Joe Gaetjens

Joe Gaetjens
Personal information
Full nameJoseph Edouard Gaetjens
Date of birthMarch 19, 1924
Place of birthPort-au-Prince, Haiti
Date of deathJuly 10, 1964 (aged 40)
Place of deathPort-au-Prince, Haiti
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Playing positionCentre forward
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
19381947Etoile Haïtienne
19471950Brookhattan
1950?Racing Club de Paris
?1954Olympique Alès
1954?Etoile Haïtienne
National team
1950United States3(1)
1953Haiti1(0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Joseph Edouard Gaetjens (/ˈɡɛnz/ GAY-jenz;[1] born March 19, 1924, Port-au-Prince, Haiti; presumed dead July 10, 1964, Haiti) was a Haitian soccer player who played for the United States national team in the 1950 FIFA World Cup, scoring the winning goal in the 1–0 upset of England.[2]

Early life

Joe Gaetjens was born in Haiti to a Haitian mother and a German father. His great-grandfather Thomas, a native of Bremen, had been sent to Haiti by Frederick William III, the King of Prussia, as a business emissary. The family was quite prosperous, and although by the time of Joe's birth their wealth had decreased significantly, they were still among the Haitian elite. When Gaetjens was born, his father even registered the birth certificate with the German embassy, in case Joe ever wanted to gain German citizenship.[3]

Club career

Gaetjens joined Etoile Haïtienne at the age of 14 and won two Ligue Haïtienne championships in 1942 and 1944. However, he could not make a living from professional soccer, so he went to New York City in 1947 to study accounting at Columbia University on a scholarship from the Haitian government, and played for Brookhattan of the American Soccer League, winning the league's scoring title. He also worked for the Brookhattan owner's restaurant as a dishwasher.[4]

At the end of the World Cup, Gaetjens moved to France where he played briefly for Racing Club de Paris and Olympique Alès,[3] before returning to Haiti in 1954 to become a spokesman and entrepreneur. Gaetjens remained active in soccer, rejoining Etoile Haïtienne.

International career

United States

His success with Brookhattan attracted the attention of U.S. Soccer, and Gaetjens made the national team for the 1950 World Cup.[5]

Gaetjens played three games at the World Cup, but easily the most memorable was one of the greatest World Cup upsets in history, in which Gaetjens scored the decisive goal of a 1–0 victory in which the American soccer team defeated the hugely favored English at Belo Horizonte. Walter Bahr had taken a shot from about 25 yards away and the ball was heading to goalkeeper Bert Williams's right. It appeared to be a relatively easy save, but Gaetjens dove headlong and grazed the ball enough that it went to the goalkeeper's left instead, with his momentum preventing him from stopping the ball. Williams later considered the goal to be a result of a lucky deflection, but this view was disputed by Laurie Hughes, who was defending Gaetjens on the play.[3]

Although Gaetjens was not a U.S. citizen, he had declared his intention of becoming one, and under the rules of the United States Soccer Football Association at that time was allowed to play. However, Gaetjens never actually did gain American citizenship.[6]

Haiti

On December 27, 1953, Gaetjens played in a World Cup Qualifier for Haiti against Mexico.

Death

Gaetjens was not interested in politics, but his family was. He was related to Louis Déjoie (his great-grandfather Thomas married Leonie Déjoie), who lost the 1957 Haitian presidential election to François "Papa Doc" Duvalier, and although the family also had connections to the new president, Gaetjens's younger brothers became associated with a group of exiles in the Dominican Republic who wanted to stage a coup.[3]

On July 8, 1964, the morning after Duvalier declared himself "president for life", the rest of the Gaetjens family fled the country in fear of reprisal for the younger Gaetjens brothers' rebellious associations, but Joe stayed, thinking that Duvalier's regime would be uninterested in him since he was only a sports figure. That morning, he was arrested by the nation's notorious Tonton Macoutes secret police and is presumed to have been killed some time that month. His body has never been found.[7] Joe Gaetjens was posthumously inducted into the United States National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1976.

Gaetjens is interpreted by Jimmy Jean-Louis in the film The Game of Their Lives. In the film, he is depicted as a practitioner of Vodou (voodoo), but in reality Gaetjens, like most Haitians, grew up as a Catholic.[3]

In 2010, his son Lesly Gaetjans wrote a biography about his father: The Shot Heard Around the World: The Joe Gaetjens Story.[8]

References

  1. "A Goal, A Ghost". ESPNsoccernet. Retrieved 2010-05-31.
  2. Gee, Alison (2014-03-22). "BBC News - Joe Gaetjens - the footballer who disappeared". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-04-22.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Schaerlaeckens, Leander (February 26, 2010). "Chasing Gaetjens". ESPNsoccernet. Retrieved 2010-02-26.
  4. Gee, Alison (22 March 2014). "Joe Gaetjens - the footballer who disappeared". BBC Magazine. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  5. "Players Appearing for Two or More Countries". RSSSF. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
  6. Longman, Jere (December 10, 2009). "How a 'Band of No-Hopers' Forged U.S. Soccer’s Finest Day". The New York Times.
  7. Samson, Pete (December 12, 2009). "The Shocking Story of the US Goalscorer Murdered After They Beat England in 1950". The Sun.
  8. Gaetjans, Lesly (2010). Shot heard around the world : the joe gaetjens story. [S.l.]: Lulu Com. ISBN 978-0557612314.

External links