1938 FIFA World Cup final tournament explained

The final tournament of the 1938 FIFA World Cup was a single-elimination tournament involving the 16 teams which qualified for the tournament. The tournament began with the round of 16 on 4 June and concluded with the final on 19 June 1938. Italy won the final 4–2 for their second World Cup title.[1]

All times are in Western European Summer Time (UTC+1).

Bracket

Round of 16

Switzerland vs Germany

Switzerland adopted a precursor version of the Catenaccio system to try stopping the talented German forwards. Thanks to this tactical system, the Swiss managed to frustrate the Germans despite going behind after a goal from Gauchel. Switzerland drew level with Abegglen after a mistake from Willibald Schmaus. Although the Germans pushed for the win, the game ended with a draw, forcing a replay.[2]

GK Willy Huber
RB Severino Minelli (c)
LB August Lehmann
RH Hermann Springer
CH Sirio Vernati
LH Ernst Lörtscher
OR Lauro Amadò
IR André Abegglen
IL Eugen Walaschek
OL Georges Aeby
CF Alfred Bickel
Manager:
Karl Rappan
GK Rudolf Raftl
RB Paul Janes
LB Willibald Schmaus
RH Andreas Kupfer
CH Hans Mock (c)
LH Albin Kitzinger
OR Ernst Lehner
IR Rudolf Gellesch
IL Wilhelm Hahnemann
OL
CF Josef Gauchel
Manager:
Sepp Herberger
Assistant referees


Johannes van Moorsel (Netherlands)
Paul Marenco (France)

Hungary vs Dutch East Indies

The difference in strength between the two teams was evident as the game resulted in a humiliation for the Dutch East Indies, which managed to hold out for just 13 minutes. In the second half, although Hungary relaxed their pressure, they were never truly troubled by the opponents.[2]

GK József Háda
RB Lajos Korányi
LB Sándor Bíró
RH Gyula Lázár
CH József Turay
LH István Balogh
OR Ferenc Sas
IR Gyula Zsengellér
IL Géza Toldi
OL Vilmos Kohut
CF György Sárosi (c)
Managers:
Károly Dietz
Alfréd Schaffer
GK Mo Heng Tan
RB Frans G. Hukom
LB Jack Samuels
RH Achmad Nawir (c)
CH Frans Alfred Meeng
LH Sutan Anwar
OR The Hong Djien
IR Suvarte Soedarmadji
IL Tjaak Pattiwael
OL M.J. Hans Taihuttu
CF Herman Zomers
Manager:
Jan Mastenbroek
Assistant referees


Charles de la Salle (France)
Karl Weingärtner (Germany)

Sweden vs Austria

Austria did not participate due to the Anschluss, so Sweden qualified directly to the quarter-finals.

Cuba vs Romania

Cuba, who had only qualified because other Latin American selections had withdrawn, impressed against Romania. Romania scored first thanks to a goal that different sources attribute to either Silviu Bindea or Nicolae Kovács. Cuba drew level through Héctor Socorro, who converted a cross from José Magriñá and then took the lead with a goal from Magriñá himself. However, equalisers from Iuliu Baratky and Ștefan Dobay forced a replay.[2]

GK Benito Carvajales
RB Jacinto Barquín
LB Manuel Chorens (c)
RH Joaquín Arias
CH José Antonio Rodríguez
LH Pedro Bergés
OR José Magriñá
IR Tomás Fernández
IL Juan Tuñas
OL Mario Sosa
CF Héctor Socorro
Manager:
José Tapia
GK Dumitru Pavlovici
RB Rudolf Bürger
LB Vasile Chiroiu
RH Vintilă Cossini
CH Gheorghe Rășinaru (c)
LH László Raffinsky
OR Silviu Bindea
IR Nicolae Kovács
IL Iuliu Bodola
OL Ștefan Dobay
CF Iuliu Baratky
Managers:
Alexandru Săvulescu
Costel Rădulescu
Assistant referees


Ferdinand Valprede (France)
Jean Merckx (France)

France vs Belgium

The hosts took the lead with only 35 seconds on the clock thanks to a shot from close range by winger Émile Veinante. France doubled their advantage soon after, but the lead was halved before the interval thanks to Hendrik Isemborghs, who connected with a free kick from Bernard Voorhoof. In the second half, Jean Nicolas got his brace, sealing the victory for France.[2]

GK Laurent Di Lorto
RB Hector Cazenave
LB Étienne Mattler (c)
RH Jean Bastien
CH Auguste Jordan
LH Raoul Diagne
OR Alfred Aston
IR Oscar Heisserer
IL Edmond Delfour
OL Émile Veinante
CF Jean Nicolas
Manager:
Gaston Barreau
GK Arnold Badjou
RB Robert Paverick
LB Corneel Seys
RH John Van Alphen
CH Émile Stijnen (c)
LH Alfons De Winter
OR Charles Vanden Wouwer
IR Bernard Voorhoof
IL Raymond Braine
OL Fernand Buyle
CF Hendrik Isemborghs
Manager:
Jack Butler
Assistant referees


Augustin Krist (Czechoslovakia)
Alfred Birlem (Germany)

Italy vs Norway

Mindful of the game played against Norway at the semi-finals of the 1936 Summer Olympics, when Italy managed to scrap a win only during extra time, Vittorio Pozzo was not to be overconfident. Italy managed to grab an early lead with Pietro Ferraris, but struggle to threaten Norway's goal further besides hitting the post once. In the second half, Norway was the better team, hitting the woodwork thrice and finally drawing level in the 83rd minute. Soon inside the extra time, Silvio Piola converted in goal a rebounded shot. Italy managed to hold out for the remaining time, reaching the quarter-finals.[2]

GK Aldo Olivieri
RB Eraldo Monzeglio
LB Pietro Rava
RH Pietro Serantoni
CH Michele Andreolo
LH Ugo Locatelli
OR Piero Pasinati
IR Giuseppe Meazza (c)
CF Silvio Piola
IL Giovanni Ferrari
OL Pietro Ferraris
Manager:
Vittorio Pozzo
GK Henry Johansen
RB Rolf Johannessen
LB Øivind Holmsen
RH Kristian Henriksen
CH Nils Eriksen (c)
LH Rolf Holmberg
OR Odd Frantzen
IR Reidar Kvammen
CF Knut Brynildsen
IL Magnar Isaksen
OL Arne Brustad
Manager:
Asbjørn Halvorsen
Assistant referees


Georges Boutoure (France)
Paul Tréhou (France)

Brazil vs Poland

See main article: Brazil v Poland (1938 FIFA World Cup).

GK Batatais
RB Machado
LB
RH Zezé Procópio
CH Martim (c)
LH Afonsinho
OR Lopes
IR Romeu
IL Perácio
OL Hércules
CF Leônidas
Manager:
Adhemar Pimenta
width=25
GK Edward Madejski
RB Antoni Gałecki
LB Władysław Szczepaniak (c)
RH Ewald Dytko
CH Erwin Nyc
LH Wilhelm Góra
OR Gerard Wodarz
IR Ernst Wilimowski
IL Leonard Piontek
OL Ryszard Piec
CF Friedrich Scherfke
Manager:
Józef Kałuża
Assistant referees


Louis Poissant (France)
Ernest Kissenberger (France)

|style="width:60%; vertical-align:top;"|Match rules
  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
  • Replay on a later date if scores still level.
  • No substitutions.

|}

Czechoslovakia vs Netherlands

Finalist at the 1934 World Cup, Czechoslovakia faced a modest Dutch team. Czechoslovakia dominated the ball but did not manage to convert their possession into clear-cut chances against a defensively sound Dutch team. In fact, Czechoslovakia managed to take the lead only in extra-time through a long-range effort, scoring a further two goals by the end of the game.[2]

GK František Plánička (c)
RB Jaroslav Burgr
LB Ferdinand Daučík
RH Josef Košťálek
CH Jaroslav Bouček
LH Vlastimil Kopecký
OR Jan Říha
IR Ladislav Šimůnek
IL Oldřich Nejedlý
OL Antonín Puč
CF Josef Zeman
Manager:
Josef Meissner
GK Adri van Male
RB Mauk Weber
LB Bertus Caldenhove
RH Bas Paauwe
CH Wim Anderiesen
LH Puck van Heel (c)
OR Frank Wels
IR Frans van der Veen
IL Kick Smit
OL Bertus de Harder
CF Leen Vente
Manager:
Bob Glendenning
Assistant referees


Eugené Olive (France)
Victor Sdez (France)

Replay: Switzerland vs Germany

This replay was five days later. Switzerland used the same line-ups as the first game, while Germany made a few changes. Georges Aeby was injured after a few minutes, forcing Switzerland to play with 10 men. Germany took soon advantage, scoring twice. However, Switzerland reacted well, and with Aeby back on the pitch in the second half, completed a remarkable comeback.[2]

GK Willy Huber
RB Severino Minelli (c)
LB August Lehmann
RH Hermann Springer
CH Sirio Vernati
LH Ernst Lörtscher
OR Lauro Amadò
IR André Abegglen
IL Eugen Walaschek
OL Georges Aeby
CF Alfred Bickel
Manager:
Karl Rappan
GK Rudolf Raftl
RB Paul Janes
LB Jakob Streitle
RH Andreas Kupfer
CH Ludwig Goldbrunner
LH Stefan Skoumal
OR Ernst Lehner
IR Josef Stroh
IL Fritz Szepan (c)
OL Leopold Neumer
CF Wilhelm Hahnemann
Manager:
Sepp Herberger
Assistant referees


Johannes van Moorsel (Netherlands)
Louis Baert (Belgium)

Replay: Cuba vs Romania

The performance of Cuba's replacement goalkeeper Juan Ayra was equally exceptional as the one from Benito Carvajales in the original match. Romania took the lead with Ștefan Dobay in the first half, but Cuba fought back and scored two goals in rapid succession soon after the beginning of the second and managed to hold on to the score against all odds and reach the quarter-finals.[2]

GK Juan Ayra
RB Jacinto Barquín
LB Manuel Chorens (c)
RH Joaquín Arias
CH José Antonio Rodríguez
LH Pedro Bergés
OR José Magriñá
IR Tomás Fernández
IL Juan Tuñas
OL Mario Sosa
CF Héctor Socorro
Manager:
José Tapia
GK Robert Sadowski
RB Rudolf Bürger
LB Iacob Felecan
RH Andrei Bărbulescu
CH Gheorghe Rășinaru (c)
LH László Raffinsky
OR Ion Bogdan
IR Ioachim Moldoveanu
IL Gyula Prassler
OL Ștefan Dobay
CF Iuliu Baratky
Managers:
Alexandru Săvulescu
Costel Rădulescu
Assistant referees


Georges Capdeville (France)
Paul Marenco (France)

Quarter-finals

Hungary vs Switzerland

Hungary looked like the stronger team as the Swiss were missing key players such as Georges Aeby and Severino Minelli. Hungary took the lead with a header from György Sárosi. The result was in doubt for most of the second half, until Gyula Zsengellér sealed the game with a long-range effort in the dying minutes. Switzerland's manager Karl Rappan resigned after the game.[2]

GK Antal Szabó
RB Lajos Korányi
LB Sándor Bíró
RH Gyula Lázár
CH József Turay
LH Antal Szalay
OR Ferenc Sas
IR Gyula Zsengellér
IL Jenő Vincze
OL Vilmos Kohut
CF György Sárosi (c)
Managers:
Károly Dietz
Alfréd Schaffer
GK Willy Huber
RB Adolf Stelzer
LB August Lehmann (c)
RH Hermann Springer
CH Sirio Vernati
LH Ernst Lörtscher
OR Lauro Amadò
IR André Abegglen
IL Eugen Walaschek
OL Tullio Grassi
CF Alfred Bickel
Manager:
Karl Rappan
Assistant referees


Alois Beranek (Germany)
Georges Boutoure (France)

Sweden vs Cuba

The result was never in doubt as Sweden was more accustomed to playing at this level. Gustav Wetterström netted a hat-trick before half-time, with the Cubans unable to deal with the relentless Swedish forward play, especially after Joaquín Arias was forced to leave the pitch injured. Tomás Fernández missed a penalty for Cuba.[2]

GK Henock Abrahamsson
RB Ivar Eriksson
LB Olle Källgren
RH Erik Almgren
CH Sven Jacobsson
LH Kurt Svanström
OR Arne Nyberg
IR Sven Jonasson
IL Tore Keller (c)
OL Gustav Wetterström
CF Harry Andersson
Manager:
József Nagy
GK Benito Carvajales
RB Jacinto Barquín
LB Manuel Chorens (c)
RH Joaquín Arias
CH José Antonio Rodríguez
LH Pedro Bergés
OR Pedro Ferrer
IR Tomás Fernández
IL Juan Tuñas
OL Juan Alonzo
CF Héctor Socorro
Manager:
José Tapia
Assistant referees


Karl Weingärtner (Germany)
Victor Sedez (France)

Italy vs France

See also: France–Italy football rivalry. Title-holders Italy met hosts France in what was considered one of the most enticing games of the tournament. Italy wore their Fascist affiliated black shirts despite the anti-Fascism protests that the team had received in France. Italy had a better start, scoring within the first nine minutes, but France levelled immediately. In the second half, France tried to control the ball but, in doing so, they left themselves open for the lethal Italian counter-attack. Silvio Piola scored a brace while unmarked, leading Italy to the semi-finals.[2]

GK Aldo Olivieri
RB Alfredo Foni
LB Pietro Rava
RH Pietro Serantoni
CH Michele Andreolo
LH Ugo Locatelli
OR Amedeo Biavati
IR Giuseppe Meazza (c)
IL Giovanni Ferrari
OL Gino Colaussi
CF Silvio Piola
Manager:
Vittorio Pozzo
GK Laurent Di Lorto
RB Hector Cazenave
LB Étienne Mattler (c)
RH Jean Bastien
CH Auguste Jordan
LH Raoul Diagne
OR Alfred Aston
IR Oscar Heisserer
IL Edmond Delfour
OL Émile Veinante
CF Jean Nicolas
Manager:
Gaston Barreau
Assistant referees


Hans Wüthrich (Switzerland)
Ivan Eklind (Sweden)

Brazil vs Czechoslovakia

See main article: Battle of Bordeaux (1938 FIFA World Cup).

GKWalter
RBDomingos da Guia
LBMachado
RH
CHMartim (c)
LH
ORLopes
IRRomeu
ILPerácio
OL
CFLeônidas
Manager:
Ademir Pimenta
width=25!width=25
GK František Plánička (c)
RB
LB Ferdinand Daučík
RH Josef Košťálek
CH Jaroslav Bouček
LH Vlastimil Kopecký
OR
IR Ladislav Šimůnek
IL Oldřich Nejedlý
OL
CF Josef Ludl
Manager:
Josef Meissner
Assistant referees:
Giuseppe Scarpi (Italy)
Charles de la Salle (France)

Replay: Brazil vs Czechoslovakia

Because of the troubling effect of the first game, which saw several players getting injured or sent off, both teams had to make many changes to their line-ups (nine for Brazil and five for Czechoslovakia). Czechoslovakia took the lead with Vlastimil Kopecký in the 25th minute, but in the second half, stand-in captain Leônidas levelled the score for Brazil. Soon after, the referee disallowed a goal by Karel Senecký, despite the Czechoslovak players stating that it had crossed the line. The European representative continued to attack following that moment, leaving space for the Brazilians to swiftly counter, which debutant Roberto took advantage of to score his nation's second goal.[2]

GKWalter
RBJaú
LBNariz
RHBritto
CHBrandão
LHArgemiro
ORRoberto
IRLuisinho
ILTim
OL
CFLeônidas (c)
Manager:
Ademir Pimenta
GKKarel Burkert
RB Jaroslav Burgr (c)
LB Ferdinand Daučík
RH Josef Košťálek
CH Jaroslav Bouček
LH Arnošt Kreuz
OR Václav Horák
IR Karel Senecký
IL Vlastimil Kopecký
OL
CF Josef Ludl
Manager:
Josef Meissner
Assistant referees


Ernest Kissenberger (France)
Paul Marenco (France)

Semi-finals

Hungary vs Sweden

Sweden took the lead after just 35 seconds, but that remained the only goal scored by them. Hungary quickly settled in control of the game, scoring thrice before half-time. Sweden, who had impressed in previous games, could not resist the vastly superior opponent, who scored two additional goals in the second half, cruising towards the final after a comfortable win.[2]

GKAntal Szabó
RBLajos Korányi
LBSándor Bíró
RHAntal Szalay
CHJózsef Turay
LHGyula Lázár
ORFerenc Sas
IRGyula Zsengellér
ILGéza Toldi
OLPál Titkos
CFGyörgy Sárosi (c)
Managers:
Károly Dietz
Alfréd Schaffer
GK Henock Abrahamsson
RB Ivar Eriksson
LB Olle Källgren
RH Erik Almgren
CH Sven Jacobsson
LH Kurt Svanström
OR Arne Nyberg
IR Sven Jonasson
IL Tore Keller (c)
OL Gustav Wetterström
CF Harry Andersson
Manager:
József Nagy
Assistant referees


Giuseppe Scarpi (Italy)
Johannes van Moorsel (Netherlands)

Italy vs Brazil

See also: Brazil–Italy football rivalry. The narrative leading to this highly anticipated match was built around an overconfident Brazil, who had impressed in the previous three matches. However, Italy had a better start to the game, creating the best chances but finding a well-positioned Walter stopping their attacks. In the second half, Italy soon found the net with Colaussi, before being awarded a penalty following a foul in the box by Domingos da Guia, his third in the tournament. The penalty was calmly converted by Meazza. At 2–0, Brazil pushed forward to break the Italian defence, but only managed to score a goal in the 87th minute with Romeu scoring from a corner kick. Some tense moments followed, but Italy managed to hold out for the remaining time, reaching their second final in a row.[2]

GK Aldo Olivieri
RB Alfredo Foni
LB Pietro Rava
RH Pietro Serantoni
CH Michele Andreolo
LH Ugo Locatelli
OR Amedeo Biavati
IR Giuseppe Meazza (c)
IL Giovanni Ferrari
OL Gino Colaussi
CF Silvio Piola
Manager:
Vittorio Pozzo
GK Walter
RB Domingos da Guia
LB Machado
RH Zezé Procópio
CH Martim (c)
LH Afonsinho
OR Lopes
IR Luisinho
IL Romeu
OL Patesko
CF Perácio
Manager:
Adhemar Pimenta
Assistant referees


Alois Beranek (Germany)
Paul Marenco (France)

Third place play-off

Sweden started on the front foot, taking a double lead inside 38 minutes. In the first half, Brazil looked uninspired until they got one back before half-time. In the second half, Brazil was reinvigorated and pushed for the comeback. In the second half, Leônidas scored twice and even let Patesko kick a penalty that he missed. Perácio secured the victory in the 80th minute.[2]

GK Batatais
RB Domingos da Guia
LB Machado
RH Zezé Procópio
CH Brandão
LH Afonsinho
OR Roberto
IR Romeu
IL Perácio
OL Patesko
CF Leônidas (c)
Manager:
Adhemar Pimenta
GK Henock Abrahamsson
RB Ivar Eriksson
LB Erik Nilsson
RH Erik Almgren
CH Arne Linderholm
LH Kurt Svanström (c)
OR Arne Nyberg
IR Sven Jonasson
IL Åke Andersson
OL Erik Persson
CF Harry Andersson
Manager:
József Nagy
Assistant referees


Ferdinand Valprede (France)
Eugené Olive (France)

Final

See main article: 1938 FIFA World Cup Final.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Molinaro . John F. . 1938 World Cup: Italy repeats as champions . . . 24 November 2009 . 8 April 2018.
  2. Book: Fielder, Robert . The Complete History of the World Cup . Kindle Edition . 2018.