Joe Gaetjens
The "american"
who scored the goal against England in the 1950 World Cup for USA.
The following story is made by:
By Patricia
Zengerle
Reuters
Haitian made U.S. sport history, vanished in prison
MIAMI, April 28, 1998
- As U.S. soccer players prepare
for this summer's World Cup, they may spare a thought for a little-known
Haitian who scored a goal nearly 50 years ago that gave them what is still
their greatest victory ever.
Soccer has soared in popularity in
the United States since those days, but
its hero, Joe Gaetjens, was destined
for a tragic end in a dictator's dungeon in his homeland. On June 29, 1950,
39 minutes into what was supposed to have been England's World Cup blowout
of the United States, Gaetjens dove an estimated 12 feet (4 metres) to
strike a shot from teammate Walter Bahr with his head, changing its direction
enough to catch English goalkeeper Bert Williams wrongfooted.
Gaetjens did not see the result of
his header -- his headlong leap left him
lying face down in the turf at Brazil's
Belo Horizonte stadium -- but it got
past Williams and gave the Americans
a 1-0 lead over the team that had been the world leader of the sport. The
slim lead held up, to the raucous delight of 30,000 Brazilians packing
the stadium. At the end, the English team congratulated the Americans as
spectators carried Gaetjens and his teammates shoulder-high. "It was a
big upset. We knew it was an upset. Of course we were excited about it,"
Bahr told Reuters in a telephone interview, recalling that day nearly 48
years ago. "Things went our way, and in the run of play they (the English)
should have won the game, (but) they didn't score. As the game went on,
we got a little bit better and they got a little bit more panicky. Nine
times out of 10 they would have beaten us. But that game was our game."
GREATEST WORLD
CUP UPSET OF ALL TIME
The game would be considered the
greatest World Cup soccer upset of all
time. The English side included
greats such as Tom Finney and Billy Wright
and was expected to beat the U.S.
eleven by at least seven goals. Only one American player, halfback Ed McIlenny,
was a full-time professional. The others were semipros -- Gaetjens an accounting
student and dishwasher, Bahr a teacher, and goalie Frank Borghi a hearse
driver for his uncle's funeral home.
The team had lost to Italy 9-0, Northern
Ireland 5-0 and Scotland 4-0 before
the World Cup. When the first teleprinter
reports on the game's outcome
reached London editors threw them
out, assuming it was a misprint for a 10-1 English victory.
"Before World War II, England was
the unquestioned leader of the sport in
the world. This game might have
been said to be the first nail in the coffin
of that superiority," said Roger
Allaway, president of the Society for
American Soccer History. But the
victory, which coincided with the U.S. entry into the Korea War, went almost
unnoticed in the United States. The Americans did not return to play in
the World Cup until 1990.
Gaetjens, playing as an American
under the era's loose eligibility rules,
never became a U.S. citizen and
was virtually forgotten in the United
States. In Britain, an erroneous
press report called him "Larry" Gaetjens,
and he remains misnamed in many
record books.
RETURNED TO
HAITI IN 1954
He played in France for the first
division Paris Racing Club after the World
Cup, returning to Haiti in 1954
to run a dry cleaning business, play weekend
soccer and coach youth teams, Jean-Pierre
Gaetjens, his younger brother,
said. "He was still active and well-known
in the sport area in Haiti," Gaetjens told Reuters. "Joe is the kind of
person that he arrived in a group of people talking, they've never seen
him before, and after 10 minutes it looks like he had been friends with
them for the past 20 years."
Joe Gaetjens was not political but
his family worked for Louis Dejoie, a
rival to Haitian dictator Francois
"Papa Doc" Duvalier in his 1957 run for
the presidency. Gaetjens' mother
and a brother were arrested after
Duvalier's victory and most of the
family fled the country. But Joe stayed in Haiti, said his brother, who
now lives in Spain. "Joe did not care much about the politics and things
like that," Jean-Pierre Gaetjens said.
Other members of the family campaigned
outside of Haiti against Duvalier,
who made himself president for life
in 1964. The last time Joe Gaetjens was seen by any friend or relative
was on July 8, 1964, when he was arrested at work by Duvalier's gangster
militia, the Tonton Macoute, which his family considered retaliation for
their political activism.
"When he arrived, they rushed to
his car, put a gun on his head, got in his
car and drove to ... the Port-au-Prince
police station," Jean-Pierre
Gaetjens said. "His wife, who lives
in Florida now, received the
authorization to get the car three
or four days after ... and from there we
have no trace from him." Gaetjens'
family tried for years to determine his fate but heard nothing from Haiti
or from U.S. officials they asked to intercede. But Jean-Pierre Gaetjens
returned to Haiti after Duvalier's son, Jean-Claude, fell from power in
1986 and met a man who had been at the notorious Fort Dimanche prison with
his brother but was transferred shortly afterward.
"Three or four days later one of
the prison guards told him ... you were
lucky because last night they had
killed everybody at Fort Dimanche,"
Gaetjens said. "That's when, we
think, that he must have been killed, around mid-July. But we never knew.
They had destroyed any evidence on everybody that was killed at the time
under Duvalier, they burned or destroyed everything."
Some did not forget Joe Gaetjens. He was honored at a New York Cosmos game in 1972 and enshrined in the U.S. Soccer Hall of Fame in 1976, the same year the Organization of American States condemned Haiti's government for his arrest.
Last year, Haiti authorized the issue
of a stamp in his honor. Jean-Pierre
Gaetjens, who continues to campaign
so his brother will be more widely
remembered, described his joy during
a visit to Belo Horizonte in April when he was featured in the local newspaper
and met people who remembered the game. "I was overwhelmed," he said.