No other events in this sport
|
| Event type

Football, Men

Date28 August – 5 September 1920
StatusOlympic
LocationOlympisch Stadion, Antwerpen / Jules Ottenstadion, Gent / Stade du Parc Duden, Saint-Gilles / Stadion Broodstraat, Antwerpen
Participants190 from 14 countries
FormatBergvall System, with winners progressing to next round. Losing quarter-finalists plus losers to the winners played for 2nd and 3rd place.

At the 1984 Olympics, the qualifying round matches in the football tournament were spread all over the United States, a situation similar to that which exists in the World Cup tournament. The first time this occurred in international matches was in the 1920 Olympics. While the bulk of the matches were played in Antwerp (although in two different stadia), some early round matches were played in Gent and St. Gilles. From the quarter-finals onward, and including the second- and third-place matches, most of the matches were played in the Beerschot Stadium, the main Olympic Stadium.

Not all the world’s top football nations were present at Antwerp. Germany and Hungary did not compete, as the nations were not invited to the 1920 Olympics because of their role in World War I. Great Britain almost did not compete. In early 1919, England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales withdrew from FIFA and formed their own federation, the Federation of National Football Association. Surprisingly, the United States protested Britain’s presence in the 1920 football tournament, since Great Britain was no longer a FIFA member. Belgium and France supported this motion, but Great Britain was allowed to compete. Among the original 15 entries, Switzerland withdrew, officially for financial reasons, but in reality the football community in the country was hopelessly split over sporting contacts with Germany. After French speaking Swiss boycotted a friendly match against Germany in June, the Deutschschweizer insisted the nation withdraw from the Games, leaving 14 nations in the field.

In the semi-final between the Czech and French teams, the Dutch referee replaced the Czech linesmen after he was accused of showing bias towards his countrymen and a local official took his place for the last half hour of the game.

The final round match of the 1920 football tournament was contested between Belgium and Czechoslovakia. The referee was supposedly neutral, John Lewis, a Brit. But the Czechs were not pleased with his selection, as according to the Czech player Sedláček, he had been the victim of violence at a match in Praha and wanted revenge on the Czechs. In addition, the crowd of 40,000 was decidedly in favor of the home team. Langenus described the scene, “Both by the side of the stands and by the side of the terraces, waves of people penetrated the stadium, overrunning all obstacles … The Olympic trench had grown into an enormous gate via which thousands poured in. A cordon of soldiers was thrown round the sidelines in an attempt to at least keep the crowd off the playing field. All around the stadium, fans were handing like bunches of grapes from the colonnades and from the trees.”

Belgium took an early lead, scoring at the 6- and 30-minute mark to lead 2-0. The Czechs were becoming very upset over Lewis’s calls. Finally, after a foul was called against Karel Steiner on Robert Coppée at the 39-minute mark, the Czech team left the field, withdrawing in protest of the officiating. They could not be convinced to return to the field and the Belgians were declared the Olympic champions.

The Czechoslovakian team was disqualified and not awarded second place. Their protest was not allowed, the terms of which read as follows (translated from the French):

  1. We were granted an English linesman, which was a contradiction against the published rules, in which it was noted that each participating nation had the right to two linesmen. This rules violation was an important prejudice against us, because the English linesman was not impartial and that is why we demand the annulment of the match.

  2. Most of the decisions by the referee M. Lewis were incorrect and it was evident that he was prejudiced against our team. Also, both of the goals were marked by Belgians only, but after false decisions of the judge, and we demand a rigorous inquiry on this point.

  3. In the course of the match, the Belgian soldiers were introduced as one, and they encircled the field and their provocative and menacing conduct prevented our team from being able to play a peaceful and regulated game. After the regrettable incident at the end of the match, a wild mob of soldiers destroyed our flag at the end in a manner that we were unable to continue to participate until a satisfactory apology for the destruction of our flag was made to the entire team.

The football tournament was to be decided by the Bergvall System, in which teams losing to the champions then contested a new tournament for second place, and then a separate third-place tournament was held among all teams losing to the winners and runners-up. A new tournament was thus begun to determine the second place team. Czechoslovakia had been disqualified in the final, and thus did not compete in the second-place tournament. The second-place tournament began on 30 August, with teams that had lost in early rounds playing off to get into the tournament. The tournament proper began late on 2 September, after the final match “ended“. Many of the French players had already left Antwerp and were not available to play so the French did not field a team in the silver medal play-off tournament. As a losing semi-finalist, France would have been matched against the Netherlands, which lost in the semi-finals to Belgium. The other teams were playing off for the right to face the winner of the France-Netherlands match. When France withdrew, The Netherlands walked over into the second-place finals, where they faced Spain, losing 3-1.

In addition to their gold medals, the Belgian football team was awarded possession of the Challenge Prize that had been donated by The Football Association of England.

PosNumberTeamNOC
1BelgiumBELGold
Jean De Bie
Armand Swartenbroeks
Oscar Verbeeck
Joseph Musch
Émile Hanse
André Fierens
Louis Van Hege
Rik Larnoe
Mathieu Bragard
Robert Coppée
Désiré Bastin
Félix Balyu
Fernand Nisot
Georges Hebdin
August Pelsmaeker DNS
Julien Cnudde DNS
Léopold De Groof DNS
Frans Dogaer DNS
Georges Michel DNS
Léon Vandermeiren DNS
Fernand Wertz DNS
Ivan Thys DNS
CoachWillie Maxwell
2SpainESPSilver
Ricardo Zamora
Vallana
Mariano Arrate
Samitier
Belauste
Sancho
Ramón Eguiazábal
Sabino
Sesúmaga
Patricio Arabolaza
Pichichi
Acedo
Artola
Pagaza
Otero
Joaquín Vázquez
Moncho Gil
Silverio
Agustín Eizaguirre DNS
Manuel Carrasco DNS
Román Emery DNS
Ramón González DNS
CoachPaco Brú
3NetherlandsNEDBronze
Dick MacNeill
Harry Dénis
Ben Verweij
Leo Bosschart
Frits Kuipers
Henk Steeman
Oscar, Ridder van Rappard
Jan van Dort
Ber Groosjohan
Felix, Jonkheer von Heijden
Evert Jan Bulder
Jan de Natris
Jaap Bulder
Arie Bieshaar
Piet Peereboom DNS
Evert van Linge DNS
Franz Tempel DNS
Eb van der Kluft DNS
Tinus van Beurden DNS
Koos Boerdam DNS
Jan de Vries DNS
Herman Legger DNS
CoachFred Warburton
4ItalyITA
Giuseppe Giaccone
Piero Campelli
Antonio Bruna
Renzo Devecchi
Virginio Rosetta
Ettore Reynaudi
Mario Meneghetti
Gracco De Nardo
Cesare Lovati
Luigi Burlando
Giuseppe Parodi
Rinaldo Roggero
Pio Ferraris
Giuseppe Forlivesi
Enrico Sardi
Adolfo Baloncieri
Emilio Badini
Guglielmo Brezzi
Aristodemo Santamaria
Adevildo De Marchi
Giustiniano Marucco
Guido Ara DNS1
CoachGiuseppe Milano
=5NorwayNOR
Sigurd Wathne
Otto Aulie
Per Skou
Adolph Wold
Asbjørn Halvorsen
Gunnar Andersen
Michael Paulsen
Einar Wilhelms
Johnny Helgesen
Einar Gundersen
Per Holm
Rolf Aas
John Johnsen
Ellef Mohn
Arne Andersen
Rolf Thorstvedt
Alf Lagesen DNS
Kaare Engebretsen DNS
Erich Graff-Wang DNS
Alexander Olsen DNS
CoachJim McPherson
=5SwedenSWE
Robert Zander
Valdus Lund
Fritte Hillén
Bertil Nordenskjöld
Ragnar Wicksell
Karl Gustafsson
Albert Öijermark
Rune Bergström
Albert Olsson
Herbert Carlsson
Albin Dahl
Mauritz Sandberg
Vidar Stenborg DNS
Fritz Carlsson DNS
Erik Hjelm DNS
Nils Karlsson DNS
Sven Klang DNS
John Torstensson DNS
Rune Wenzel DNS
Erik Dahlström DNS
Einar Johansson-Halling DNS
Henning Svensson DNS
CoachHerbert Butterworth
7FranceFRA
Albert Parsis
Léon Huot
Édouard Baumann
Jean Batmale
René Petit
François Hugues
Jules Devaquez
Jean Boyer
Paul Nicolas
Henri Bard
Raymond Dubly
Jean Le Bidois DNS
Pierre Mony DNS
Alfred Roth DNS
Maurice Gravelines DNS
Pierre Gastiger DNS
Maurice Leroux DNS
Nicolas Margueres DNS
Maurice Gastiger DNS
Oscar Bongard DNS
André Lassalle DNS
Philippe Bonnardel DNS
CoachFreddie Pentland
=8DenmarkDEN
Sophus Hansen
Nils Middelboe
Steen Steensen Blicher
Christian Grøthan
Ivar Lykke
Gunnar Aaby
Leo Dannin
Mikael Rohde
Viggo Jørgensen
Alf Olsen
Bernhard Andersen
Poul Graae DNS
Carl Hansen DNS
Jens Jensen DNS
Vilhelm Jørgensen DNS
Poul Nielsen DNS
Svend Ringsted DNS
Fritz Tarp DNS
Holger Forchhammer DNS
Samuel Thorsteinsson DNS
Paul Berth DNS
Kristian Middelboe DNS
CoachJack Carr
=8EgyptEGY
Kamel Taha
Mohamed El-Sayed
Abdel Salam Hamdy
Riadh Shawki
Ali El-Hassani
Gamil Osman
Tewfik Abdullah
Hussein Hegazi
Hassan Allouba
Sayed Abaza
Zaki Osman
Khalil Housny DNS
Mohammed El-Anwar DNS
Mohammed Gaber DNS
Abbas Safwat DNS
Mahmoud Mokhtar Saqr DNS
CoachHussein Hegazi
=8Great BritainGBR
James Mitchell
Arthur Knight
Kenneth Hunt
George Atkinson
Charles Harbidge
Frederick Nicholas
Herbert Prince
Dick Sloley
Jackie Hegan
John Payne
Maurice Bunyan
Jack Brennan DNS
Harry Buck DNS
Basil Gates DNS
Herbert Hambleton DNS
Wesley Harding DNS
Charles Julian DNS
Humphrey Ward DNS
G. Wiley DNS
CoachGeorge Latham
=8GreeceGRE
Antonios Fotiadis
Nikolaos Kaloudis
Agamemnon Gkilis
Dimitrios Gotis
Apostolos Nikolaidis
Christos Peppas
Theodoros Nikolaidis
Ioannis Andrianopoulos
Georgios Chatziandreou
Theodoros Dimitriou
Georgios Kalafatis
Dimitris Demertzis DNS
Sotiris Despotopoulos DNS
Georgios Andrianopoulos DNS
Giannis Stavropoulos DNS
Vasilis Samios DNS
CoachGeorgios Kalafatis
=8LuxembourgLUX
Arthur Leesch
Jean Massard
Robert Elter
Tiny Langers
Léon Metzler
Émile Hamilius
Michel Ungeheuer
Camille Schumacher
Jos Koetz
Thomas Schmit
Charles Krüger
Charles Kieffer DNS
J. Kieffer DNS
Jean Valin DNS
J. Rémy DNS
Dominque Kelsen DNS
Coach?
=8YugoslaviaYUG
Dragutin Vrđuka
Vjekoslav Župančić
Branimir Porobić
Jaroslav Šifer
Stanko Tavčar
Nikola Simić
Rudolf Rupec
Dragutin Vragović
Slavin Cindrić
Josip Šolc
Artur Dubravčić
Emil Perška
Andrija Kojić
Ivan Granec
Jovan Ružić
Branko Jopantević DNS
Jovan Pojić DNS
Nikola Stanković DNS
CoachVeljko Ugrinić
ACCzechoslovakiaTCH
Rudolf Klapka
Antonín Hojer
Miroslav Pospíšil
Karel Steiner
František Kolenatý
Karel Pešek
Antonín Perner
Emil Seifert
Josef Sedláček
Antonín Janda
Václav Pilát
Jan Vaník
Otto Mazal-Škvajn
Jan Plaček
František Peyr DNS2
Josef Kuchař DNS
Václav Šubrt DNS
Jaroslav Hromadník DNS
Václav Prošek DNS
Josef Janík DNS
CoachJohn Madden
DNSSwitzerlandSUI
Coach?
DNSPolandPOL
CoachGeorge Burford

Round One

Date28 August 1920
FormatWinners advanced to the quarter-finals. Loser to eventual winner advanced to the semi-finals of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #128 Aug 10:00CzechoslovakiaTCH7 – 0YugoslaviaYUG
Match #228 Aug 15:30NorwayNOR3 – 1Great BritainGBR
Match #328 Aug 15:30ItalyITA2 – 1EgyptEGY
Match #428 Aug 15:30SpainESP1 – 0DenmarkDEN
Match #528 Aug 17:30NetherlandsNED3 – 0LuxembourgLUX
Match #628 Aug 17:30SwedenSWE9 – 0GreeceGRE
Match #728 AugBelgiumBELPolandPOLwalkover
Match #828 AugFranceFRASwitzerlandSUIwalkover

Quarter-Finals

Date29 August 1920
FormatWinners advanced to the semi-finals. Losers played each other in round one of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #129 Aug 10:00NetherlandsNED5 – 4SwedenSWEAET
Match #229 Aug 15:00FranceFRA3 – 1ItalyITA
Match #329 Aug 16:30CzechoslovakiaTCH4 – 0NorwayNOR
Match #429 Aug 17:00BelgiumBEL3 – 1SpainESP

Semi-Finals

Date31 August 1920
FormatWinners advanced to the final. Loser to eventual winner advanced to the semi-finals of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #131 Aug 15:35CzechoslovakiaTCH4 – 1FranceFRA
Match #231 Aug 17:25BelgiumBEL3 – 0NetherlandsNED

Final Round

Date2 – 5 September 1920
FormatLoser advanced to the semi-finals of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match 1/202 Sep 17:30BelgiumBELCzechoslovakiaTCH

Second Place Tournament - Round One

Date31 August – 1 September 1920
FormatWinners advanced to round two of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #131 Aug 10:00ItalyITA2 – 1NorwayNORAET
Match #201 Sep 16:30SpainESP2 – 1SwedenSWE

Second Place Tournament - Round Two

Date2 September 1920
FormatWinners advanced to the semi-finals of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #102 Sep 16:00SpainESP2 – 0ItalyITA

Second Place Tournament - Semi-Finals

Date4 September 1920
FormatWinners advanced to the final of the second-place tournament.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #104 SepSpainESPwalkover
Match #204 SepNetherlandsNEDwalkover

Second Place Tournament - Final

Date5 September 1920 — 15:00
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match 2/305 Sep 15:00SpainESP3 – 1NetherlandsNED

Consolation Round

Date3 September 1920
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #103 Sep 10:00EgyptEGY4 – 2YugoslaviaYUG