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Who knew? 10 Jews and the World Cup

We take a look at the secret history

June 12, 2014 12:43
Paintsil: celebration
3 min read

1. Meisl's Wunderteam

The Anschluss was still four years away when Hugo Meisl coached his Austrian Wunderteam to the 1934 semi-finals. They bowed out 0-1 to hosts and eventual champions Italy, but would be remembered for pioneering a style later rebranded "total football" by the great Dutch sides of the 1970s. That a Jew could manage Austria so shortly before the Holocaust was testament to the community's influence on local football; Hakoah Vienna even won the inaugural professional league championship in 1925. Meisl died of a heart attack in 1937. Star player Matthias Sindelar later refused to join the unified German team.

2. Hungary makes the final

There was no Hakoah equivalent in Hungary, although 23-time league champions MTK initially drew a significant proportion of its fans and players from Budapest's large Jewish community. One of these players, Alfred Schaffer, scored 17 goals in 15 appearances for the national team, and later coached Hungary to the 1938 final, where they lost 4-2 to Italy.