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Italy,
one of the unsuccessful applicants for the honor of staging
the 1930 tournament, was chosen as host by the FIFA for the
second FIFA World Cup.
Italy's
triumph left both Argentina and Brazil disenchanted after
traveling 8,000 miles (13,000 km) for just one game each in
the first round. Italy beat Czechoslovakia 2-1 after extra
time in the final after trailing 1-0 until eight minutes
from time.
Staged
between 27 May and 10 June 1934, this FIFA World Cup was
markedly more encouraging than its forerunner. Thirty-two
nations took part so that a preliminary round was necessary
(even the hosts, Italy, had to qualify), which qualified 16
teams for the finals. As a retort to the many withdrawals of
European teams four years earlier, several South American
nations, such as Argentina and Brazil, did not send their
best teams to Italy. Uruguay declined to participate and
defend its title.
A tough struggle
Predictably then, only European
teams reached the quarterfinals. The battle reached its
height in Florence. In grueling
heat,
a steely Spanish defense bravely resisted the hard and
almost violent team of the Squadra Azzurra and at the end of
extra-time the score stood at 1-1. The match was to be
replayed the next day. In an effort to rejuvenate their
troops, both coaches called on fresh legs (five changes in
the Italian team and seven for Spain), but player after
player collapsed from sheer exhaustion. Happily for the
locals, the Squadra center forward Giuseppe Meazza scored
the only goal of the game. Two days later, a similar
scenario took place in the semi-final against Austria, in
Milan. On a San Siro pitch resembling a quagmire after a
torrential storm, it was again Meazza, playing his fourth
game in a week, who scored the winning goal and qualified
his team for the final. Italy's opponents were to be
Czechoslovakia, conquerors of Germany.
On Sunday 10
June, the whole of Italy was holding its breath. There were
still twenty minutes remaining when, from a corner, the
Czechoslovakia left-winger Puc put his team ahead. The
stadium was silenced. With only a few minutes to go,
however, the Italo-Argentinian Orsi equalised for Italy,
forcing the game into extra-time. Italy suffered a blow when
marksman Meazza was injured in a tackle, but he recovered
sufficiently to lay on the winning goal for his team mate
Schiavio. The Squadra Azzurra had displayed tenacity as well
as undeniable footballing abilities and truly deserved to
win.
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Round 1
Germany 5, Belgium 2
Sweden 3, Argentina 2
Switzerland 3, Holland 2
Czechoslovakia
2, Romania 1
Austria 3, France 2
Hungary 4, Egypt 2
Spain 3, Brazil 1
Italy 7,
United States 1Quarterfinals
Germany 2, Sweden 1
Czechoslovakia
3, Switzerland 2
Austria 2, Hungary 1
Italy 1, Spain 1 (Italy 1, Spain 0) |
Semifinals
Czechoslovakia
3, Germany 1
Italy 1, Austria 0
3rd Place
Germany 3, Austria 2
Final
Italy 2, Czechoslovakia 1 |
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