St. Louis has a deep connection to the event. It wasn’t just their team, either. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch was the only U.S. publication to send a reporter to that World Cup.
Those who have been around the soccer scene in Western Missouri for generations coyly argue that the upset was a long-time coming for the U.S. - with the area itself spearheading the victory. While soccer is largely a game of second generation immigrants in the United States, St. Louis is the OG - supporting the sport since the late 1800s.
“This year we submitted the 150th anniversary of the first game that was reported in the newspapers, a soccer league game in 1875,” Lange said.
The first international game played in the United States was held in St. Louis, on Christmas Day 1884. For perspective, the first known match in the UK was in 1860 and professional leagues have been playing in Europe for 100 years. Meanwhile, in St. Louis., a strong amateur league started in 1912, and tapped into well-defined European communities throughout the area.
Spaniards, Italians, Germans - they all took part in these divisions, and were playing high quality football in their own right.
“The story of soccer goes much farther back than 1950,” Lange said. “These guys who played for the United States in that game were like third- or fourth-generation soccer players in St Louis.”
And they were tough, too. That generation of footballers lived - and died - through a lot. They were all born either slightly before or during the Great Depression. Frank “Peewee” Wallace, who started against England, was captured by German soldiers during World War II, and spent 16 months in a prison camp. Frank Borghi fought in the Battle of the Bulge. Harry Keough enlisted in the Navy on his 18th birthday.
“What they did in Brazil, becomes more and more amazing the more you think about it,” Keough says. “They were competitive. They were gritty.”
Lange echoed that sentiment, saying “It's kind of a thread that runs all through St Louis soccer. It's us against the world.”
And this group were also all remarkably familiar with the European game. Keough’s father was a perfect example. He played left back that day against England, but would often recount the time he spent practicing and being around Spanish communities. He spent his teenage years waiting for newspapers to come in from Madrid on a week-long delay, just so he could read the soccer scores. The whole thing happened by circumstance.
“He was an Irish American kid who just happened to live a block and a half of where all the Spaniards lived,” Keough said. “They had a lot down by the Mississippi River where they would play pickup games, and the school playground was nearby. So even though he was not Spanish, he had a bit of a view of world soccer.”
For Keough, though, the sport loomed large in his youth. He was born six years after the game, and has vague memories of kicking a ball on the side of a pitch as his father played out his final days on the field. But even when he was growing up, there was a sense that the upset was a distinctly St. Louisian event - something that he might some day have to live up to.
“Growing up, it was still obviously fresh in everyone's minds, and everybody, my dad and the four St Louis guys… it’s been a big part of what I lived and witnessed,” Keough said.