Breslau Eleven

The Breslau Eleven (German: Breslau-Elf) was the name given to the Germany national football team who defeated Denmark 8–0 at Hermann-Göring-Sportfeld in Breslau, Nazi Germany (now Wrocław, Poland) on 16 May 1937. Coached by Sepp Herberger, the German side is generally regarded as one of the most famous teams in German football history.[1] Likewise, the defeat has been characterized as the lowest point for Danish football.[2] In Denmark, the game became known for posterity as the Battle of Breslau (Danish: Slaget i Breslau).[3]

Battle of Breslau
EventExhibition game
Date16 May 1937
VenueHermann Göring Stadion, Breslau
RefereeAugustin Krist (Czechoslovakia)
Attendance40,000

Background

The core players of the Breslau Eleven were first assembled during the 1934 FIFA World Cup under the management of Otto Nerz. The dominant German side of the era was Schalke 04, but the club's style of play, a quick passing game known as the Kreisel, was not suited to the more physical and direct tactical approach used by Nerz from observing English football. Consequently, only Fritz Szepan was a regular for both Schalke and the national team.

Nerz's tactics were initially successful, with Germany achieving a surprise third-place finish at the World Cup. Nerz had opted to make several changes to the side in the third-place playoff against Austria, with Hans Jakob replacing Willibald Kreß in goal due to the latter's poor performance in the semi final defeat against Czechoslovakia. Also added to the starting line up was Reinhold Münzenberg, allowing Szepan, who had previously been deployed as a centre half, to play in his more familiar position as an inside forward.

The success at the World Cup resulted in high expectations for the side during the 1936 Summer Olympics held in Berlin, but were defeated 2–0 by Norway in the second round. The result effectively cost Nerz his job as he began handing over control to assistant Sepp Herberger over the next 18 months. Following the Olympics, Herberger opted to rebuild the team based on Schalke's Kreisel system, and Szepan's team mates Rudi Gellesch and Adolf Urban soon became regulars for the national side.

The match

Germany 80 Denmark
Lehner  7'
Siffling  33', 40', 44', 48', 65'
Urban  70'
Szepan  78'
Attendance: 40,000
Referee: Augustin Krist (Czechoslovakia)
GK1Hans Jakob
DF2Paul Janes
DF3Reinhold Münzenberg
MF4Andreas Kupfer
MF5Ludwig Goldbrunner
MF6Albin Kitzinger
FW7Ernst Lehner
FW8Rudolf Gellesch
FW9Otto Siffling
FW10Fritz Szepan (c)
FW11Adolf Urban
Manager:
Sepp Herberger
GK1Svend Jensen
DF2Poul Hansen
DF3Oscar Jørgensen
MF4Carl Larsen
MF5Henry Nielsen
MF6Poul Jensen
FW7Helmuth Søbirk
FW8Eyolf Kleven
FW9Pauli Jørgensen (c)
FW10Kaj Uldaler
FW11Eigil Thielsen

Aftermath

Coached by Sepp Herberger, the German side went undefeated in all eleven matches they played in 1937, winning ten of them.[4] The Breslau Eleven was broken up following the Anschluss with Austria in March 1938. Due to political pressure, Herberger was forced to include Austrian-born players in his team for the upcoming 1938 FIFA World Cup. The team failed to live up to expectations, and was defeated in the first round of the tournament by Switzerland.

For the Danish national team, the loss is still the largest in team history. The loss would have been even deservedly bigger, had goalkeeper Svend Jensen not played the best game of his international career. Seven Danish players were subsequently dropped for the next national team game, including Carl Larsen, who had remarked that it was simply too warm weather for football on the day.[2] The 0-8 defeat was to be Carl Larsen's only game for Denmark. The poor Danish play was later rationalized as being caused by very poor fitness, and, perhaps most significantly, a clash of tactical formations among the Danish defenders. Svend Jensen, Poul Hansen, and Henry Nielsen played the 2-3-5 tactic used in their club (B.93), while Carl Larsen and Poul Jensen played the modern WM formation of their club (AB).[2] Not until English coach Edward Magner was hired in 1939, did the Danish amateurs undergo sufficient physical conditioning, and were properly schooled in the WM tactic.[5]

gollark: Rust inevitably incurses into all locations, yes.
gollark: Asm2bf slowly becomes, inevitably, Rust.
gollark: Maybe the original code somehow relies on it being floats rather than u16s but I don't see how it would be.
gollark: As opposed to deliberate apioform generation.
gollark: I managed to eke out a few performance improvements and remove a significant amount of dependencies, and yet I can't work out why it's apioforming unwantedly.

See also

References

Specific

  1. Hesse-Lichtenberger, Ulrich (2003). Tor! The story of German football.
  2. Lundberg, Knud (1986). Dansk Fodbold. 1. Fra Breslau til Bronceholdet. Copenhagen: Rhodos. pp. 20–23. ISBN 87-7245-132-7.
  3. Lybech, Arne; John Laden Jensen (2005). Fra marken til Parken. Hjørring: Lindtofte Forlag. p. 16. ISBN 87-989914-7-7.
  4. Muras, Udo (16 May 2007). "Nur Hitler konnte sie stoppen" (in German). Retrieved 23 February 2011.
  5. Lundberg, Knud (1986). Dansk Fodbold. 1. Fra Breslau til Bronceholdet. Copenhagen: Rhodos. pp. 25, 28–29. ISBN 87-7245-132-7.
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