The US and the 1934 World Cup

Featured, History, Philadelphia Soccer History, U.S. World Cup History, World Cup, World Cup - International — By on April 15, 2010 at 10:20 am

Our series on the US and the World Cup continues with a look at how the US did in 1934. You can read more about US World Cup appearances in 1930 (part 1), 1930 (part 2), 1950, the 1950-1990 drought, 1990, 1994, 1998 (part 1), 1998 (part 2), 2002 (part 1), and 2002 (part2).

The site of the World Cup was in Europe for the first time when Italy was selected to be the host of the 1934 World Cup. David Goldblatt notes in The Ball is Round: A Global History of Football, that “Like the Uruguayans in 1930 the Italian government was prepared to throw money at the event.”

But where Uruguay was anxious to celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of independence from colonial rule, Benito Mussolini’s Italy was anxious to demonstrate the strength and superiority of fascism. As would become more clear at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, international sport was becoming a venue for political propaganda.

US soccer after the 1930 World Cup

With a squad of professionals strengthened by the experience of playing in the professional American Soccer League (ASL) in the 1920s, the US national team had surprised the soccer world by finishing third in the inaugural World Cup in Uruguay in 1930. But the toll taken by the American Soccer Wars leading up to the first World Cup was made worse by the trauma of the Great Depression and financial backing for the league withered away. While soccer had made great strides in widening its audience through the 1920s and for a time the ASL was second only to baseball as the most successful professional league in the United States, as David Wangerin writes in  Soccer in a Football World, “By 1933 the Depression had eroded much of the bedrock on which the game existed: the mills, factories, mines and other lodestones of immigrant labor.”

At the end of the spring season of 1933 the first ASL folded. While it was reestablished for the fall season of that year and would last until 1983, the league would never regain the level of success enjoyed by the first ASL and would be at best a semi-professional league. American soccer was entering in to a dark age.

The 1934 World Cup team

The management of the 1934 US World Cup team was distinctly Philadelphian. Team manager Elmer Schroeder had been born in the city and played soccer at the University of Pennsylvania when Penn was declared national collegiate champions in 1919 and 1920. Having managed the US team at the 1928 Olympics, Schroeder managed the Philadelphia German Americans team that won the National Amateur Cup in 1933 and 1934. He chose as the team’s coach David Gould, the Scottish immigrant who settled in Philadelphia and had played on the John A. Manz team that won the American Cup in 1897 and who later was an assistant coach at the University of Pennsylvania when Schroeder was there.

The 1934 US World Cup squad was chosen from a series of three tryout matches, with the first and third matches taking place in Philadelphia. In the first match on May 2, 1934, the US team beat the Pennsylvania League All-Stars 8-0. Two days later in Newark, New Jersey, the US side lost 4-0 to an ASL all-star team that included the legendary Archie Stark, who had not been selected for the US team. In the final match on May 5, the US beat the Eastern Pennsylvania All-Stars 2-0.

The squad of nineteen players included six amateur players from Pennsylvania. Five came from the Philadelphia German Americans,, including Peter Pietras, William Fiedler, Albert Harker, Herman Rapp and the captain of the team, Francis “Hun” Ryan, who had also played on the 1928 Olympic team. Only Pietras and Ryan would appear in the World Cup

Aldo "Buff" Donelli

The fifth player, Aldo “Buff” Donelli, had been born in Morgan, a town in western Pennsylvania. While attending Duquesne University, Donelli played for his college’s American football team on Saturdays and played in amateur soccer leagues on Sundays. In 1929 he was on the Heidelberg FC team that won the National Amateur Cup. Donelli was playing for the Curry Silver Tops in Pittsburgh when he received an invitation to tryout for the US team. He scored a hat trick in the first tryout game and would go on to score all of the US goals in the 1934 World Cup.

Also on the 1934 squad were veterans of the 1930 team including Jimmy Gallagher (Cleveland Slavia), Thomas Florie (Pawtucket Rangers), George Moorehouse and Billy Gonsalves (St. Louis Stix, Baer & Fuller).  Two other players came from St. Louis Stix, Baer & Fuller (winners of the US Challenge Cup 1933, 1934, 1935), three more from Pawtucket Rangers (runners up in 1934), and one each from the Chicago Wieboldt Wonder Bolts, Baltimore Canton, Brooklyn Celtic and the New York Americans.

The lead up to the 1934 World Cup

Just as the game of soccer had been hard hit by the Depression, so to had the United States Football Association. Because of its uncertain financial status, the USFA was late in submitting its application to compete in the 1934 World Cup. FIFA accepted the US application with the stipulation that the US would have to play a qualification game against the winner of the North American qualifying round of games, Mexico. The location of the qualification game would be in Rome at the Stadio Nazionale del Partito Nazionale Fascista, the National Stadium of the Fascist Party. One team would go home, the other would play in the World Cup.

The US arrived in Rome on May 14. The team had its first training session the next day playing baseball. They played soccer the next day. Aldo Donelli remembers in Tony Cirino’s U.S. Soccer vs The World “that there was no effort to get to know one another’s playing styles:”

just practicing movements up in front like passing for forwards and crossovers from the outside men. It is not a real big practice because there is no defense moving and you don’t know where the heck to move and in those days we did not move like they do now. You played center forward, you would be a center forward. You had to make your opening from the defense as you could and you did not stay too far away from that one position.

Donelli started the first scrimmage game the team played in Rome on the reserves side. At the half the reserves, filled out with three Roma players, were leading the first team 1-0. Donelli was moved to the first team for the second half and ended up scoring the winning goal.

Donelli was unknown to the professional players on the team and he had the impression that they were “disdainful of the amateur from the coal fields.” Donelli said later, “There was a clique among the New York and St. Louis players and they wanted to keep me out of the lineup.” Recognizing Donelli’s undeniable talent, Billy Gonsalves, the “Babe Ruth of American Soccer,” told Schroeder he would leave the team if Donelli wasn’t on the starting roster against Mexico.

Qualification game against Mexico

When the US met Mexico on May 24 for the qualifying match, the sold out crowd included Mussolini and the American ambassador. Donelli scored the first goal at the fifteen minute mark after receiving a long pass from the back. Mexico tied the game seven minutes later. Eight minutes after that Donelli scored again to put the US up 2-1.

In the second half a Mexico player was ejected for trying to pull Donelli down. With a one man advantage, the US and Donelli pressed for control of the match. In the 73rd minute Donelli had a breakaway to make the score 3-1. While Mexico managed to get a goal back, Donelli got another himself and the match ended with the US winning 4-2. Donelli was the first person to score four goals in a World Cup game.

The US team takes to the field in their match against Italy in the 1934 World Cup

The US v Italy

The 1934 World Cup was a single elimination tournament. Of the 32 teams that had applied to play, sixteen teams had qualified. Uruguay, host and winners of the first World Cup, declined to participate in protest of the several European countries which had declined to travel to South America. Only four of the sixteen countries that qualified – Brazil, Argentina, United States and Egypt – were from outside of Europe.

For its first match, the US had the misfortune to draw Italy. The Italian team had been completely revamped following a 4-2 defeat to the Austrian Wunderteam only three months earlier. Taking advantage of permissive FIFA regulations, the Italian coach, Vittorio Pozzo, constructed his new squad around a core of Argentinian players – the Rimpatriato – who could claim Italian heritage. Among those on the team were Raimondo Orsi, who had scored two goals playing for Argentina against the US in the 1928 Olympics, and Luisito Monti, who had been on the 1928 Olympic and 1930 World Cup squads for Argentina.

Mussolini and his son were in the sellout crowd at the Stadio Nazionale del PNF on May 27; the Italian papers made much of the fact that Mussolini had paid for the his own tickets. By the time Donelli scored for the US with a shot from 20 yards out in the 57th minute, the Italians had already scored three goals, all of them coming  between the 20th and 30th minute. When the match ended with Giuseppe Meazza‘s goal in the 90th minute, the Italians had scored another three goals in six minutes. The final score was 7-1 and the US was out of the World Cup. Italy would go on to win the World Cup, first beating Spain in two games after the first game was tied (and injuring at least four Spanish players along the way), next beating Austria 1-0 and then defeating Czechoslovakia in extra time in a match not without some controversy.

Billy Gonsalves told Soccer Monthly, “Losing to Italy was no disgrace. They went on to win the World Cup. We complimented ourselves on getting that one lonely goal against a team of that caliber, world class players from two world class soccer powers.” Donelli described the Italy team as “probably the greatest international team in the world.”

After a short tour playing in Germany, the US team returned home. Several US players, notably Gonsalves and Donelli, had received offers to play in Europe but, sensing the growing political tensions, both turned the offers down. While Gonsalves would continue to play soccer professionally, Donelli returned to American football and eventually coached the Pittsburgh Steelers and the then Cleveland Rams.

Those political tensions would lead the US not to enter the qualification for the 1938 World Cup in Paris. The Second World War and its aftermath would put the World Cup on hold until 1950. Meanwhile, US soccer would find its self increasingly marginalized and dependent on an ethnic and immigrant fan base for its survival.

You can read about the US team at the 1930 World Cup here and here.

The 1934 World Cup

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5 Comments

  1. Matthew Steel says:

    I find historical matches quite intriguing. I only play amateur soccer and these are my ideas for a great no-cost friendly:

    http://www.weekendnotes.com/soccer-match-at-aberfeldie-oval/

  2. Matthew says:

    I just found this through our author last night. Fantastic reading. Glad I didn’t miss this after the fact.

    Keep up the great work guys.

    Matthew
    The Shin Guardian.

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