This is the first post
in a weekly series highlighting Italy’s four World Cup wins from qualifications
to the finals.
The inaugural World Cup had been held in Uruguay in 1930.
Many European nations refused to take part due to the long travel by sea as
well as issues with FIFA and the bidding process, and Italy was one of them.
This time, however, Italy had successfully won the bid to host the World Cup.
Their bid had been chosen over the Swedish bid, after a decision making process
that saw FIFA delegates meet eight times.
Politically, Mussolini wanted the World Cup as a way to
promote fascism throughout the world. To the rest of the country, it was a way
to promote the sport. To the Italian National Team, it was a chance to prove
their worth in front of a home crowd. They were actually still required to
qualify like everyone else, the only time a host nation was required to
qualify. In fact, this was the first World Cup Tournament with qualifications
at all, since there were 32 out of the then 50 FIFA nations who applied to
participate and only 16 spots in the tournament.
Uruguay, reigning World Champions, refused to participate in
order to return the snub of the European teams four years earlier. That made
them the unfortunate statistic of being the only reigning World Cup Champions
to not defend their title. Actually, there were a number of teams from the
Americas that did not make the journey due to the long boat travel. And
Argentina, one of the more talented teams, refused to send its best players
from its top league, so instead sent a team of B & C players. England were
still snubbing FIFA altogether, so they also snubbed this World Cup. Certainly
the World Cup has come a long way from these humble beginnings, with
established and fair protocol, better travel methods, and a literal worldwide
tournament that is revered and respected.
Qualifications
For qualifications, the 32 nations were divided up into
groups of two to three based on geographic proximity. Italy were grouped with Greece,
and were to play two legs to determine which team would qualify for the World
Cup. Greece, which had only formed its National Team four years prior, was
considered the sacrificial lamb so that the host nation would not be disgraced
by failing to make the tournament. So in the first leg, Italy won 4-0. Greece
forfeited the second leg to avoid further embarrassment, and Italy were
qualified in the space of 90 minutes.
Mexico had already qualified by defeating Cuba. But from the
same region, the United States applied late to participate. Both teams traveled
to Italy, but a single game, held three days before the World Cup in Rome,
determined which team would play in the tournament. The United States beat
Mexico, taking that 16th tournament spot. So Mexico had made the long journey
by boat and weren’t even able to play a single game in the actual tournament.
That is one European vacation a footballer wouldn’t want!
Meisl's "Wunderteam" |
And Then There Were
16…
So the 16 teams who qualified from the original 32 were: Italy, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Austria,
Spain, Hungary, Switzerland, Sweden, France, Netherlands, Argentina, Romania,
Egypt, Brazil, Belgium, United States. It is notable that 12 of the 16
teams were European, geographically very much the opposite of the 1930 World
Cup in Uruguay. And while transportation played a large part in the teams from
the Americas not being better represented, sadly politics affected it, too.
Italy were one of the favorites going into the tournament
along with Spain, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. But Austria, coached by Hugo
Meisl and also known as the Wunderteam,
were probably the favorites. Meisl, a giant in Austrian football, was the inventor
of the Mitropa Cup, the predecessor of the European Champions Cup. His Wunderteam only lost three times in 31 games
over a three year period going into the 1934 World Cup. This made them the team to
fear, or the team to beat, depending on your attitude.
Vittorio Pozzo |
The Azzurri, circa
1934
The Italian squad were not without their own pedigree and
success. Firstly, they were coached by one Vittorio Pozzo. Like Meisl, he was
an excellent tactician and a popular coach. He was very superstitious, and had
a couple of lucky charms he always relied on. He developed Il Metodo (“the Method”), a formation of 2-3-5, with two defenders
and five strikers. Known by others as the Danubian School and widely used in
the 1920’s, Pozzo tweaked it to look more like a 2-3-2-3, adding more players
to the midfield which was more defensive and more effective on the
counterattack.
Surprisingly, Oriundi,
or children of Italian heritage born outside of Italy (at this point
specifically in South America,) were to play a big part in Italy’s success in
this tournament. Pozzo justified their presence on the team by pointing out
that these men were eligible to serve in the military for Italy. His theory led
to his infamous quote, “If they can die
for Italy, they can play football for Italy.”
The Oriundi all
hailed from Argentina and included: Luis Monti and Attilio Demaria, who had
played with Argentina in the 1930 World Cup, Raimundo Orsi, who had won a
silver medal with them in 1928, and Enrique Guaita. They were part of a very
small group of players that represented more than one nation in international
play before the rules were changed.
The squad who would represent their country and its dictator
in front of a home crowd and on an international stage were: Luigi Allemandi,
Pietro Arcari, Luigi Bertolini, Felice Borel, Umberto Caligaris, Armando
Castellazzi, Giuseppe Cavanna, Gianpiero Combi, Attilio Demaria, Giovanni
Ferrari, Attilio Ferraris, Enrique Guaita, Anfilogino Guarisi, Guido Masetti,
Giuseppe Meazza, Luis Monti, Eraldo Monzeglio, Raimundo Orsi, Mario Pizziolo,
Virginio Rosetta, Angelo Schiavio, and Mario Varglien.
Together, they were the Azzurri,
with a common dream of lifting their country’s first World Cup. They were a
squad enlisted by a dictator, dreamed up by a coach who hungered for victory,
and a squad eager to make their country proud at home.
Next week: read about the “Group Stage” of the 1934 World Cup
This is part one of a 12 week series I originally wrote for the now
defunct Italy World Cup Blog five years ago. The series will now appear here weekly as a tribute to the Azzurri teams of the past.