Peru 4–2 Austria (1936 Summer Olympics association football)
Event | 1936 Summer Olympics | ||||||
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Date | 8 August 1936 | ||||||
Venue | Hertha Platz, Berlin | ||||||
Referee | Thoralf Kristiansen (Norway) | ||||||
Attendance | 5,000 |
Peru v Austria was a football match played on 8 August 1936 during the Summer Olympics in Berlin.
Background
The Peru squad mixed members of Alianza Lima, Universitario de Deportes and the 1935 league champions Sport Boys.[1]
Pre-match
Austria
Austria had won its first-round match against Egypt with a 3-1 win.[2]
Peru
In the first round, Peru had an easy win on Finland winning with 7-3, with Teodoro Fernández scoring five Peruvian goals.[3]
Match
First half
Walter Werginz opened scoring for Austria in the 23rd minute, to give the Austrian side a one-goal lead. Shortly after, in the 37th minute of action, Klement Steinmetz put a ball past Peruvain keeper Juan Valdivieso to double Austria's early lead. After 45 minutes of play, the scoreline was 0-2 in favour of the Austrians.
Second half
Trailing 0-2, with elimination from the tournament at stake, the Peruvians entered the second half with renewed determination to prolong their Olympic stint. In the 75th minute, the Peruvians produced their first goal as a result of an effort on net by Jorge Alcalde. Six minutes later, in the 81st minute of play, Alejandro Villanueva scored the equalizer. The remaining minutes of the match saw no further scoring, and the match went into extra-time.
Overtime
The match was highly contested, and the game went into overtime when the Peruvians tied the Austrians after being two goals behind. Peru scored 5 goals during overtime, of which 3 were nullified by the referee, and won by the final score of 4-2.[4] [5]
Details
August 8, 1936 17:30 |
Peru | 4–2 (a.e.t.) 1 | Austria |
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Alcalde 75' Villanueva 81' 117' Fernández 119' |
Report | Wergin 23' Steinmetz 37' |
Berlin Hertha-BSC Platz Referee: Thoralf Kristiansen (NOR) |
Peru
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Austria
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Assistant referees:
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Post-match
Austria protests
The Austrians demanded a rematch on the grounds that Peruvian fans had stormed the field, and so the field did not meet the requirements for a football game.[5][6] Austria further claimed that the Peruvian players had manhandled the Austrian players and that spectators, one holding a revolver, had "swarmed down on the field."[7] Peru was notified of this situation, and they attempted to go to the assigned meeting but were delayed by a German parade.[5]
Controversial decision
At the end, the Peruvian defense was never heard, and the Olympic Committee and FIFA sided with the Austrians. The rematch was scheduled to be taken under close grounds on August 10, and later re-scheduled to be taken on August 11.[6][7][8]
Peru withdraws
As a sign of protest against these actions, which the Peruvians deemed as insulting and discriminatory, the complete Olympic delegations of Peru and Colombia left Germany.[9][10] Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, and Mexico expressed their solidarity with Peru.[7] Michael Dasso, a member of the Peruvian Olympic Committee, stated: "We've no faith in European athletics. We have come here and found a bunch of merchants."[11] The game was awarded to Austria by default.[7]
In Peru, angry crowds protested against the decisions of the Olympic Committee by tearing down an Olympic flag, throwing stones at the German consulate, refusing to load German vessels in the docks of Callao, and listening to inflammatory speeches which included President Oscar Benavides Larrea's mention of "the crafty Berlin decision."[7] To this day, it is not known with certainty what exactly happened in Germany. It is popularly believed that Adolf Hitler and the Nazi authorities might have had some involvement in this situation, though this was not claimed at the time.[10]
Peru was coached by national manager Alberto Denegri,[12] and Austria was under the command of English James Hogan.
Aftermath
Austria won silver in the Olympics and Peru, a few years later, became South American champions.
References
- ↑ Roberto Salinas (17 June 2013). "Continuando con las cronicas ..." (in Spanish). CPDP. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
- ↑ Fifa Report; Austria - Egypt 3:1
- ↑ Fifa Report; Peru - Finland 7:3
- ↑ Paul Doyle. "The forgotten story of … football, farce and fascism at the 1936 Olympics - Paul Doyle". the Guardian. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
- 1 2 3 "Las épocas doradas del fútbol peruano y las Olimpiadas de 1936" (PDF). Beta.upc.edu.pe (in Spanish). Retrieved 2009-02-14.
- 1 2 "Controversia – Berlín 36. Un mito derrumbado (The Berlin '36 Controversy. A myth debunked.)" (in Spanish). Larepublica.com.pe. Retrieved 2009-02-15.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Sport: Olympic Games (Concl'd)". Time.com. 1936-08-24. Retrieved 2010-01-24.
- ↑ hitler se entera que Perú le ganó a Austria. 24 July 2010. Retrieved 15 March 2016 – via YouTube.
- ↑ http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:muoMOUbxrLYJ:www.todosports.com/inicio/articulos/gente/2800.aspx&cd=4&hl=ru&ct=clnk&gl
- 1 2 "Las Olimpiadas de Berlín". futbolperuano.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2007-08-21.
- ↑ "Sport: Olympic Games (Concl'd)". Time. 1936-08-24. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ↑ http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament=512/edition=197041/teams/team=43929.html