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Italy rediscovers a hero of football, lost to Shoah

September 15, 2013 09:00
Arpad Weisz

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Anonymous,

Anonymous

2 min read

Some have compared Arpad Weisz to Josè Mourinho, for their extraordinary relationship with their players, their innovative leadership styles and the attention paid to the psychological aspects of coaching a football team.

Not to mention the fact that Arpad Weisz was also a winner — the Hungarian Jew led Bologna FC and Inter Milan to championship victories in the 1920s and the 1930s.

Weisz even played a part in Chelsea’s history. In 1937, during the Tournoi international de l’Exposition Universelle, a precursor of the Champions League, Chelsea was beaten in the final by Weisz’s Bologna FC in Paris.

A little over a year later, Weisz, as a foreign Jew, left Italy to escape Benito Mussolini’s antisemitic laws. He fled to the Netherlands, but after the Nazi invasion he was deported to Auschwitz together with his wife and two children. Nobody survived.