Association football during World War II

When World War II was declared in 1939, it had a negative effect on association football; competitions were suspended and players signed up to fight, resulting in the deaths of many players.

League football

Austria

Main article: Gauliga Ostmark

The Republic of Austria had ceased to exist with the Anschluss in 1938 and the Austrian league had become a part of the German football league system, under the name of Gauliga Ostmark. League football resumed in a now independent Austria again in 1945.

England

Main article: Wartime League

The 1939–1940 season was the 65th season of competitive football in England. In September 1939, shortly after World War II was declared, most football competitions were abandoned as the country's attention turned to the war effort. Regional league competitions were set up instead; appearances in these tournaments do not count in players' official records. A few leagues, such as the Northern League, did manage to complete a season, but more than half of the teams were unable to fulfil all their fixtures and resigned. Many footballers signed up to fight in the war and as a result many teams were depleted, and fielded guest players instead – Crystal Palace fielded 186 different players during the seven wartime seasons.[1] The FA Cup was resumed for the 1945-46 season and The Football League for the 1946-47 season.

Germany

Main article: Gauliga

The 1939-40 season started in August 1939, but with the outbreak of the Second World War shortly after, league football was suspended. It only resumed at the end of October, with a number of local city-championships having been played to bridge the gap.[2] As the war progressed, top-division football became more regionalised. It also expanded into occupied territories, some of them annexed into Greater Germany, increasing the number of tier-one Gauligas considerably from the original 16 in 1933. The last German championship was played in 1944 and won by Dresdner SC, but the last official league game was played as late as 23 April 1945, being the FC Bayern Munich versus TSV 1860 Munich derby in the Gauliga Oberbayern, ending 3-2. The final years of league football saw the rise of military teams, like LSV Hamburg, who reached the 1944 German championship final, since most top-players were drafted into the German armed forces and ended up playing for these sides. Representative teams like the Rote Jäger also had a number of German internationals playing for them.[3]

With the end of the war, ethnic German football clubs in the parts of Germany that were awarded to Poland and the Soviet Union disappeared. Clubs like VfB Königsberg and Vorwärts-Rasensport Gleiwitz, who had successfully competed in the German championship on quite a number of occasions[4] disappeared for good. In Czechoslovakia, where the ethnic German minority in the Sudetenland was forced to leave the country, clubs experienced the same fate. A few, like BSK Neugablonz,[5] were reformed by these refugees in West Germany.

Some of the events of the war continue to affect German football today. Within the first couple of weeks of the re-development of the Mercedes-Benz Arena in 2009, home of the VfB Stuttgart, 18 undetonated bombs left over from air raids on Stuttgart during the Second World War were found on the construction site. The stadium was originally built, like so many others in Germany, on rubble left over from the war.[6]

Italy

Main article: Serie A

The Italian Serie A continued to operate during the war, up until 1943. A regional championship was played in 1944, before resumption of the league in a limited form in 1945.

Switzerland

Football was affected less in World War II than it was during World War I.[7]

International football

England

England played 29 unofficial wartime internationals between 11 November 1939 and 5 May 1945, 14 against Wales and 15 against Scotland.[8]

Germany

With the outbreak of the Second World War, Germany did not cease to play internationals but was limited to neutral, axis and puppet states. Its first war international was held on 24 September 1939, a loss to Hungary in Budapest. All together, the country played 35 international games during the war, its last on 22 November 1942, against Slovakia.[9]

Wales

Wales played seventeen wartime unofficial matches for which the players were not awarded caps, and a further six matches in aid of war charities.[10]

Football for morale

Football was seen as a morale booster during the horrors of World War II, for both soldiers and civilians.[11][12] Tom Finney captained Army football teams, and organised friendly matches in Austria and Egypt.[11][13]

Effects on footballers

Soldiers

Some players, such as Norman Corbett, have expressed the opinion that the War ruined their careers.[14] Other players died during the war, such as the Hungarian Jewish international footballer József Braun, who died in a Nazi labor camp in 1943.[15]

Many German players, drafted into the Wehrmacht, saw their careers shortened or interrupted. Fritz Walter, captain of the 1954 World Cup-winning team of Germany who made his debut for the country during the war in 1940, missed many years of his career due to serving in the military from 1942 and spending time as a POW after the war.[16] Fritz Walter served as a paratrooper and also spent time in a Soviet labour camp.[17]

Many German football clubs suffered heavy casualties from Hitler's war. An amateur club like SVO Germaringen saw ten of its eleven players that had won a local youth championship in 1940 not return from the battle fields.[18] TSV 1860 Rosenheim had 170 of its club members drafted into military service, of those, 44 were killed in action and another 15 are missing. Those that did return found the clubs facilities completely destroyed by air raids on the town in October 1944 and April 1945. Rosenheim was on an important rail- and road intersection.[19]

The Holocaust

A number of Jewish footballers died during the Holocaust. The Hungarian football manager Árpád Weisz died at Auschwitz in 1944.[20][21] Henrik Nadler died at an unknown camp working as a labour serviceman.[22] Julius Hirsch, the first Jewish player to represent the German national team, died at Auschwitz in May 1945.[23] Hirsch had served for four years in the German Army in the First World War, had been decorated with the Iron Cross and was a German patriot, unable and unwilling to believe that his life could be at risk.[24]

However, some people also survived the concentration camps. Leo Goldstein survived the camps to become a FIFA international referee.[25] Goldstein is also a member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame.[26] Hungarian coach Alfréd Schaffer was interned at Dachau, and was liberated by the Allies.[27] He died naturally in the nearby town of Prien am Chiemsee a few months later.

Collaborationism

Some footballers also collaborated with the Nazis. Alexandre Villaplane, who was captain of the French national side, worked actively with the Gestapo and eventually became a SS lieutenant. He was executed in December 1944.[28] The Estonian international goalkeeper Evald Mikson was accused by the Simon Wiesenthal Center (in particular by Efraim Zuroff) of committing serious war crimes against Jews during the War, when he was working as Deputy Head of Police in Tallinn.[29]

Decorated footballers

Scottish footballer Willie Thornton won the Military Medal, while German goalkeeper Bert Trautmann won a total of five medals, including an Iron Cross.[30]

Former players killed in action

See also

References

  1. "Palace During WWII". Crystal Palace FC. Archived from the original on 25 June 2012. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  2. Die deutschen Gauligen 1933-45 - Heft 2 (German) Tables of the Gauligas 1933-45, Booklet 2, page: 47, publisher: DSFS
  3. Geschichte der Roten Jäger (German) History of the Red Hunters, accessed: 13 July 2009
  4. kicker Allmanach 1990, by kicker, page 160 & 178 - German championship
  5. Historie - Chronik des BSK Olympia (German) BSK Neugablonz website - History, accessed: 15 October 2013
  6. Deutschland deine Stadien (German) Weltfussball.de - Article on the redevelopment of football stadiums in Germany, accessed: 9 July 2009
  7. "Club history: 1933/34 until 1942/43". FC Basel. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  8. Courtney, Barrie (21 March 2004). "England - War-Time/Victory Internationals - Details". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  9. kicker Almanach 1990 – Die Nationalmanschaften (German) publisher: kicker, published: 1989, page: 44-103, ISBN 3-7679-0297-4
  10. Davies, Gareth; Garland, Ian (1991). Who's Who of Welsh International Soccer Players. Bridge Books. pp. 225–232. ISBN 1-872424-11-2.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Alfred Forrest (13 October 2005). "Football during WWII". BBC. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  12. "Football League War Cup". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  13. Kevin McGuiness. "A life in football: Sir Tom Finney talks to Kevin McGuiness". Preston Today. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  14. "Norman Corbett". Spartacus International. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  15. "Braun, Joszef 'Cziby'". Jews in Sports. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  16. Fritz Walter Planetworldcup.com, accessed: 13 July 2009
  17. Walter, Fritz Encyclopaedia Britannica, accessed: 13 July 2009
  18. Chronik (German) SVO Germaringen website - History: until 1950, accessed: 15 October 2013
  19. TSV 1860 Rosenheim website - Vereinschronik (German) Club history, accessed: 13 July 2009
  20. "Weisz, Arpad". Jews in Sports. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  21. "Hungarian Players and Coaches in Italy". RSSSF. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  22. "Nadler, Henrik". Jews in Sports. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  23. "Hirsch, Julius". Jews in Sports. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  24. Nationalspieler und Opfer des Nationalsozialismus (German) Der Westen, Published: 7 April 2008, accessed: 15 October 2013
  25. "Goldstein, Leo". Jews in Sports. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  26. "Builders' Eligibility List". National Soccer Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 24 September 2010. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  27. "Schaffer, Alfred 'Spezi'". Jews in Sports. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  28. "Le footballeur qui voulait être un SS". Le Monde. 15 March 2007. Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  29. "WIESENTHAL CENTER WELCOMES ESTONIAN HISTORICAL COMMISSION FINDINGS WHICH CONFIRM HOLOCAUST CRIMES OF EVALD MIKSON". Simon Wiesenthal Center. 21 June 2001. Archived from the original on 19 March 2006. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
  30. Paolo Bandini & John Ashdown (1 April 2009). "Has a referee ever been sent off?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 4 April 2009. Retrieved 1 April 2009.