In the aftermath of the Suez crisis, Israel had no opponents in the World Cup qualifying rounds within the Africa/Asia group to which it belonged.
First Turkey refused to play Israel. Then Indonesia requested that they play Israel in a neutral country, and FIFA refused, so Indonesia forfeited.
Finally, Sudan forfeited rather than play Israel in the finals .
FIFA was not happy about this so they created a rule that no one could qualify to the World Cup tournament without playing at least one qualifying game.
They drew lots among teams that had been eliminated in the finals of the European qualifiers to see which lucky team would get a second chance to go to the World Cup by playing Israel.(I'm not sure how they decided that only European teams would have a secon chance.)
In the end, Wales was Israel's opponent, and it handily defeated Israel for its one and only World Cup appearance, and the only time that all four UK teams (England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) qualified.
I'm more interested in something that happened before Wales was chosen as Israel's opponent.
Wikipedia says, without citation:
So a special play-off was created between Israel and the runner-up of one of the UEFA Groups, where the teams played against each other on a home-and-away basis, with the winner qualifying. After Belgium refused, Wales, the runner-up of UEFA Group 4, was the team drawn from the UEFA group runners-up.
Why would Belgium refuse a second chance at World Cup glory?
This story is corroborated by the BBC:
With Fifa unwilling to allow a team into the World Cup finals without playing a match, Jimmy Murphy's Wales - who had finished behind Czechoslovakia in their qualification group - went into the so-called lucky losers' draw with eight other European runners-up to play off against Israel.
Legend has it the Jules Rimet trophy was used for the draw.
Belgium were actually pulled out first - but passed up the opportunity to play.
And from this football site:
Wales were initially eliminated by Czechoslovakia, but after Sudan refused to play Israel for political reasons in their two team group, FIFA decreed Israel could not simply get a bye into the tournament without playing a game. Lots were drawn among the European runners up to find them an opponent, Belgium turning down the opportunity, Wales coming out next. They took on the Israelis and won 2-0 home and away.
Was Belgium so anti-Israel that they refused what would have probably been a shoo-in chance to reach the World Cup?
I can't find anything more on this, if anyone knows more details there might be a fascinating story here.
--
Posted By Elder of Ziyon to Elder Of Ziyon - Israel News at 1/12/2015 04:00:00 PM
0 comments:
Post a Comment