Fussballerische
Landesverteidigung an Fhrers Geburtstag: SchweizDeutschland 2:1 (20.4.1941), Sternstun-
den des Schweizer Fussballs, ed. Christian Koller (Mnster: Lit, 2008), 6375.
104. Berner Tagwacht, April 23, 1941; Sport, April 21, 1941; Emile Birbaum, Rencontres spor-
tives et voyages, 19041954 (Lugano: Tipografia, 1954), 12325; and Georg Kreis, Zensur und Selbst-
zensur: Die schweizerische Pressepolitik im Zweiten Weltkrieg (Stuttgart: Huber, 1973), 453.
105. Neue Zrcher Zeitung, November 16, 1942; Sport, November 13, 1942.
Football and War
Conclusion
A comparison of the British, German, and Swiss experiences during the
World Wars clearly shows that athletes were understood as role mod-
els in both official and popular perception, and that it was consequently |263
expected that football would put its men into military service dur-
ing times of war. In contrast to members of the political elite, athletes
were not seen as indispensable. In all three of the cases considered here,
because the population was opposed to special treatment for athletes,
the authorities could take a hard line, knowing that a hoped-for propa-
ganda effect from the ostentatious granting of special privileges for ath-
letes would immediately fail. Thus they only organized special sporting
events that could be accommodated, at least to some degree, within the
normal demands of military service. However, the propaganda value
of these sport events also was quite well known. Strikingly, these events
could be organized somewhat better in states with universal military
conscription than they could in Great Britain, where there was a fear
that they would have a negative impact on recruitment efforts. In all
three states considered here, the conflict in goals ultimately resulted in
a compromise that tended more to one side or the other, depending on
the actual military situation.
dAllemagne: Les Jeux Olympiques de 1952 et la Coupe du Monde de Football de 1954, in Sports
et relations internationales, 23143.
10|Football and
Gender
For a long time, football was seen as the epitome of masculinity. In con-
trast to highly paid male stars, womens football, insofar as it existed,
had a puny presence, and was mocked and belittled with sexist com-
ments by experts sitting around local pubs, if they took any notice of
it at all. Football-playing women only really came to the notice of these
circles when the Matildas, the players on the Australian national wom-
ens team, put a naked calendar on the market in 2000.
Even the terminology points to an asymmetry with regard to the
sexes. Football played by women is generally denoted as womens foot-
ball, while football played by men is simply football. As a rule, boys are
supported in their passion for football from childhood, while girls with
the same interests frequently are encouraged to pursue other, more
feminine, less hard sports. But it is not only on the green turf that
men dominate. Female faces long have been an infrequent occurrence
among the ranks of spectators as well. Apparently, the prospect of being
able to observe thoroughly trained male bodies in shorts for ninety min-
utes did not attract many women to the stadium, while numerous other
men did not, under any circumstances, wish to miss this opportunity.
This image of an overwhelmingly male-dominated sport is almost
completely reversed when one considers the situation in the United
States. Here, soccer has long been a sport for elementary and high
schools, played predominantly by girls and women, while a real man
focused on the harder sports such as American football or baseball.
Men who played soccer were long considered to be weaklings, and only
recently have not had to justify themselves to their athletic comrades
in the other sports. In addition, the masculine socialization of the true
American did not take place, as for example in England or Scotland, at
264
Football and Gender
the fathers side in the football stadium, but rather at a baseball game, as
can be seen in the novels of Philip Roth or Don DeLillo.1 The Super Bowl,
which is the final game of the National Football League, is comparable
in terms of masculine heroization and myth creation with the European
Football Cup finals, while soccer does not have a similar fixed point in |265
the annual calendar.
These observations indicate that the question of whether a particu-
lar sport is masculine, feminine, or gender neutral is not dependent in
the first instance on its structure, rules, or conduct. The decisive factors
are rather societal conventions. Girls are not supposed to play football
because this does not belong to girls, because it is clear that girls do not
play football, and so on. Certain sports, and here football has an excep-
tionally important place, are to a high degree gendered, to use a favorite
expression of scholarship in the cultural sciences. The term gender, in
contrast to the biologically determined sex, concerns the nature and
roles of the sexes as these are determined by societally dominant and
historically determined conceptions, relational categories regarding the
interplay between men and women. It has become the dominant view in
social and cultural history over the past few decades that descriptions
of human societies in the past are only adequate if they include an in-
vestigation of the relationships between men and women alongside the
categories of rich and poor, powerful and weak, as well as native and
foreign.2
The social and cultural history of football is highly suitable for an
investigation of the questions of gender history. First, it can be asked
why football in Europe and Latin America is commonly accepted as typi-
cally masculine, which quickly leads to general observations regarding
the gendered structure of the relevant societies.3 One can also turn this
question around and investigate the consequences that the conception
1. Philip Roth, The Great American Novel (New York: Holt Rinehart and Winston, 1973); and
Don DeLillo, Underworld (New York: Scribner, 1997).
2. See, for example, the programmatic essays by Joan W. Scott, Gender: A Useful Category
of Historical Analysis, American Historical Review 91 (1986): 105375; and Gisela Bock, Geschich-
te, Frauengeschichte, Geschlechtergeschichte, Geschichte und Gesellschaft 14 (1988): 36491.
3. In the early days of Argentinian football, however, the players typified the youth rather
than adult men. See, for example, Edoardo P. Archetti, Playing Styles and Masculine Virtues
in Argentine Football, in Machos, Mistresses, Madonnas: Contesting the Power of Latin American
Gender Imagery, eds. Marit Melhuus and Anne Stlen (London: Verso, 1996), 3455.
Football and Gender
of football as typically masculine has for football itself and also for so-
ciety as a whole. In this chapter we will analyze the masculinity of the
male sport of football. We will make use of a concept that has proven
itself useful in research regarding gender, the idea of Maennerbund, that
266 | is, male societies characterized by specific rules, rituals, symbols, and in-
ternal hierarchies.4 We will also investigate the difficulties that women
who played football confronted in the past and still face, to a certain ex-
tent, today. It will be shown that these difficulties are closely connected
with the character of football as a Maennerbund.
4. With regard to the concept of the Maennerbund see, for example, Thomas Schweizer,
Mnnerbnde und ihr kultureller Kontext im weltweiten interkulturellen Vergleich, in Mnner-
bandeMnnerbnde: Zur Rolle des Mannes im Kulturvergleich, eds. Gisela Vlger and Karin von
Welck (Cologne: Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum fr Vlkerkunde, 1990), 1:2330; Helmut Blazek,
Mnnerbnde: Eine Geschichte von Faszination und Macht (Berlin: Aufbau Taschenbuch Verlag,
2001); Jrgen Reulecke, Ich mchte einer werden, so wie die ...: Mnnerbnde im 20. Jahrhundert
(Frankfurt: Campus, 2001; and Ulrik Brunotte, Zwischen Eros und Krieg: Mnnerbund und Ritual
in der Moderne (Berlin: Wagenbach, 2004). Regarding the genesis of this concept, see Claudia
Bruns, Politik des Eros: Der Mnnerbund in Wissenschaft, Politik und Jugendkultur (18801934) (Co-
logne: Bhlau, 2008).
Football and Gender
altered the nature of his affairs. What had the potential to threaten the
Maennerbund when one individual had to answer for the intrusion of the
other sex into the male preserve, became instead a means of strengthen-
ing the Maennerbund and at the same time a reinforcement of the collec-
tive experience of the internal hierarchy, that is, a demonstration of male |269
potency and superiority as well as the degradation of the woman into a
mere object of lust.
The widespread homophobia that is to be found even today among
not only the fans but also among players and coaches is also closely con-
nected with Maennerbund character of the football team. Occasional
comments by prominent football players and coaches such as, for ex-
ample, the idea that gay football players are not real men or that they
cannot really play, are not infrequent even today. Most homosexual top
players, therefore, recoil from coming out.9 The up-and-coming Ger-
man talent Marcus Urban decided against a professional career in the
early 1990s in order to avoid the pressure to hide the fact that he was
homosexual.10 The Englishman Justin Fashanu outed himself in 1990,
the first professional player to do so. Eight years later, he committed
suicide because of a never-proven charge of rape. The American profes-
sional Robbi Rogers in 2013 came out and announced his retirement
from professional sports at the same time. A short time later, however,
he announced his comeback and thereafter played as the first professed
homosexual in Major League Soccer.
Fan groups represent yet another form of male society. As Peter
Becker demonstrated in a stimulating essay, the activities of youth fan
groups are oriented towards a masculine grammar.11 In large part,
their conduct turns on the demand for and defense of power and mascu-
line honor, which is mirrored in the forms of their physical presentation,
in the text of their songs and conversations, in their behavior toward
women, in their drinking behavior, and in the content of magazines and
9. See, for example, Andreas Erb and Dirk Leibfried, Das Schweigen der Mnner: Homosexu-
alitt im deutschen Fussball (Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2011).
10. Ronnie Blaschke, Versteckspieler: Die Geschichte des schwulen Fussballers Marcus Urban
(Gttingen: Werkstatt, 2008).
11. Peter Becker, Fussballfans: Vormoderne Reservate zum Erwerb und zur Verteidigung
mnnlicher Macht und Ehre, in MnnerbandeMnnerbnde: Zur Rolle des Mannes im Kultur-
vergleich, 14956.
Football and Gender
12. Basic for the role of honor in modern society is Ludgera Vogt, Zur Logik der Ehre in der
Gegenwartsgesellschaft: Differenzierung, Macht, Integration (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1997).
13. Morris, Spiel, 312.
14. Fundamental for the relationship between individual and collective honor is Georg
Simmel, Soziologie: Untersuchungen ber die Formen der Vergesellschaftung (Munich: Duncker &
Humblot, 1923), 326.
15. Crucial on this point are Ute Frevert, Ehrenmnner: Das Duell in der brgerlichen Gesell-
schaft (Munich: Beck, 1991); and Kevin McAleer, Duelling: The Cult of Honor in Fin-de-Sicle Ger-
many (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1994).
Football and Gender
27. Ibid., 17781. Also see Dunning et al., Hooligans Abroad: The Behaviour and Control of
English Fans in Continental Europe (London: Routledge, 1984).
28. For an overview of the scholarly and political discussions of the phenomenon of hoo-
liganism from the 1960s until the 1990s, see Richard Giulianotti, Social Identity and Public
Order: Political and Academic Discourses on Football Violence, in Football, Violence and Social
Identity, ed. Richard Giulianotti (London: Routledge, 1994), 936.
29. Dunning, Roots, 16973. With regard to skinheads, also see Burkhard Schrder, Rechte
Kerle: Skinheads, Faschos, Hooligans (Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1992).
30. See, for example, Christiane Eisenberg, Rival Interpretations of Football Hooliganism:
Figurational Sociology, Social History and Anthropology, in Representations of Emotional Excess,
ed. Jrgen Schlaeger (Tbingen: Narr, 2000), 297306; Jean Nicolai and Madjid Allali, Violence
et football: Leurohooliganisme (Marseille: Editions Autres Temps, 1998); Robert Braun and Rens
Vliegenthart, The Contentious Fans: The Impact of Repression, Media Coverage, Grievances and
Aggressive Play on Supporters Violence, International Sociology 23 (2008): 796818.
31. Ian Taylor, Football Mad: A Speculative Sociology of Football Hooliganism, in The Soci-
ology of Sport: A Selection of Readings, ed. Eric Dunning (London: Cass, 1976), 35277; Soccer Con-
sciousness and Soccer Hooliganism, in Images of Deviance, ed. Stanley Cohen (Harmondsworth:
Penguin Books, 1971), 13464; John Clarke, Football and the Working Class Fans: Tradition and
Football and Gender
Change, in Football Hooliganism: The Wider Context, ed. Roger Ingham (London: Inter-Action Im-
print, 1978), 3760.
32. Dunning, Roots, 2831.
33. See, for example, Sabine Vogel, Sozialdisziplinierung als Forschungsbegriff?, Frh-
neuzeit-Info 8, no. 2 (1997): 19094; and Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the
Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: Vintage Books, 1975).
34. Norbert Elias, ber den Prozess der Zivilisation: Sozio- und psychogenetische Untersuchun-
gen (2 vols.) (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1976).
Football and Gender
38. Basic for the critiques of the grand narratives is Jean-Franois Lyotard, Randbemer-
kungen zu den Erzhlungen [1984], in Postmoderne und Dekonstruktion: Texte franzsischer Philo-
sophen der Gegenwart, ed. Peter Engelmann (Stuttgart: Reclam, 1990), 4953.
39. For a comparative analysis of the composition of the audience for football matches, see
Ivan Waddington et al., The Social Composition of Football Crowds in Western Europe, Interna-
tional Journal for the Sociology of Sport 33 (1998): 99113.
Football and Gender
male football fans was a long time in coming, and remains something
of an open question even today. In the following section, we will exam-
ine the mechanisms for exclusion in Great Britain and Germany and the
arguments that were used to sustain them. We will also examine the so-
cietal contexts that led to the general recognition of womens football. |277
Finally, we will consider the special case of the United States with its
relatively gender neutral view of soccer.
Even before the regulation of modern football in the second half
of the nineteenth century, there were women in Great Britain who en-
countered air-filled animal bladders. It was supposedly the custom in
Inverness and Midlothian in Scotland in the eighteenth century that
every year married women played a popular football game against the
unmarried women in front of an audience of men who were interest-
ed in being married and used this game as a bride show.40 During the
second half of the nineteenth century, football was also played in some
girls secondary schools. In 1894 the London resident Nettie Honeywell
founded the first womens football team, the British Ladies. When the
first important womens football match took place on March 23, 1895,
between northern and southern England, the newspaper commentators
stressed the decorum and grace of the football-playing ladies.41 As was
true in other sports, such as cycling, the discussion turned to the ques-
tion of what clothing was appropriate for women participating in athlet-
ics. Should they wear long but unpractical clothing, or more comfortable
blouses and masculine short pants for their athletic activities? The
so-called rational dress movement finally freed women from restric-
tive clothing regulations. As early as 1896, an English womens national
eleven wished to make their debut. The planned game against a womens
side from Sparta Rotterdam was blocked by the Royal Dutch Football
Union.42 In Scotland, the author, inventor, and activist for womens
rights Lady Florence Dixey played a leading role in organizing benefit
games between womens teams.43 However, the Football Association was
40. David J. Williamson, The Belles of the Ball: The Early History of Womens Football (Devon:
R&D Associates, 1991), 1.
41. Ibid., 5; and Philipp Heinecken, Das Fussballspiel: Association und Rugby (Hannover,
1898, reprinted Hannover: Schfer, 1993), 12.
42. Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 99.
43. Ibid., 95.
Football and Gender
44. See, for example, Gail Braybon, Women Workers in the First World War (London: Rout-
ledge, 1989); Arthur Marwick, Women at War, 19141918 (Glasgow: Croom Helm, 1977); Laura Lee
Downs, Manufacturing Inequality: Gender Division in the French and British Metalworking Indus-
tries 19141939 (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1995); Deborah Thom, Nice Girls and Rude
Girls: Women Workers in World War I (London: I. B. Taurus, 1998); Angela Woollacott, On Her
Their Lives Depend: Munition Workers in the Great War (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1994); John Williams, The Home Fronts in Britain, France and Germany, 19141918 (London: Con-
stable, 1972); Gerard J. Degroot, Blighty: British Society in the Era of the Great War (London: Long-
man, 1996), 12639.
45. Williamsson, Belles, 810; and Marwick, Women, 134.
46. Gail J. Newsham, In a League of their Own! The Dick Kerr Ladies 19171965 (London:
Paragon Publishing, 1997).
Football and Gender
drew the masses to the stadium. However, the game could not escape
its image as offering a spectacle. In some cases womens teams played
against men, mixed teams played against each other, and there was even
theater football with women in costumes.47
After the war, this boom continued at first. The first international |279
meeting between two womens football teams took place in March 1920,
as Dick Kerrs Ladies played four matches against Femina Paris, in front
of a total audience of 61,000 paying spectators.48 In October of the same
year, the series was replayed, this time in France. A number of womens
football teams also were established in Paris during the war, and they even
held a championship in the 191819 season.49 On Boxing Day 1920, 53,000
spectators attended a game between Dick Kerrs Ladies and St. Helens
Ladies. A further 10,000 hopefuls had to be turned away at the gates of
Evertons Goodison Park.50 It is thought that there were about 150 wom-
ens football clubs in England in 1921, most of them in the north and in
the Midlands.
Despite the great popularity of womens football, there were also
critics. There were discussions in both the press and public events about
whether women really should play football. In addition to public rejec-
tion, there were also voices that sought to ridicule womens football.
Others ignored womens football completely.51 It soon became clear
that some of these criticisms were based not only on concerns about the
maintenance of traditional gender roles. There was an economic compo-
nent as well. In 1921 there were suddenly widespread rumors about fi-
nancial irregularities. It was claimed that receipts from admissions were
falsified, and that individual players or even whole teams had received
money for their appearance on the field. That this second charge was
scandalous despite the fact that professionalism in mens football at this
point had been legal for more than thirty years shows the fundamen-
tally different nature that people were prepared to concede to womens
football, under the best of circumstances. While people had come to ac-
cept that football could be a career for men, women were only permit-
ted to play football for a good cause. David J. Williamson, a historian of
womens football, claims that there were neither witnesses nor evidence
for these charges of financial irregularities, and believes that they were
part of a plot against womens football.52 Since womens football was
seen as competing with mens football, and particularly with the games
280 | of the lower professional divisions, the situation was comparable to that
of women who had taken typically male positions in industry. After the
end of the war, they also were expected to give up their places again
to men, and there was a burning debate in the early 1920s about those
women who refused to do so.53
The FA, which in the period immediately after the war generally had
been willing to permit the women football players to use their stadiums,
gradually returned the pre-1914 rejectionist stance. At first, targeted in-
vestigations stoked mistrust of womens teams. Then the decision came
on October 21, 1921, that clubs could only make their stadiums available
to womens football games if they had previously obtained the permis-
sion of the association. In addition, the clubs staging the games were
made responsible for assuring that the income from admissions was cor-
rectly distributed, and had to make available the corresponding book-
keeping records to the association. On December 5 the FA banned wom-
en from using club stadiums. At the end of 1921, the association issued
a general prohibition against womens football. This decision was based
on the argument that it had become clear that the sport of football was
completely inappropriate for women and should not be supported. In
addition, it was alleged that a great part of the income from the specta-
tors at womens football games was used to cover the cost of the match-
es, and a disproportionately small part was being used effectively for
charitable purposes.54
This ban was to last for the next fifty years. However, the women
football players immediately founded their own association, the Eng-
lish Ladies Football Association (ELFA), which organized its own cup
competition for the 192122 season. In 1922 Dick Kerrs Ladies went to
the United States and played nine games against entirely male teams in
55. Dirk Kerrs Ladies did not fold until 1965. By this time, the team had played more than
800 matches and had earned more than 70,000 for charitable causes.
56. Bruley, Women, 69.
57. The basic works on German womens football are Eduard Hoffmann and Jrgen Nen-
dza, Verlacht, verboten und gefeiert: Zur Geschichte des Frauenfussballs in Deutschland (Weilerswist:
Ralf Liebe, 2005); Carina Sophia Linne, Freigespielt: Frauenfussball im geteilten Deutschland (Ber-
lin: Bebra-Wiss.-Verl, 2011); and Frauenfussball in Deutschland: Anfnge-Verbote-Widerstnde-
Durchbruch, ed. Markwart Herzog (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2013).
Football and Gender
brutality of the game in its two variants, soccer and rugby. Heinecken
stressed that the schoolgirls playing football are perfectly safe as they
do so.58
The first womens football teams were established in the interwar
282 | period.59 The first organized womens football game took place in Ger-
many in 1922 in the context of the German university championships.
The first Damen-Fussball-Club was established in Frankfurt in 1930 but
was dissolved a short time later following numerous protests. Beyond
that, there were very few efforts to establish womens football as a new
sport. In general, the first efforts should be understood as part of a com-
prehensive experimental phase by women in a range of sports.
Just as was true in Great Britain, the First World War disrupted the
traditional gender order in Germany.60 Here too, women were brought
into traditionally male occupations and were largely driven out of them
after the armistice.61 Important in this context, however, is that wom-
ens occupations shifted during the course of the 1920s. The percentage
of service girls, maids, and agricultural laborers shrank, and the number
of factory workers, and above all white-collar workers and civil servants
increased. Overall, there was a growing concentration of women in the
modern sectors of industry, trade, as well as in public and private servic-
es. There were now new typically female professions such as stenogra-
phers, assembly-line workers, sales clerks, primary school teachers, and
social workers.62
Arbeit der Frauen im Wandel: Fachwissenschaftliche und fachdidaktische Studien zur Geschichte der
Frauen, eds. Annette Kuhn and Gerhard Schneider (Dsseldorf: Schwann, 1979), 82112.
63. Peukert, Weimarer Republik, 104. Also see Neue Frauen: Die zwanziger Jahre, eds. Maruta
Schmidt and Kristine von Soden (Berlin: Elefanten-Press, 1988).
64. See Florence Herv, Brot und FriedenKinder, Kche, Kirche: Weimarer Repub-
lik 1918/19 bis 1933, in Geschichte der deutschen Frauenbewegung, ed. Florence Herv (Cologne:
PapyRossa-Verlag, 1995), 85110.
65. See, for example, Karin Hausen, Mtter zwischen Geschftsinteresse und kultischer
Verehrung: Der Deutsche Muttertag in der Weimarer Republik, in Sozialgeschichte der Freizeit:
Untersuchungen zum Wandel der Alltagskultur in Deutschland, ed. Gerhard Huck (Wuppertal:
Hammer, 1980), 24980.
66. Gertrud Pfister, Leibesbungen in der Weimarer Republik, in Frau und Sport, 2746.
67. Annemarie Kopp, Emanzipation durch Sport [1927], in Frau und Sport, 69.
Football and Gender
However, in the final result the emancipatory ideas for the unwinding
of this biological essentialism were not successful. This is demonstrated
quite clearly in Germany, where, in contrast to Great Britain, profession-
al sports also were frowned upon for men. Thus the reservations about
womens sports, in general, and womens football, in particular, cannot |285
be traced back to purely economic interests. It was much more the case
that women playing sports touched on deep-seated convictions regarding
the nature of the sexes and their roles in society, as well as their service
for the Volkskrper (body of the people), as the concept was popularly ex-
pressed at that time. Football, as a particularly strongly masculine sport,
remained a privilege of the stronger sex, even in the socialist workers
sport movement.73
Emancipatory ideas about sport were completely suppressed in the
Third Reich.74 The National Socialists placed sport completely in the ser-
vice of military competence. The SA focused above all on military sports,
which included fighting games and scouting exercises.75 Womens sports
were reduced to joy in childbirth. Masculine sports such as football were
forbidden to women.76 The sex-specific polarization of sports thus reached
a high point.
While the Second World War again shook the gender order, there was
a rapid return to traditional conditions in the early years after the war, in
parallel with the unfolding of the economic miracle.77 The increased sig-
nificance of football following the German victory in the 1954 World Cup
was not lost on the female portion of the population. Numerous wom-
ens football teams were established in the immediate post-war period
alongside the resurrected mens football teams and the German Football
Union, which was reestablished in 1949. In 1955, the DFB debated wheth-
73. See, for example, berhorst, Arbeitersport- und Arbeiterkulturbewegung, 181. The basic
works on socialist womens sports are Sigrid Block, Frauen und Mdchen in der Arbeitersport-
bewegung (Mnster: Lit, 1987) and Gertrud Pfister, Macht euch frei: Frauen in der Arbeiter-
Turn- und Sportbewegung, in Illustrierte Geschichte des Arbeitersports, 4857.
74. According to Fechtig, Frauen, 24.
75. Fischer, Strmer, 22.
76. See Michaela Czech, Frauen und Sport im nationalsozialistischen Deutschland: Eine Unter-
suchung zur weiblichen Sportrealitt in einem patriarchalen Herrschaftssystem (Berlin: Verlagsge-
sellschaft Tischler, 1994).
77. Eva Kolinsky, Women in West Germany: Life, Work and Politics (Oxford: Berg, 1989); Rob-
ertG. Moeller, Protecting Motherhood: Women and the Family in the Politics of Postwar West Ger-
many (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993).
Football and Gender
Admittedly, when the players were getting dressed there were prob-
lems with some of the journalists, who tried to to get a look around
the dressing rooms with all of the women, with the claim that this was
common in international football. The Bavarian reporter was silent on
the question of whether he was one of those types. A short while lat-
er, when both of the teams were on the field, where the scent of the
greater, wider football world awaited them: 5,000 curious Italians broke
out in appreciative oh-ohs when catching sight of the wondrous Ger-
man calves, with which the tree-trunk like calves of the British wom-
en could not compete. Then the national anthems were played, a pair
of the German players handed over their head scarves to their chaper-
ones on the sideline, and within 50 seconds the score was 10 in favor of
England. The German team had no chance to avoid defeat as the game
progressed. Mlter ascribed the defeat to the fact that our eleven were
committed to taking their breasts out of the line of fire when there was
a hard kicked ball. Helga Walluga, in particular, played so that she could
288 | return intact to her marriage. Thus, the German sweeper, who defi-
nitely would have been the first to be chosen as Miss Football Pitch ...
shoveled more air than balls. By contrast, the British women had long
since ... overcome this handicap. They were all iron, and skillfully used
their womanly weapons to stop the ball. In sum, the more attractive
team had clearly lost.83 It was apparently clear to the reporter that only
masculine women could be successful in football. In any case, the athlet-
ic event was less interesting to him than the appearance of the players.
If some sections of the press did not take womens football serious-
ly, as had been the case earlier as well, or simply ignored it, the tourna-
ment in Italy did lead several associations to lift their bans out of fear
that independent national womens football organizations would be es-
tablished. The French and German associations lifted their bans in 1970,
and the English did so in the following year. However, in a poll conduct-
ed by FIFA of its member states in 1970, just 12 of the 90 national as-
sociations officially supported womens football.84 In the context of the
political and social atmosphere of the Federal Republic after 1968, which
also saw the cultural end of the Adenauer era, legal discrimination by
the association against womens football was no longer tenable in the
face of a social-liberal policy of reform and the new womens movement.
However, when it lifted its ban on womens football, the DFB put in place
a series of special requirements making clear that it still was not con-
vinced that the game of football was safe for women.85 It became clear
in the following period that most of these requirements were foolish or
unenforceable, and they were subsequently lifted.86 However, as late as
the 1980s, women football players were prohibited from shirt advertis-
ing, apparently because it was feared that the advertisements would lead
spectators to focus too much on the female anatomy.87
By 1971 there were 1,100 womens football teams in the Federal Re-
public. In 1982 there were 2,891. All state associations organized cham-
pionship competitions for women in the 197273 season. But there was
not yet an official German championship. There was a Gold Cup tourna-
ment at the end of the season for the champions of the individual states
which was organized through a private initiative and served as an unof- |289
ficial German championship. The next year, the DFB stepped in as the
organizer of this tournament. The winner of the first official German
womens football championship was TUS Wrrstadt, the same team as
had won the first Gold Cup the year before.88 The first official German
national womens football eleven was organized in 1982. One year be-
fore, Germany had been represented at the unofficial Womens World
Cup in Taiwan by series champion SSG 09 Bergisch Gladbach. The DFB
would not reimburse the travel costs of the club, even though it won the
tournament.89
The 1989 European championship in their own country was a land-
mark in German womens football both in an athletic contextthe Ger-
mans won the tournament with a 41 victory in the final match against
the defending champion Norwayas well as regarding the acceptance
of womens football by the public. The final game was watched by 22,000
spectators in the stadium and was shown live on television, as was the
semifinal against Italy. These games went a long way toward dispelling
the clich that women football players were unfeminine.90 The same
year saw the establishment of a womens national league, which began
playing games in the following season. However, despite various success-
es on the international stage, German womens football had only modest
success in attracting an audience. During the 201213 season, games in
the womens national league had an average attendance of 890 specta-
tors, while the mens game attracted about 45,000.
Official recognition on the international level took even longer. It
was not until 1991 that the first FIFA-organized World Cup for womens
football took place, in China. Up until this point, FIFA had not taken a
firm stance with regard to womens football. This policy was due, in no
95. Schulze-Marmeling, Fussball, 101. Also see Sheila Scraton et al., Its Still a Mans
Game? The Experiences of Top-Level European Women Footballers, International Review for the
Sociology of Sport 33 (1998): 99113.
96. Tages-Anzeiger, April 2, 1994.
Football and Gender
just what the media had been waiting for. The sex scandal around the
lesbian team made it onto the front page of the leading tabloid Blick.97
Swiss television aired a report with the title Does Womens Football Cor-
rupt the Youth?
In sum, the gendered nature of football demonstrates an astound- |293
ing continuity over more than 150 years (or an even longer period, if one
takes folk football into account). The basic connotation of football as
masculine has proven even more persistent than the individual concepts
of masculinity, which not only have changed over time, but even differ
between social classes in the same period, as for example with regard
to the question of emotionality. Interestingly, the different concepts of
masculinitythe emotionless upper-class gentleman, the rough miner,
or the hyper-potent rebellious young starare all compatible with foot-
ball, while the concepts of femininity have been excluded until very re-
cently. Seen in the context of gender history, football is a mirror for the
overall development of society and culture.
The various Maennerbund systemsclubs, associations, teams, fan
groups (and one could include the sporting press here as well)seem to
have stabilized and reproduced themselves over the long course of foot-
balls history. The demonstration of masculinity on the playing field had
a corresponding masculinizing effect on the spectators in the stands,
which then went back to the players. The events on and around the pitch
also marked the culture of the leadership echelons of the clubs and the
associations. All three of these areas worked together in creating the so-
cietal image of the game. This process then played a central role in the
recruitment of new players, coaches, officials, fans, and journalists, and
thus worked to maintain the status quo so long as there were no major
disruptions in the broader society.
In light of this background, the exclusion, distrust, repression, and
mockery that are the hallmarks of the history of womens football are no
longer surprising. Until very recently, womens football, so long as it was
tolerated, was simply an appendage or an imperfect form of mens foot-
ball. The images of female players followed in this same path. Because
they presumed to play a mans sport, they were considered constitution-
This foray into aspects of the social and cultural history of modern foot-
ball illustrates the private world of football, as well as the numerous ex-
ternal influences on the sport from society, culture, politics, economy,
media, and science. Football exists, fundamentally, in a state of contin-
gent autonomy. The results of a match cannot be precisely prognosticat-
ed even though games have always been manipulated for a highly varied
set of reasons. The small always has a chance to defeat the great, and an
entire championship can be decided in additional time. This autonomy,
and the exceptionally emotional circumstances that arise from it, are at
the heart of the private world of football. The sport is characterized by
its own terminology and narrative, has developed its own formal and
informal organizational structures, has generated its own geographical
mental maps, and, not least, presides over its own distinct culture of
memory.1
However, this autonomy does not exist in a vacuum, but rather
communicates in a variety of different ways with its context. The soci-
etal place of football has changed in different places and different coun-
tries. But these changes have always taken place within the context of
broader societal transitions and the processes of negotiation between
various social groups and classes. The identification with a particular
team and club often brought with it particular connotations of class as
well as social-topographical or confessional attributions, without being
completely subordinated to them. Contrasts between socioeconomic
1. See, for example, Memorialkultur im Fuballsport: Medien, Rituale und Praktiken des Erin-
nerns, Gedenkens und Vergessens.
295
Conclusion
centers and peripheries, both within countries and on the global level,
are generally mirrored on the football stage.
From very early on, the economic realm has played an important
role in the history of modern football. As soon as football made the tran-
296 | sition from being the game of grammar school and university students
into a mass spectator phenomenon, the processes of commercialization,
professionalization, and media attention began. The symbiosis has been
particularly close between football and mass media, whose technological
and economic development has had an important impact on the sport,
but which also used footballs popularity for its own economic profit.
Politics has also had both direct and indirect influence on the his-
tory of football. Politicians from a range of backgroundsdemocrats
and dictators, both left and righthave attempted to use football for
their own purposes in both peacetime and war, often (but not always)
successfully. It is notable, however, that football developed along simi-
lar lines as a mass spectator phenomenon in very different political sys-
tems, and not always in a manner that pleased those in power.
Finally, football is a highly reliable seismograph for continuities
and changes in the gender order of various societies. The long-enduring
masculine-heterosexual dominance, as well as the occasional early femi-
nine interventions, and finally the gradual transition toward greater
gender equality in the final third of the twentieth century clearly mir-
ror general societal and cultural trends. Thus, it is precisely the tense
relationship between footballs autonomous character and its complex
cross-linkage with varied contexts that accounts for the fascination with
the sport and makes the study of its history a worthwhile endeavor.
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Index
337
Index
Excelsior Zurich, 27 207, 20910, 217, 222, 226, 231, 233, 23536,
Eyre, Charles, 147 262, 28889, 292
Femina Paris, 279
Facchinetti, Giacinto, 131 Ferencvaros Budapest, 172
FA cup, 1819, 73, 7576, 7980, 24445, 247, Ferguson, Alec, 144
278 Fernandez, Luis, 112, 123
Falco, Paulo Roberto, 111 Ferretti, Lando, 220 |341
Faroe Islands, 115 Ferrol, 238
Fascist Party, 22021 Fignon, Laurent, 113
Fashanu, Justin, 269 Figo, Luis, 113
Faszekas, Laszlo, 134, 172 Finger, Edi, 114
Fatherland Front, 187 Finke, Volker, 136
Fatton, Jackie, 114, 131 Finland, 190, 259
FA Womens Premier National League, 281 Finney, Tom, 247
FA Womens Super League, 281 Fiorentina, 133
FC Aarau, 128 Fire Flies, 27
FC Airdrieonians, 144 First Vienna Football Club, 37, 8485, 119, 252
FC Au, 138 Fischer, Klaus, 110, 127
FC Barcelona, 29, 149, 173, 22630 Fishwick, Nicholas, 55
FC Bari, 29 Fleming, Harold, 6566, 119
FC Basel, 2627, 114, 126 Floridsdorfer Athletiksportklub, 37
FC Bayern Mnchen, 71, 91, 96, 115, 12627, 133, Fontaine, Just, 171
136, 172, 253 Foot, Michael, 169
FC Bologna, 29 Football Association (FA), 1718, 2123, 26, 30,
FC Cantonal Neuchtel, 254 3435, 3841, 43, 67, 73, 77, 101, 189, 24245,
FC Grandson, 161 27677, 28081
FC Hansa Rostock, 151 Foot-Ball Club, 17
FC Kitzbhel, 239 Football League (FL), 21, 50, 52, 7576, 79,
1. FC Kln, 109, 134 99100, 24445, 278
FC Lugano, 127 Foreign Office, 227
FC Lyon, 29 Frster, Karl-Heinz, 112
1. FC Magdeburg, 215, 218 Fortuna Dsseldorf, 91, 165
FC Mnchengladbach/Rheydt, 91 Forza Italia, 103
FC Nantes, 147 France, 9, 39, 41, 81, 113, 12123, 136, 15051,
1. FC Nrnberg, 91 158, 162, 176, 178, 18990, 194, 204, 206, 208,
FC Porto, 115 22728, 256, 25960, 279
FC Santos, 117 Francescoli, Enzo, 126
FC Schalke 04, 9091, 97, 124, 172, 175, 239, 252 Franco, Francisco, 194, 22630
FC St. Gall, 24, 27 Frank, Wolfgang, 116
FC St. Pauli, 105, 13536 Frankfurt am Main, 83, 91, 174, 190, 218, 282
FC Wacker Mnchen, 91 Frauenfeld, 25
FC Wettswil-Bonstetten, 292 Freie Deutsche Jugend (FDJ), 214
FC Wiesloch, 262 Freier Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (FDGB),
FC Winterthur, 29, 161 214
1. FC Wuppertal, 91 Friaa, 131
FC Yverdon, 27 Friedlnder, Hans-Peter, 260
FC Zrich, 29, 126 Friedrichs, Hanns Joachim, 115
Federal Commission for Radio and Press, 261 Friends of Nature, 184
Federal Department of the Military, 25859 Front de Libration Nationale (FLN), 122
Federal Office for Wartime Food Production, 259 FT Jessitz, 183
Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), 4, 96, 108, Frth, 166
164, 16971, 21519, 286, 28889
Fdration Internationale de Football Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), 40
Association (FIFA), 4142, 86, 153, 19293, Galeano, Eduardo, 133
Index
Netherlands, 41, 98, 113, 123, 125, 134, 173, 218, Palestine, 85, 208
28687 Pallas, David, 123
Netzer, Gnter, 125, 131, 219 Panathinakos Athens, 172
Neuberger, Hermann, 235 Panenka, Antonin, 13334
Neuchtel, 152, 160 Pan-German League, 31
Neuengamme, 129 Paraguay, 82
346 | Newcastle United, 61, 142, 145 Paris, 157, 160, 162, 193, 208, 227, 279
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 47, 57 Paris St. Germain, 112
New York Yankees, 102 Partisan Belgrade, 149
New Zealand, 40, 66 Paoli, Silvio, 127
Nier, Willi, 91 Pascolo, Marco, 123
Nigeria, 38 Passarella, Daniel, 117
Nmes, 28 Pel, 111, 117, 119, 125, 232
NKono, Thomas, 111 Pearol Montevideo, 117
Nora, Pierre, 4, 173 Peoples Olympics, 194
Nordau, Max, 85 Peoples Police, 215
North American Soccer League (NASL), 290 Perdigo, Pedro, 132
Northern German Football Association, 249 Perez, Valdir, 111
Northern Ireland, 125, 149, 246 Pern, Juan, 234
North Vietnam, 122 Persia, 2078, 210
Norway, 195, 208, 210, 225, 227, 289 Pertini, Sandro, 111
Norwegian Workers Sport Association, 193 Peru, 82
Norwich, 57 Petit, Emmanuel, 113
Nottingham, 55, 57, 61 Pezzey, Bruno, 114
Nottingham Forest, 117 Pieiro y de Queralt, Enrique, 228
Notts County, 75 Pinochet, Augusto, 212, 23031
Nyliasi, Tibor, 172 Pinto, Joo, 115
Planck, Karl, 34
Oberhuber, Karl, 224 Platini, Michel, 109, 112, 113n4, 119, 123, 125
Obilic Belgrade, 150 Poland, 85, 111, 121, 172, 216, 227
Ocwirk, Ernst, 114 Polgar, Alfred, 84
Odermatt, Karl, 126 Polster, Toni, 127, 134
Oertel, Heinz-Florian, 217 Poole, William, 38
sterreichischer Fussballverband (FV), 37 Portsmouth, 272
Ogris, Andreas, 127 Portugal, 123, 228, 259
Old Boys Basel, 27, 255 Poulidor, Raymond, 113
Old Carthusians, 74 Pozzo, Vittorio, 28
Old Etonians, 74 Prague, 31, 35, 209
Oldham, 131 Premier League, 101
Olympic Games, 42, 170, 193, 196, 200, 210, 212, Preston, 51, 61, 278
225, 235, 291 Preston North End, 51, 68, 73, 75
Olympique Marseille, 123 Princeton, 290
Ortiz, Oscar, 117 Prof, Alice, 284
Orwell, George, 238 Professional Footballers Association (PFA), 77
Oslo, 129 Prohaska, Herbert, 114, 126
Osmanovski, Yksel, 123 Prosinecki, Robert, 150
Oswald, Rudolf, 9394 Pro Vercelli, 127
Overmars, Marc, 118 Prussia, 32
Oxford, 19, 31, 74 Pusks, Ferenc, 116, 16465, 172, 174
Oxford City, 62
Oxford United, 270 Race, Mick, 48
Racing Paris, 1, 204, 208
Pahl, Jrgen, 219 Racing Strasbourg, 136
Palermo, 29 Racing Universitaire dAlger, 1
Index
Switzerland, 24, 2628, 30, 41, 81, 86, 119, UEFA. See Union of European Football
123, 126, 131, 13638, 15056, 158, 16062, Associations
16465, 172, 176, 206, 22526, 228, 242, 254, UEFA Cup, 215
26162, 292 UEFA Womens Champions League, 292
Szarmach, Andrzej, 134 UEFA Womens Cup, 292
Szepan, Fritz, 153 Uganda, 38
Ukraine, 103, 192, 213 |349
Taffarel, Claudio, 113 Union Berlin, 151
Taiwan, 289 Union Franco-Musulmane de Stif, 122
Talinn, 196 Union Internationale Amateur de Football
Tapie, Bernard, 130 Association (UIAFA), 42
Tarantini, Alberto, 117 Union of European Football Associations
Tardelli, Marco, 11112 (UEFA), 211, 281
Tassotti, Mauro, 130 United Irish League, 147
Tauber, Peter, 249 United States, 1, 5, 12, 34, 40, 42, 82, 84, 102,
Teague, Bert, 65 115, 125, 208, 232, 264, 277, 280, 29091
Tehran, 208 United States Soccer Federation (USSF), 291
Tell, William, 160 Urban, Marcus, 269
Tetzlaff, Alfred, 216 Uridil, Josef, 119
Thatcher, Margaret, 45, 99, 144 Uruguay, 38, 79n17, 82, 131, 165, 192, 232,
Thommen, Ernst B., 262 234
Thompson, E. P., 45 US Bastia, 151
Thuram, Lilian, 113 USL W-League, 291
Tiflis, 227 Utley, George, 67
Tigana, Jean, 10910
Tipperary, 40 Valdez, Francisco, 231
Thames Ironworks, 53 Valencia, 228
Tilkowski, Hans, 108 Valley Party, 104
Torberg, Friedrich, 84 Vampley, Wray, 78
Torres, Jos Augusto, 117 Van Basten, Marco, 118, 127
Tosto, 111 Van de Kerkhof, Ren, 218
Tottenham, 49 Van de Kerkhof, Willy, 218
Totti, Francesco, 134 Van der Sar, Edwin, 118
Toulouse, 123 Van Zandt, Townes, 116
Tour de France, 113 Vargas, Gtulio, 23132
Trautmann, Bernd, 128 Varna, 196
Trsor, Marius, 10910, 123 Vasco da Gama, 131
Trogen, 25 Vava, 111
Trudovye Rezervy, 201, 212 Vega, Ramon, 123
Tschammer Cup, 253 Veitch, Fred, 48
Tschammer und Osten, Hans von, 93, 225, Venice, 29
25052 Vernati, Sirio, 160
TSV Mnchen 1860, 96, 133, 253 Vernde, R. E., 242
Tudjman, Franjo, 150 Versailles, 152
Trkyilmaz, Kubilay, 123 Vevey, 257
Tunisia, 122 VfB Stuttgart, 110
Turati, Augusto, 221 VfL Leipzig, 35
Turek, Toni, 4, 16566, 168, 173 Viareggio, 220
Turin, 4, 28 Vichy, 136
Turkey, 124, 164, 2089 Victoria Hamburg, 181
TUS Wrrstadt, 289 Victorian Football Association, 40
Tyne, Wear & Tees Alfred Wood Munition Girls Videla, Jorge Rafael, 234, 236
Cup, 278 Videoton Szkesfehrvr, 172
Vidigal, Jos Luis, 123
Index
Vienna, 37, 81, 84, 87, 11921, 179, 183, 186, Winterthur, 2829
19192, 199, 249, 256 Witschge, Richard, 118
Vienna Cricket and Football Club, 37 Wolverhampton Wanderers, 67, 75, 211, 246
Viera, Patric, 113 Womens Football Association, 281
Viktoria Wien, 37 Womens Professional Soccer (WPS), 292
Vodnik, 212 Womens United Soccer Association League
350 | Vogts, Berti, 114, 217 (WUSA League), 292
Volkssturm, 252 Womens World Cup, 287, 28991
Vollenweider, Eduard, 30 Woodcock, Tony, 127
Von der Goltz, Colmar, 248 Woolwich Arsenal, 76
Vorwrts, 21314 Workers Football European Championship, 192
Vorwrts Frankfurt, 217 Workers Football World Championship, 193
Vsevobu, 201 Workers Olympics, 179, 186, 19092, 19596,
Vukovar, 150 208, 227
Workers Union for Athletics and Physical
Wacker Wien, 11920 Culture (ASK), 185
Wagner, Theodor, 114 World Cup, 86, 9496, 98, 1089, 11113,
Wahl, Alfred, 122 11517, 12123, 12528, 13032, 13436, 145,
Walacek, Gnia, 15253 15053, 15758, 16465, 169, 17273, 192,
Wales, 46, 63, 77, 128, 246, 281 21112, 21516, 222, 22425, 23035, 240, 257,
Walfrid, 146 261, 272, 285, 291
Wallace, William, 143 Worms, 39
Waller, J. P., 61 Wortmann, Snke, 174
Walluga, Helga, 28788 Wright, Ian, 123
Walsall Swifts, 73
Walter, Des, 123 Yad Vashem, 137
Walter, Fritz, 16567, 171, 174 Yakin, Hakan, 124
Walter, Ottmar, 171, 174 Yakin, Murat, 124
Walvin, James, 55, 57 Yale, 290
Wanderers, The, 19, 74 Yashin, Lev, 12424
War Cup, 24546 York, 4849
Watson Hutton, Alexander, 38 Young Boys Bern, 6, 27, 173
Weber, Max, 118 Young Communist League, 188
Weber, Wolfgang, 108 Young Fellows Zurich, 2728
Weimar, 174 Young German Union, 248
Weissweiler, Hennes, 131 Yugoslavia, 119, 149, 164, 169, 259
West Bromwich Albion, 63, 75
West German Womens Football Association, Zamoskvoretskij, 206
286 Zenit, 201, 212
West Ham United, 5354, 85, 108 Zentralausschuss fr Volks- und Jugendspiele,
Westrup, Zenon Stanislas, 261 31
Whiteside, Norman, 125 Zico, 111, 125
Wiener Amateur-Sportverein, 85, 184 Zidane, Zinedine, 113, 123
Wiener Athletik-Sportclub, 37 Zimmermann, Herbert, 16566
Wiener Neustadt, 18384 Zitouni, Mustapha, 123
Wiener Sportclub, 37 Zoetemelk, Joop, 113
Wilhelm II, 33 Zoff, Dino, 111, 125
Williamson, David J., 279 Zola, Gianfranco, 68
Winchester, 14 Zurich, 2526, 28, 126, 152, 15455, 157, 16061,
Winter, Aaron, 123 225, 26162