Gene Olaff

Eugene A. "Gene" Olaff (September 23, 1920 January 17, 2017) was an American soccer goalkeeper. He played in the National Soccer League of New York and the American Soccer League. Olaff also earned one cap with the United States in 1949. Prior to his death, he resided in Florence Township, New Jersey.[1]

Gene Olaff
Personal information
Full name Eugene A. Olaff
Date of birth September 23, 1920
Place of birth Bayonne, New Jersey, U.S.
Date of death January 17, 2017 (aged 96)
Place of death Florence, New Jersey, U.S.
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
1933–1935 Bayonne Rangers juniors
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1935–1936 Bayonne Rangers
1936–1937 New York Brookhattan
1937–1939 Hatikvoh
1939–1941 Swedish F.C.
1941–1953 Brooklyn Hispano
National team
1949 United States 1 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Youth

Olaff’s father was a Swedish seaman who jumped ship in the United States. He joined the U.S. National Guard in order to gain his U.S. citizenship and married Irene MacGregor. Olaff was born in 1920 and his sister in 1927. After his mother died in 1937, the year Olaff graduated from high school, and his father in 1941, Olaff took on the responsibility of raising his younger sister while also marrying in 1941.

Soccer career

Youth

By that time he was married in 1941, Olaff had established himself as an accomplished goalkeeper. He began playing organized soccer with the semi-professional Bayonne Rangers’ youth team in 1933 with his size leading to his being put in the net. While playing for the Rangers, Olaff also competed with the Bayonne High School soccer team, graduating to the Rangers’ senior team by the time he finished high school.

Professional

In 1936, Olaff left the Rangers to sign with the professional New York Brookhattan of the American Soccer League (ASL). He spent a season on Brookhattan’s reserve team, never seeing first team action, before moving to Hatikvoh F.C. of the National Soccer League of New York (NSL) in 1937. In 1939, Hatikvoh won the league cup. In 1939, he moved to Swedish F.C. of the NSL where he won a second league cup in 1940. The next season, Olaff moved back to the ASL, this time with Brooklyn Hispano. Olaff and his team mates won the 1943 National Challenge Cup. In 1944, Olaff gained his first double when Hispano won its second National Cup in addition to a league title. Olaff’s professional career took a hit with the entry of the U.S. into World War II. He joined the U.S. Navy, becoming a diver. While he was able to continue playing with Hispano while also serving in the Navy, in the fall of 1944, he was deployed to Bari, Italy. He returned to New Jersey in 1946, but was hired by the New Jersey State Police. At the time, members of the State Police were required to live in barracks. In order to continue to play with Hispano, Olaff needed to request a pass each weekend. Despite this limitation, he remained with Hispano and won the 1946 Lewis Cup. In May 1946 he twice played against a touring Liverpool side, representing the New York region and the American Soccer League. Liverpool manager George Kay told the Liverpool Echo newspaper that he was good enough for the English 1st Division but there was no chance of persuading him to give up a police career that allowed him to retire on a pension at the age of fifty.[2] He retired from football in 1953.

National team and the 1950 FIFA World Cup

Olaff earned one cap with the United States in a 4-0 loss to Scotland on June 19, 1949. He also played an unofficial game in 1948 against Israel. As the U.S. began preparations for the upcoming 1950 FIFA World Cup, the national team coach approached Olaff about joining the U.S. team. Olaff was forced to decline the invitation as the State Police refused to approve his request for a leave of absence.

Attire

When Olaff began playing, Stanley Chesney was the dominant U.S. goalkeeper. Olaff imitated Chesney in both his style of play and attire, a baseball cap and pants

Non-soccer career

Throughout his life, Olaff held a number of jobs to supplement the meager pay, ranging from nine to thirty dollars per game, for playing soccer. This included time as a janitor, shipping clerk and a metal finisher with General Motors.

During World War II, Olaff was inducted into the U.S. Navy, becoming a diver. He spent his first year in the Navy attending diving schools on the east coast, allowing him to continue competing with Hispano. In 1944, he was deployed to Italy to conduct salvage operations in the Adriatic and was discharged from the Navy in March 1946.

After leaving the Navy, Olaff was hired by the New Jersey State Police. During his nearly 30 years with the State Police, Olaff was an academy instructor, deputy superintendent, chief of staff and finally, superintendent in 1975. He also created the police underwater unit using his wartime experience.[3]

In 1978, Olaff was hired by D.B. Kelly Associates, a newly established security firm. He remained with D.B. Kelly until at least 1996.

Olaff was inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1971. He died in January 2017 at the age of 96.[4]

gollark: Sometimes.
gollark: Inelegant.
gollark: It might be like my URL shortener where it uses a deterministic map from URL text to a numeric ID.
gollark: No, just a regular mouse. I was using my trackpad before.
gollark: I HAVE a mouse. My gaming power will increase by 3232323232323%. You are not safe.

References

  1. Zygo, Brian. "New Jersey – The Garden State with Soccer Roots", MLS Talk, June 2, 2009. Accessed February 3, 2013. "Gene Olaff, considered by some to be one of the greatest American goalkeepers, was born in Bayonne, New Jersey in 1920.... Olaff currently lives in Florence Township, New Jersey, where he’s actively involved in youth soccer."
  2. Liverpool Echo 27 May 1946
  3. http://www.njsp.org/about/colonels-row.shtml
  4. REMEMBERING GENE OLAFF: 1920-2017
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.