As a middling European nation,
Austria have never touched the heights of peers such as Hungary, Czechoslovakia
or Netherlands at club or national level, however this might have been very
different but for the rise of Nazism which destroyed the great Austrian
Wunderteam of the 1930s created by Hugo Meisl.
Meisl was born in Bohemia in 1881
and after moving to Vienna in his youth initially pursued a career in banking
but switched to work for the Austrian Football Association, after becoming a
top class referee, officiating internationals and at the 1912 Olympics.
As an administrator he pioneered the
establishment of professional league football in Austria in the early 1920s and
also created the Mitropa Cup, one of the first international competitions for
club sides in Central Europe which lasted until 1992, and the Central European
International Cup for national teams. These competitions were effectively the
forerunners of the Champions League and the Euros.
Appointed coach of the Austrian
national team in 1913, and assuming full control in 1919, Meisl was also an innovator
on the pitch, working with other men who made modern football such as Herbert
Chapman (#4), Vitorio Pozzo (#10) and Jimmy Hogan (#7). Working closely with
the latter, he was keen to keep the ball on the ground encouraging crisp
passing. Using the successful Scots team as their template, what followed has
been cited as the first example of total football which Austrian Ernst Happel
(#20) exported to the Netherlands in the 1960s.
As the 1920s drew to a close Austria
became the pre-eminent European team and in a twenty month period from April
1931 went on a fourteen match unbeaten run which included winning the Central
European International Cup with a 4-2 win over Italy. This run also featured
the first ever win by a non-British team over the Scots who had earlier been
Meisl’s source of inspiration.
Fielding one of the leading players
in the world, Mathias Sindelaar, known as the paper man (Die Papierene) for his
slight appearance which saw him ghost through challenges, Austria were
naturally favourites to win the first World Cup to be played in Europe in 1934
in Italy.
A tough quarter-final win over
rivals Hungary, came at the cost of losing Johann Horvarth to injury. They then
faced a determined host nation in the semi-final who took an early lead, and
then desperately held on to it on a heavy pitch which hampered the Austrians’
passing game. The Italians won the match 1-0 and went on to win the Cup by
beating Czechoslovakia 2-1. Austria finished fourth having lost the play off to
Germany 3-2.
Two years later Meisl took his team
one step further to the Olympic final in Germany. In the run up to the 1936
games, Austria became only the fifth non British team to beat isolationist
England with a 2-1 win in Vienna. At the finals a quarter-final defeat by Peru
was annulled by the head of the host state, Adolf Hitler, which led to the
Peruvians’ withdrawal. Italy again proved to be Austria’s nemesis, winning the
final 2-1, the runners up spot remaining Austria’s best achievement to date.
Meisl died in 1937, and within a year his Wunderteam had been
broken up by the Nazis in the wake of the Anschluss. After qualifying for the
1938 World Cup in France, the country was annexed by Germany in March and
within two weeks the Austrian FA was abolished, with Germany now representing
the whole territory at the finals as FIFA accepted Austria’s withdrawal. The
Austrian team were all eligible for selection for Germany but were given one
last outing in a “reunification” derby. This was supposed to finish in a draw
but wearing a special red and white kit to assert their national identity the
Austrians eased to a win with two late Sindelaar goals. Having celebrated
vigorously in front of the watching Nazi leaders, Sindelaar went on to
deliberately miss a further chance. He further demonstrated his refusal to bow
to fascism by refusing to play for the new national team and was found dead in
mysterious circumstances in 1939. He was voted Austria’s Sportsman of the
century in 2000.
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