The Death Match
The official poster about the match printed by the German administration | |||||||
| |||||||
Date | 9 August 1942 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Zenit stadium[lower-alpha 1], Kiev, Reichskommissariat Ukraine | ||||||
The Death Match (Russian: Матч смерти) is a name given in postwar historiography to the football match played in Kiev in Reichskommissariat Ukraine (abbreviated RKU) under occupation by Nazi Germany. The Kiev city team Start (Cyrillic: Старт) which represented the city Bread Factory No.1 played several football games in World War II. The team was composed mostly of former professional footballers of Dynamo Kyiv and Lokomotyv Kyiv who worked at the factory under the occupation authority.
On August 6, 1942 FC Start played the German team Flakelf. There was an estimated 2,000 spectators in attendance, with each spectator paying a total of five rubles to attend. Zenit Stadium was lined with SS soldiers and police dogs as an attempt to intimidate the Start players. The Flakelf team consisted of German soldiers who manned antiaircraft guns around Kiev. FC Start dominated the first game by defeating the Germans 5-1.[1] The German team would demand a rematch. The "Death Match" or second match took place on 9 August 1942 at the Kiev city stadium against the German team Flakelf, made up of air defense artillery football players.[lower-alpha 2]
Background
Football had become very popular in the Soviet Union in the 1930s which led to establishment of the Soviet Top League in 1936. Football competitions had existed since 1900 in the former Russian Empire. Many football clubs were restructured after the October Revolution. That happened with Dynamo Kyiv, which was created in place of the existing team of Sovtorgsluzhashchie in 1927. Dynamo Kyiv was part of the Dynamo sports society and was funded by the police (including the NKVD), became one of the strongest teams in the Soviet Ukraine in the 1930s, winning a number of republican championships and cup competitions. In 1936, Dynamo Kyiv came in second in the first Soviet championship. Lokomotyv Kyiv, which was created almost a decade prior to Dynamo, also had several winning seasons in the Kiev city competitions and was admitted to compete at the third tier of Soviet competitions in 1936. A Kiev native Georgiy Kuzmin points out in his book Facts and fiction of our football (Были и небыли нашего футбола) that the first squads of Dynamo Kyiv included a number of regular Cheka members among whom was Konstantin Fomin. Konstantin Fomin is known to have participated in repressions against Kharkiv sportsmen of Polish descent during 1935–1936.[2] Right before World War II, Fomin also played in Lokomotyv.
Because players were not getting paid regularly, the football team of Dynamo for sometime had a shortage (only eight players).[2] The team's captain Konstantin Shchegodsky even tried to escape to Dnipropetrovsk, where he played FC Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk, but was forced to come back.[2] During the Holodomor in 1932–33 half of the team escaped to Ivanovo near Moscow.[2] Two of Dynamo's players, Pionkovsky and Sviridovsky, were arrested by the NKVD agents during an attempt to exchange several cuts of cloth for products and therefore had to work "for the good of the country" for two years in a penal colony. During the Great Purge in 1938 Piontkovsky, and one of the Dynamo's team creators, Barminsky were targeted, and eventually shot in 1941. The season was never completed, as Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. Several Dynamo Kyiv players joined the military and went off to fight. The initial success of the Wehrmacht allowed it to capture the city from the Red Army. Several of the Dynamo Kyiv players who had survived the onslaught found themselves in prisoner-of-war camps.
In taking Kiev the Germans captured over 600,000 Soviet soldiers. The city was under a strict occupation regime. Universities and schools were shut down; only in 1942 a four-year school for the Ukrainian population was introduced. Youth over 15 years and adults under 60 years old were submitted to labour obligations.[3] Thousands of inhabitants were deported to Germany for forced labour. The Germans controlled the Ukrainian police, who took part in the hunt for Bolsheviks and Jews.
Use for propaganda within the Soviet Union
All citizens were rounded up and forced to listen to the German military decree themselves the new rulers. It was here that Major Eberhardt decided that the population were too great to police and he decided on a plan to placate the people of Kiev. His idea was to stage a football match between the German team and Ukrainian Champions Dynamo Kiev. During the occupation, the Kiev team had been rounded up by a soccer mad Wehrmacht officer and he had decided to spare their lives when all other citizens of a certain public stature were being executed.[4]
According to the Soviet representation of the events, the match took place in a climate of fear, with heavily armed German soldiers with dogs surrounding the playground. The referee, an SS officer, was in favour of the German, ignoring their brutal fouls and not accepting regular goals of the Start team, which had chosen red jerseys, the colour of communism. At the half-time break another SS officer threatened the local team with death in the case that the Germans did not win the match. The FC Start starting goalkeeper Nikalai Trusevich said, “We do not have weapons but we can fight with our victories on the football pitch”.[1] According to the Soviet account, after the match the Soviet players were all shot by the SS. However, this version was thoroughly rejected by Ukrainian eyewitness and historians after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Version given until mid sixties
After the withdrawal of the German troops from Kiev and the reestablishment of Soviet administration in autumn 1943, writer Lev Kassil was the first to report about the death of Dynamo players murdered by the Germans. But his report in the newspaper Izvestiya did not mention the football match.[5][6] The expression "Death Match" appeared in the newspaper Stalinskoye plemya ("Stalin's tribe") on August 24, 1946 (#164, page 3) where a film script of Aleksandr Borshchagovsky was published. In 1958 he published his novel Alerting Clouds (Trevozhnye oblaka) about the match. Also in 1958 Piotr Severov and Naum Khalemsky published their novel The Last Duel (Posledni poyedinok).[7]
These two novels gave inspiration to Yevgeni Karelov's black and white film Third Time (Тreti time).[8] According to the Great Soviet Encyclopedia about 32 million spectators saw it in the Soviet cinemas.[9] The "Death Match" was also a very popular subject of the Soviet press. None of these publications mentioned survivors of the match.
The Start players surviving the German occupation did not show up in public. In the first years after World War II they were suspected as having collaborated with the Germans. They were controlled and interrogated by the secret police (NKVD).[10][11]
Version given in 1985
The stadium became the site of one of soccer's most infamous and disputed games, the so-called Death Match. With Kiev and Nazi occupation during World War II, a group of Ukrainian players defeated a military team of Germans thought to be from artillery and perhaps Luftwaffe units. The Germans warned the local team beforehand or at halftime that it had better lose the match, and when the Ukrainians ignored the threat and prevailed, key members of the team were killed in retribution.
Estimated 2,000 spectators, paying 5 rubles apiece, were said to have attended the rematch in Start Stadium, then known as Zenit stadium. Some people warned it could be risky playing against and defeating the Germans in a rematch. The players listened, but ultimately decided to proceed with the match. Gestapo officer visited the team before the match, introduced himself as the referee and told the players they should raise their right arms and make the Nazi salute on the field in a pregame greeting.
The game began roughly and the Start goalkeeper, Nikolai Trusevich, was knocked out. Water was poured on the goalkeeper to revive him but while he was still dazed, the Germans scored 3 goals. Behind at halftime, the Start team decided to play for a tie, believing the referee would never allow the Ukrainians to win. After the match was tied at 3–3, Goncharenko scored the final 2 goals to give Start 5–3.[12]
In the Brezhnev era
The reports about the "Death Match" changed in the mid-sixties. Under the rule of Leonid Brezhnev the propaganda of the Communist Party had to expose the heroism of the Soviet population during World War II. The "Death Match" became part of Kiev's war history. The exact number of victims was given: four Dynamo players were murdered by the Germans – the goalkeeper Nikolai Trusevich, an ethnic Russian, defender Olexi Klimenko and goalgetter Ivan Kuzmenko who together had played on the vice champion team of 1936 [13] as well as midfielder Mikola Korotkykh, having left Dynamo in 1939.[14]
In 1965, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR awarded posthumously four Dynamo players killed by the Germans the Medal "For Courage". Five surviving players got the Medal for Battle Merit: Volodymyr Balakin, Makar Honcharenko, Mikhailo Melnik, Vassyl Sukharev, Mikhailo Sviridovsky.[15]
Despite a KGB dossier warning about the "glorification" of the players with known collaborators amongst them,[16] two monuments were erected in Kiev in 1971. The former Zenit Stadium where the match had taken place in 1942 was renamed to FC Start Stadium.[17]
Historical accounts and analysis after the dissolution of the USSR
After the decline of the Soviet Union, journalists and historians in the new state of Ukraine were able to make historical research without being controlled by Glavlit, the Soviet censorship agency.
Eyewitness
The 50th anniversary of the "Death Match" in 1992 marked the beginning of eyewitness reports in Ukrainian mass media:
- Kiev Radio broadcast an interview with former Dynamo player Makar Honcharenko [18] Honcharenko denied the version that the players were threatened by an SS officer: "Nobody from the official administration blackmailed us for giving up the match."[14]
- Sport reporter Georgi Kuzmin published a series of articles entitled "The Truth about the Death Match". According to him the creation of the "Death Match" legend was a countermeasure of Soviet propaganda to the reproach that the inhabitants of Kiev "did not fight against the aggressor".[19]
- Writer Oleg Yasinsky published his report "Did the Death Match happen?"[20][21] Being a youth Yasinsky was among the spectators of the match and later played on Dynamo's youth team.
- Vladlen Putistin, son of midfielder Mikhail Putistin, an ethnic Russian, being eight years old at the time of the match was one of the ball boys during the match. Later he interviewed (unofficially) some of the players.[15]
All these reports denied the Soviet version: There were no SS officers being referees or threatening the Start team.[22] The Germans played fair, the referee did not manipulate. There were no heavy armed soldiers with dogs in the stadium. The red jerseys were not a symbol for communist spirit; instead, the players got them from the Germans.[23] Indeed, the Germans arrested nine of the Start players, but the first among them was nine days after the match. Five, not four, players were murdered by the SS, three among them half a year after the match. All the eyewitnesses denied the version that the Dynamo players were murdered as revenge for the German defeat.[24]
Historical research
The first genuine historical studies of the "Death Match" confirmed the reports of the eyewitnesses. Former Generallieutenant of Justice Volodymyr Pristaiko, having been vice chief of the Ukrainian Security Service SBU, summoned his analysis of the papers documenting the arrest and death of the Dynamo players: "There was definitively no context to the match."[25] In his book (2006), he published NKVD papers concerning FC Start from 1944 to 1948 as well as KGB documents from the Breshnew era.[26]
Historian Volodymyr Hynda showed that defeats of German teams against local clubs happened regularly. The Ukrainian press, controlled by the Germans, published many reports about these matches. Hynda found informations about 150 matches and documented the results of 111 among them: the Ukrainians won 60 matches and lost 36 matches, 15 were draws.[27]
History of FC Start
Articles published in the daily Nove ukrainske Slovo (New Ukrainian Word), controlled by the Germans, the reports of the witnesses and the NKVD documentation allow a reconstruction of FC Start's history.
Organisation of the bakery team
Under German occupation all Soviet organisations and clubs were dissolved. By the end of 1941 German administration allowed newly formed Ukrainian sport clubs.[28] In January 1942, football trainer and sport reporter Georgi Dmitrievich Shvetsov founded the club Rukh (Movement). He tried to engage the best players in Kiev.[29]
But most of the former Dynamo players, among them the very popular goalkeeper Trusevich, did not want to play in Rukh, probably because they took Shvetsov for a collaborateur. Trusevich found a job in the Bakery No. 1 which guaranteed their workers and their families normal supplies of food.[10][30] More former Dynamo players found jobs in the bakery. The German director Joseph Kordik, an engineer from Moravia, encouraged them to form a football team: FC Start. After World War II Kordik declared to the NKVD that in reality he was Czech, not German.[15][29][31]
Three players of the former club Lokomotiv Kiev were incorporated into the new team.[32] Four former players who were directly submitted to the German administration also played for Start: three Ukrainian policemen [33][34] and one engine driver of the German railways Reichsbahn in Kiev.[15] None amongst the Start players had played for the Dynamo team in the years just before the war. Some of them had left the club a couple of years before.[13]
Matches in June and July 1942
Seven Start matches are documented for June and July 1942: against the Ukrainian teams Rukh and Sport, three Hungarian military teams, a team of the German artillery and the German railway team RSG. FC Start won all the matches, scoring 37 and conceding only 8 goals.[35]
Match against Flakelf on 6 August 1942
On 6 August 1942 FC Start beat Flakelf scoring 5–1. The names of the German players are given in cyrillic letters on the poster: Harer, Danz, Schneider, Biskur, Scharf, Kaplan, Breuer, Arnold, Jannasch, Wunderlich, Hofmann.[36]
Revenge match against Flakelf on 9 August 1942
With an audience of 2000,[20] the teams met again three days later, in the later so-called "Death Match". The poster informed that Flakelf had a "strengthened" team but did not reveal any names. But it named 14 Start players, amongst them Lev Gundarev, Georgi Timofeyev and Olexander Tkachenko, Ukrainian policemen under German command.[33]
The score was 5–3 in favour of Start. Only the first half of the match is documented: The Germans opened the score, then Ivan Kuzmenko and Makar Honcharenko two times marked the 3–1 score for half time.[14] After the match a German took a photograph of both teams showing a relaxed atmosphere. Some days later he offered a copy to former Lokomotiv player Volodymyr Balakin.[15][37] This photograph was never published in Soviet times.[38]
Afterwards the winners drank a glass of self-made vodka and met at a party in the evening.[39]
Arrest of the players
On 16 August 1942 FC Start beat Rukh scoring 8–0. Two days later, on 18 August, the Gestapo arrested six of the Start players in the bakery and two days later two others were arrested.[40]
The destinies of the Kiev players
In contradiction to the Soviet version not all of the Start players were prosecuted by the Gestapo. After the war Soviet authorities punished some of them for collaboration with the Germans.
In Gestapo jail
According to the archives some of the Start players said during the NKVD interrogation that they were convinced having been denounced to the Gestapo by Rukh trainer Georgi Shvetsov.[41][42] According to them he had been very angry after Rukh's 8–0 defeat. Therefore, he informed the Gestapo that the former Dynamo players had been officially members of the NKVD.[14] The Gestapo arrested them as potential NKVD agents who could organise sabotage acts in Kiev.[15]
Ukrainian historians are convinced that this version was the real reason for the arrest; also because of the fact that the three former Lokomotive players in FC Start were not prosecuted by the Gestapo.[43] The Gestapo did not arrest neither Georgi Timofeyev for having played in the "Death match" nor Lev Gundarev who was named on the poster but did not take part in the match. Both served in the Ukrainian police.[33] Their names were never mentioned in Soviet publications.
The first two cases of manslaughter
The Kiev archives document the cases of Olexander Tkachenko and Mikola Korotkykh as both not having played on Dynamo's first team before the war. Both cases do not show any context of the "Death Match":
- Tkachenko, one of the three policemen in FC Start, had beaten up a German in Kiev and therefore was arrested by the Gestapo.[44] According to his mother's report he tried to escape from the Gestapo arrest and was shot by an SS man. At this very moment his mother came to the police station where he had been taken when arrested to bring him a meal.[45] His case was not mentioned in Soviet publications.
- Korotkykh had left Dynamo in 1939 and played in the club Rotfront.[14] In 1942 he did not work in the bakery but in the kitchen of a German officers' club.[15] His name was on a list of former NKVD agents established by Ukrainian collaborators. When he got information about this list he hid himself. According to some reports his sister was afraid of the gestapo and denounced him.[46] During the interrogation the Gestapo tortured Korotkykh to death. According to some of the players the Germans found a NKVD identity card in his clothes.[15] But there is no proof for this version in the NKVD archives which contain only documents about his membership in the Communist Party and about his military service in a NKVD unit from 1932 to 1934 in the Russian city of Ivanovo.[37]
Forced labour in the concentration camp Syrets
After three weeks in the Gestapo prison eight of the former Dynamo players were deported to the Syrets concentration camp next to the valley of Babi Yar in the outskirts of Kiev. Nikolai Trusevich, Olexi Klimenko and Ivan Kuzmenko had to work in a group of street builders.[47] Pavlo Komarov, Mikhail Putistin and Fedor Tyutchev worked as electricians outside the camp. Makar Honcharenko and Mikhailo Sviridovsky had to repair shoes for the Wehrmacht. The prisoners working outside the camp were not guarded by the SS, but rather by Ukrainian policemen who allowed their families to bring them food. They spent only nights in the camps; Komorav was chosen by the SS as a Kapo.[15]
Execution of three players in the concentration camp
About half a year after their arrest Trusevich, Klimenko and Kuzmenko were executed amongst a group of prisoners on 24 February 1943 in the camp. Survivors reported that the bodies were thrown into the mass graves of Babi Yar.[25][48] None of the surviving players described the execution as consequence of the match on 9 August 1942. On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the match Honcharenko said on Kiev radio: "They died like many other Soviet people because the two totalitarian systems were fighting each other and they were destined to become victims of that grand scale massacre."[14][49]
The reports give several reasons for the execution:
- A conflict concerning the dog of the camp commandor Paul Radomski: Some prisoners were said to have beaten it with a shovel in the camp kitchen. On this situation one of the prisoners had attacked an SS soldier.[50][51]
- Punishment for the escape of some prisoners.[10]
- Disobiedience of prisoners who were ordered to hang other prisoners who tried to flee from the camp.[52]
- A sabotage act of partisans on a tank repair facility.[14][15]
After World War II
After receiving the information about the execution in the camp Honcharenko and Sviridovsky left the shoe repairing facility and hid in the apartment of friends in Kiev.[10] By the end of the sixties Honcharenko became a media figure and often told the official version of the Death Match. But after the end of the Soviet regime he denied this version.[15][53]
Putistin and Tyutchev would flee from the camp in September 1943 when the Germans left Kiev.[54] Tyutchev died in 1959, before the surviving Dynamo players became stars of Soviet propaganda. Putistin was not awarded any honour in 1966. According to his son, he did not want to repeat the propaganda version.[15]
Komarov, before World War II Dynamo's penalty specialist, left Kiev with the Germans. It is not known whether he was forced to come with them as a forced labour slave or was a collaborator. In 1945 he found himself in occupied Western Germany and soon he emigrated to Canada.[54][55] His name was never mentioned in any Soviet publications.
Former Ukrainian policeman Timofeyev was convicted to five years in the Gulag for collaborating with the Germans. Gundarev, according to NKVD documents a "German agent", was condemned to death, but later his punishment was changed to ten years in the Gulag. He was not allowed to return to Kiev; he had to stay in the Asian part of the Soviet Union. He became the director of the stadium in Karaganda in the Soviet Republic of Kazakhstan.[56][57] Both cases were never mentioned in Soviet publications.
Investigation in Germany
After the publication of a report in a German newspaper repeating the Soviet version [58] a case about the "Death Match" was opened by the prosecution office of Hamburg in July 1974.[59] As Soviet authorities did not collaborate on the case, it was closed in March 1976. In 2002 the Ukrainian authorities informed Hamburg about their new investigation.[60] So the case was reopened, but finally closed by the investigation commission in February 2005. The commission was not able to find any connections between the game and the execution of people who participated in it, nor any person responsible for the executions being still alive.[61] Radomski had been killed on 14 March 1945.[62]
Second life of the Soviet version
The publications in the Kiev press found a strong echo in Ukraine, but they were ignored by most authors in other countries.
John Huston's film (1981)
In 1981, Michael Caine and Sylvester Stallone starred in the film Escape to Victory, directed by John Huston, which told the story of a group of Allied POWs who are challenged to a match against the prison's guards. While the film's POWs are not Ukrainian but rather predominately Westerners, the story parallels are clear: they are threatened with death if they win, the playing ground is surrounded with Nazi guards and attack dogs, the referee ignores vicious and brutal fouls committed by the German team, yet the Allied prisoner team ignore the threat and draw the match, thus risking forfeiting their lives. (Huston's film has a deus ex machina ending which conflicts with the original Soviet story when the spectators storm the field at the match's end and the POWs escape in the resultant confusion, but as no event similar to this actually occurred in the West during World War II, it is generally assumed that this film was inspired by the legendary/propaganda version of the Death Match.)
Andy Dougan's book (2001)
In the Anglo-American media the publication of a book by the Scottish journalist Andy Dougan [63] inspired many articles.[64] Dougan specialises in publications about Hollywood and has written books about George Clooney, Robert De Niro and Robin Williams. On the front page of his Dynamo book he exposes his thesis: "If ever soccer was a matter of life and death, then it was here."
Without giving any concrete sources, Dougan's "docufiction" invents dialogue and repeats the Soviet version of an SS-officer threatening the Start players (p. 178). According to him the players were arrested because of their victories against Flakelf. He describes many details which Ukrainian historians revealed as false before the publication of his book but common to the Soviet propaganda versions of the story, e.g. the red jerseys as symbol of the players' communist spirit (p. 137), the SS officer demanding the Nazi salute from the Start players (p. 164), and the heavy armed German soldiers surrounding the playground with German shepherd attack dogs (p. 177–178), also Trusevich praising the Soviet regime before his execution (p. 210).
Dougan gives citations from Honcharenko's interview reproaching the Soviet version; in his bibliography he notes also Kuzmin's first articles,[65] but ignores completely their conclusions. For the year 2013 the press announced a British film based on Dougan's book. Scottish actor Gerard Butler was announced to play in it.[66]
Andrey Malyukov's film (2012)
The film Match (2012) by the Russian director Andrey Malyukov also ignores the reports of Ukrainian witnesses and scholars and repeats the Soviet propaganda version. In the film Russian communists are fighting against the German occupiers. All the collaborateurs speak Ukrainian. Malyukov became popular as a director of a nationalistic–patriotic TV series about Russian troops in the Caucasus and in Afghanistan.[67] Ukrainian authorities blocked the release of the film for several months because according to them the film gives a wrong picture of history.[68]
Further reading
- Vartanian, Axel. Myth about the Death Match. Football during the War years. Part IV. Axel Vartanian Chronicle. "Sport-Express", 2007. МИФ О "МАТЧЕ СМЕРТИ"
- Anspach, Emma, Hilah Almog, and Taylor, The Death Match! Rebel Ultras, Europe.
Notes
- ↑ Today it is known as Start Stadium located in the Shevchenko Raion, Kiev.
- ↑ Note that "Flakelf" is an abbreviated combination of the German words Flak (Fliegerabwehrkanone – air defense artillery) and elf – "eleven" which was used to denote an association football team.
Citations
- 1 2 "Weebly is the easiest way to create a website, store or blog". Weebly.com. Retrieved 2016-04-17.
- 1 2 3 4 Kipiani, V. "Byli i niebyli nasheva futbola". From the Polytechnic to the Death match. Ukrayinska Pravda. May 5, 2012.
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 321
- ↑ Gannon, Willie. "Senior Writer". The Death Match: Dynamo Kiev vs the Nazis. Retrieved 2015-03-13.
- ↑ Izvestiya, 16 November 1943, p.4.
- ↑ see: Hynda (2012), pp. 246–247
- ↑ http://www.e-reading-lib.com/book.php?book=1013262
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056615/ http://fileszona.com/filmy/russian_films_torrent/14976-tretiy-taym-1962-dvdrip.html
- ↑ http://www.enci.ru/ Третий_тайм_(фильм)
- 1 2 3 4 Georgi Kuzmin, Goryacheye leto sorok vtorogo, in: Futbol 13/1995 chapter: Футбол, хлеб насущный.
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 43–87
- ↑ Longman, Jeré; Lehren, Andrew. "World War II Soccer Match Echoes Through Time". nytimes.com. NY Times. Retrieved 2015-03-13.
- 1 2 Pristaiko (2006), p. 15
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kuzmin (1995), Момент истины
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Wladlen Putistin, in: Bulvar, 7 August 2002, p. 5. ФУТБОЛ В ГОДЫ ВОЙНЫ. Часть пятая: МИФ О "МАТЧЕ СМЕРТИ" Sport-express.ru
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 48–50
- ↑ Vecherni Kyiv, 21 June 1971, p. 1.
- ↑ Partially cited in Dougan (2001), pp. 229–233
- ↑ "Pravda o ‚Matche smerti'", in: Kievskie Novosti, 22 October 1992, p. 8.
- 1 2 O. Yasinsky, A byl li "Match smerti"?, in: Vseukrainskiye Vedomosti, 12 November 1994, p. 8.
- ↑ see also http://2000.net.ua/2000/sport-revju/igra/33047
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 274
- ↑ Hynda (2012), pp. 268–270
- ↑ Russian articles confronting elements of the Soviet version to the eyewitness reports
- 1 2 Pristaiko (2006), p. 160
- ↑ 35 dokuments, p. 41–105.
- ↑ Hynda (2012), pp. 429–441
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 27
- 1 2 Pristaiko (2006), p. 21
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 22
- ↑ Hynda (2012), pp. 322–323
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 19
- 1 2 3 Pristaiko (2006), p. 30
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 323
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 23–25
- ↑ http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Start-Flakelf_6_aug_1942.jpg
- 1 2 Pristaiko (2006), p. 29
- ↑ Foto 2
- ↑ Bredenbrock (2008), p. 510
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 74
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 34–35
- ↑ Hynda (2012), pp. 281–282
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 34
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 86
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 31
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 280
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 37–38
- ↑ Hynda (2012), pp. 284–287
- ↑ see Dougan (2001), pp. 229–230
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 104, 117
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 283
- ↑ Bredenbrock (2008), p. 512
- ↑ Kuzmin (1995), Футбол и политика
- 1 2 Pristaiko (2006), p. 38
- ↑ Kuzmin (1995), "Динамо" в защите
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 36, 47, 53
- ↑ Hynda (2012), p. 296
- ↑ Stuttgarter Zeitung, 5 December 1973, p. 9.
- ↑ No. 147 Js 7/74
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), pp. 110–119, 138–139
- ↑ Disclosed myths about the Death match., Focus, 14 March 2005,
- ↑ Pristaiko (2006), p. 118
- ↑ Dougan (2001)
- ↑ p.e. http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/18609772; http://footballspeak.com/post/2012/06/07/Dynamo-Kyiv.aspx
- ↑ Dougan (2001), pp. 229–233, 242
- ↑ http://www.nme.com/filmandtv/news/gerard-butler-to-star-in-football-film-about-world/289860
- ↑ http://www.kinopoisk.ru/film/260136/
- ↑ http://article.wn.com/view/2012/04/11/Ukraine_blocks_death_match_film/#/related_news
References
- Bredenbrock, Claus (2008). "Die Todeself. Kiew 1942: Fußball in einer besetzten Stadt". In Lorenz Peiffer & Dietrich Schulze-Marmeling. Hakenkreuz und rundes Leder – Fußball im Nationalsozialismus. Göttingen: Verlag Die Werkstatt. ISBN 978-3-89533-598-3.
- Dougan, Andy (2001). Dynamo. Triumph and Tragedy in Nazi-occupied Kiev. Guildford. ISBN 1-58574-719-X.
- Hynda, Volodymyr (2012). Український спорт під нацистською свастикою (1941–1944 рр.) [Ukrainian sport under the Nazi swastika] (in Ukrainian). (Гінда, Володимир). Zhytomyr. pp. 243–336. ISBN 978-617-581-116-0.
- Kulida, S. Debunk myths about the Death Match. "Svoboda" magazine. 10 May 2005
- Kuzmin, Georgi (Георгий КУЗЬМИН), Goryacheye leto sorok vtorogo (ГОРЯЧЕЕ ЛЕТО СОРОК ВТОРОГО…), Junik.lv webpage; Futbol, 13/1995.
- Pristaiko, Volodymyr (2006). Чи був "матч смертi"? Документи свiдчать [Did the Death Match Happen? Documents Give Witness] (in Ukrainian). Пристайко, Володимир. Kiev. ISBN 966-7769-56-9.
|