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Okęcie Airport incident

The Okęcie Airport incident (Polish: Afera na Okęciu) was a dispute between players and technical staff of the Poland national football team on 29 November 1980, starting at the team hotel in Warsaw and climaxing at Okęcie Airport. As an incident of insubordination, when strikes and other forms of civil resistance were intensifying in communist Poland, it caused a domestic press storm, and led to the suspension of several prominent players and the resignation of Ryszard Kulesza, the team manager.

Okęcie Airport's 1960s terminal buildings, the site of the incident's climax (2003 photograph)

Józef Młynarczyk, the team's goalkeeper, was hung over when the time came to leave the hotel for the airport, having not slept following a night on the town with a friend. Kulesza and one of his assistants, Bernard Blaut, decided to leave Młynarczyk behind, much to the indignation of some of the players, including Stanisław Terlecki, Zbigniew Boniek, Włodzimierz Smolarek, and Władysław Żmuda. Terlecki, a stridently pro-Western intellectual with a reputation for mocking the communist establishment, was particularly angered, and drove Młynarczyk to the airport himself, where the players continued their protests. Kulesza eventually relented and allowed Młynarczyk to travel with the team.

The Polish media took hold of the story and over the following days, vociferously attacked the rebellious players. Meanwhile, Terlecki again defied the communist authorities by arranging for the players to meet Pope John Paul II. The Polish Football Association sent Terlecki, Młynarczyk, Boniek, and Żmuda home and imposed various bans preventing them from playing at the international and club level, over the next year. Terlecki and Boniek, in particular, were condemned by the association as insubordinate "rabble-rousers".[1] Smolarek received a more modest, suspended ban. Kulesza resigned in protest at the sanctions imposed on the players, saying they were too harsh. Most of the banned players were reinstated during 1981, but Terlecki was not. He emigrated to the United States in June of that year and, although he returned home five years later, he never played for Poland again.

Background edit

 
Poland football players at the 1974 FIFA World Cup in West Germany

In June 1976, a series of protests took place across communist Poland, soon after the government announced plans to sharply increase the fixed prices charged nationwide for many basic commodities. Violent incidents occurred in Płock, Radom, and Ursus, as the protests were forcibly put down and the planned price hikes were cancelled.[2] These demonstrations and the events surrounding them brought the Polish workforce and intellectual political opposition together, and by 1980, a campaign of civil resistance for political change was strongly intensifying.[3] Industrial strike action in Lublin in July 1980 (the so-called Lublin July) preceded formation of Solidarity (Solidarność) in the port city of Gdańsk, during the following months. This was the first non-communist trade union in an Eastern Bloc country. The government took several steps to obstruct Solidarity's emergence, enforcing press censorship and cutting off telephone connections between the coast and the hinterland, but despite these efforts, by late 1980, four out of every five Polish workers were members of the union.[4]

Poland's national football team, managed by Ryszard Kulesza, was then regarded as one of the world's best, having finished third at the 1974 FIFA World Cup.[5] In November 1980, it was ranked sixth in the world by the Elo rating system.[6] Later that month, the team was preparing for a 1982 World Cup qualifying match away against Malta on 7 December.[7] The squad's departure was scheduled for 29 November, ten days before the game, so the players could attend a training camp in Italy, then contest a warm-up match against a team representing the Italian league.[8]

One of Poland's key players at the time was Stanisław Terlecki, a forward whose club was ŁKS Łódź. The son of university lecturers, Terlecki held a degree in history from the University of Łódź, as well as fervent anti-communist political views and a strident attitude regarding their display.[9] He was known for openly mocking the establishment with subversive abandon, and regularly made jokes in public about communist authority figures and organisations, prompting the ire of the Polish Football Association (PZPN) and the Warsaw police force.[1] The first Polish international player with a university degree in anything other than physical education, he eschewed the Polish sports magazines read by many of his teammates on road trips in favour of Western news journals, such as Newsweek and Time.[9] Like many Polish intellectuals, he sympathised with movements such as Solidarity;[4][9] following their example, he twice attempted to unionise Polish footballers during the late 1970s. The PZPN blocked both attempts, banning Terlecki from all organised football each time; first for six months, then for a year.[9]

Incident edit

Main incident edit

 
Józef Młynarczyk, the team's goalkeeper, whose alleged drunkenness sparked the dispute

Late on 28 November 1980, the night before the team's departure from Warsaw for Italy, goalkeeper Józef Młynarczyk and forward Włodzimierz Smolarek, both of Widzew Łódź, left the Hotel Vera without permission. According to Smolarek they did this to get some dinner because they did not like the food at the hotel. They met a friend of Młynarczyk's, sports journalist Wojciech Zieliński, at the Adria nightclub. According to Andrzej Iwan, another member of the team, the main topic of conversation was Zieliński's estranged wife, who had been caught prostituting herself around Warsaw, and had since moved to Italy.[1] Several Poland players knew her, and Młynarczyk had just been to Italy to play for Widzew Łódź against Juventus. According to Iwan, the journalist encouraged Młynarczyk to drink as they talked, hoping the goalkeeper might have news of her. Smolarek left the club around 02:00, but Młynarczyk and Zieliński stayed until about three hours later.[1]

A senior national team official, Colonel Roman Lisiewicz of the Polish Army, said he saw the goalkeeper and the journalist reach the hotel in a taxi soon after 05:00, but rather than going to his room Młynarczyk left again with Zieliński before returning around 07:00.[1] Tired and hungover, Młynarczyk joined the rest of the players for breakfast, and according to Terlecki spent most of the meal getting worked up about possible managerial retribution. Młynarczyk was in such bad shape that he was unable to carry his own bags; Smolarek took them for him.[10] Next to the team bus, one of Kulesza's assistants, Bernard Blaut, confronted Smolarek and told him Młynarczyk was to stay behind.[10]

Smolarek, Terlecki and two other Polish players – Zbigniew Boniek and Władysław Żmuda, both of Widzew Łódź – angrily objected and nearly came to blows with Blaut.[10] Grzegorz Lato, one of the team's forwards, did not join the protest but later said he had not thought Młynarczyk drunk enough to warrant exclusion.[11] The team eventually left without Terlecki or Młynarczyk. Terlecki, whose own car was on hand, drove himself and Młynarczyk to the airport, where the confrontation continued.[1]

Terlecki tried to stop the many pressmen at the airport from photographing Młynarczyk by running around, yelling, and snatching cameras and microphones from their hands. Meanwhile, the other players attempted to talk Kulesza around, telling him Młynarczyk had serious personal problems. Kulesza eventually relented and allowed the goalkeeper to travel with the team.[1]

Press storm; players meet the Pope edit

 
Pope John Paul II, himself Polish, met the Poland team at the request of Stanisław Terlecki, one of the players.

Among the journalists at the airport were Jacek Gucwa of Polish Television, Bogdan Chruścicki of Polish Radio, and Remigiusz Hetman of the weekly football journal Piłka Nożna.[1] News about the incident quickly spread across the country, partly because of Terlecki's outlandish actions in the reporters' presence. Iwan later reflected that Terlecki had "made so much commotion it was impossible to sweep everything under the carpet".[1] Boniek corroborates this version of events: "Terlecki was massively to blame. He brought Młynarczyk to the airport in his own car, then pulled the plug powering a TV camera out of the wall."[1] Grzegorz Majchrzak, a historian of the Polish Institute of National Remembrance, questions Boniek's words, positing that he might have distorted events in an attempt to distance himself from Terlecki.[1]

The government attempted to use the scandal as a popular distraction, aiming to deflect attention from the strikes and other industrial action.[12] A number of journalists attacked the players who had supported Młynarczyk; the Przegląd Sportowy sports magazine ran the headline "No Mercy for Those Guilty of the Scandal at the Airport" while Tempo, another journal, was similarly severe, proclaiming "This Cannot Be Tolerated".[1] Piłka Nożna condemned the "magnificent men ... who think they can do what they want", but at the same time questioned the conduct of the team's non-playing staff.[1]

In the Italian capital, Terlecki continued to defy the establishment. The players were under strict instructions not to associate with the Vatican while in Rome, but Terlecki arranged for them to meet Pope John Paul II, who was himself Polish.[9] Seeing this as a second act of defiance, the PZPN promptly sent Terlecki, Młynarczyk, Boniek and Żmuda home, escorted by General Marian Ryba of the Polish Army, who was also the football association president.[1][10] Lech Poznań's Piotr Mowlik replaced Młynarczyk for the match against Malta,[13] which Poland won 2–0.[7]

Aftermath edit

Hearings and suspensions edit

 
Ryszard Kulesza, the team manager

Ryba announced on 1 December 1980 that he intended to bar the dissenting players from the Poland squad.[1] When the rest of the team returned to Poland, Terlecki once again attempted to form a footballers' union. Securing the support of 16 other Poland international players, he wrote a letter to the PZPN declaring their intention to do so, leading the authorities to order them to face a tribunal.[9] Only Terlecki, Boniek, Żmuda and Młynarczyk continued to endorse the letter when challenged in court.[9]

On 15 December, PZPN officials attempted to reconstruct the night's events, asking various players and staff to give accounts of what had happened. Several journalists were present. The stories told contradicted each other in several places, notably regarding how much Młynarczyk had had to drink. The team's technical staff said he had been obviously intoxicated when they had seen him, while the goalkeeper insisted he had taken only "three glasses of champagne and a sip of beer" with his friend.[1] Another point of contention regarded the conversation at the airport, which had caused Kulesza to yield. It was generally agreed that the players had talked the manager around by telling him Młynarczyk had personal problems, but the non-playing staff now accused them of emotional blackmail. The players said their intention had been to explain the goalkeeper's off-field issues to help the manager make a more informed decision.[1]

Terlecki's answers at this meeting under the questioning of General Ryba, a former military prosecutor, were typically provocative; when the general asked what time Terlecki had left the hotel on 29 November, the ŁKS forward said 08:00. "Are you sure it was 08:00?" Ryba pressed – "Are you sure it wasn't 08:02?" The player replied that he was not: "No. Maybe it was even 08:03. I don't know this time exactly, because I have one of your Russian watches."[9]

 
Antoni Piechniczek replaced Kulesza as manager soon after the incident.

A week later, the PZPN announced its final verdict. The only versions of events accepted for consideration were those recounted by Kulesza and Blaut; those of all the players and of the team physiotherapist and sport psychologist were dismissed. Żmuda and Młynarczyk were barred from playing for either Poland or their clubs for eight months, and Terlecki and Boniek for twelve. Smolarek received a two-month ban, which was suspended for six months.[1] Citing their previous records of insubordination and misconduct, the PZPN called Terlecki and Boniek "rabble-rousers".[1]

Reactions edit

Kulesza left his job soon afterwards; according to Majchrzak, he resigned in protest at the players' punishments, which he thought were too harsh. Officials at Widzew Łódź accused the PZPN of bias, saying the association had not supervised the players properly and should shoulder some of the blame. Directors at Widzew and ŁKS Łódź briefly considered resigning their PZPN memberships and organising their own league championship, but did not. The national team players' council, at that time comprising Marek Dziuba, Paweł Janas and Wojciech Rudy, wrote an open letter expressing surprise at what they saw as excessive sanctions against Terlecki, Boniek, Żmuda and Młynarczyk. They admitted the goalkeeper's conduct had been far from exemplary, but contended that the incident was only minor, and had been exacerbated by disproportionately prominent and negative press coverage.[1]

Despite being without some of their top players, Widzew Łódź were crowned champions of Poland at the end of the 1980–81 season.[14] Ryba left his post in April 1981, along with a number of his contemporaries, described by Stefan Szczepłek, a sports journalist and football historian, as "honest officials, together with some football-friendly Polish Army officers".[1] In their place came a number of communist officials, most prominently Włodzimierz Reczek, an erstwhile Politburo member, who took over as head of the football association despite a reputation for not liking the sport.[1]

Młynarczyk, Boniek and Żmuda had their bans cancelled early. Żmuda and Młynarczyk returned in the 1–0 home win over East Germany on 2 May 1981,[15] and Boniek was reinstated four months later.[7][16] The players' recall was partly due to the efforts of Kulesza's replacement, Antoni Piechniczek, to secure their return.[12] According to Majchrzak, Boniek and Żmuda apologised for their actions before the General Committee for Physical Culture and Sport of the Polish People's Republic, the PZPN's governing body, but kept this from Terlecki,[1] who appealed to have his ban lifted several times, but to no avail.[9][10]

Legacy edit

Terlecki openly participated in students' strikes at his old university in Łódź and across Poland over the next few months, providing food to the students by the car-load. ŁKS cancelled his registration in early 1981.[9][10] Majchrzak stresses that Terlecki was the only player involved in the incident not to regain his place in the Poland team, and claims that this was down to an intense grudge held against him by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Secret Police (SB). Terlecki developed his own theory that the media circus following the airport incident had been deliberately engineered by the SB to head the players off forming their own trade union. There were several other incidents of drunkenness involving Młynarczyk, Majchrzak writes, but this was the only occasion when any player was punished for it. In October 1981, when the team travelled to Argentina, Młynarczyk arrived at Okęcie "completely drunk", according to Iwan,[1] but far from reprimanding him, team staff gave him even more alcohol during the flight to help ease the pain of his broken finger.[1]

Poland qualified for the 1982 World Cup with a perfect record,[17] and performed strongly in the competition, losing to Italy in the semi-finals but beating France in a play-off to claim third place.[18] Kulesza became the manager of Tunisia, and later founded a coaching school in Warsaw.[19]

Saying he was "being treated like a leper",[10] Terlecki emigrated to the United States in June 1981, and joined the Pittsburgh Spirit of the Major Indoor Soccer League. He pursued a new life in America with great vigour.[9] Terlecki's on-field displays in the U.S. were widely praised. In three seasons with Pittsburgh he became the club's all-time top goalscorer, but managers reportedly had trouble "harness[ing] Terlecki's fiery temper"[20] and his wife Ewa became intensely homesick.[9] Terlecki announced his intention to move back to Poland in 1985, saying he believed the political situation had improved and that he wished to reunite his family.[20] He returned home the following year,[21] and resumed his career in Polish club football.[10] He expressed a desire to play for the national team again,[20] but was never selected.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Majchrzak, Grzegorz (22 July 2012). "Banda czworga, czyli afera na Okęciu" [Gang of Four, the Okęcie incident]. Uważam Rze (in Polish). Presspublica: 84–87. ISSN 2082-8292. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
  2. ^ Falk, Barbara J. (2003). The Dilemmas of Dissidence in East-Central Europe: Citizen Intellectuals and Philosopher Kings. Central European University Press. p. 34. ISBN 963-9241-39-3.
  3. ^ Smolar, Aleksander (2009). "'Towards 'Self-limiting Revolution': Poland 1970–89". In Roberts, Adam; Garton Ash, Timothy (eds.). Civil Resistance and Power Politics: The Experience of Non-violent Action from Gandhi to the Present. Oxford University Press. pp. 127–143. ISBN 978-0-19-955201-6.
  4. ^ a b Barker, Colin (Autumn 2005). "The rise of Solidarnosc". International Socialism. No. 108. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  5. ^ "World Cup 1974 finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  6. ^ "World Football Elo Ratings: Poland". World Football Elo Ratings. Advanced Satellite Consulting. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  7. ^ a b c . FIFA. Archived from the original on 4 June 2007. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
  8. ^ Dobrowolski, Piotr (17 December 2000). [(Re)presentation of the scandalous] (PDF). Słowo Ludu (in Polish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Anderson, Bruce (15 February 1982). "Stan The Fran, Free Spirit". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 4 August 2012. He was the bread-and-butter man during student strikes in [Ł]odz in 1981, using his connections to get food by the carload for university students. And twice he was suspended by the federation – the first time for six months, then for a year for trying to form a players' union.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Błoński, Robert (14 November 2005). [Terlecki: Life begins at 50]. Sport.pl (in Polish). Agora SA. Archived from the original on 17 February 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  11. ^ Malicki, Wojciech. [The state of war and football]. Grzegorz Lato – Wspomnienia (in Polish). Wojciech Malicki. Archived from the original on 2 August 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  12. ^ a b Kalwa, Andrzej (7 August 2008). "Poligon: Rola alkohola" [Proving Ground: The role of alcohol]. Z czuba (in Polish). Agora SA. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  13. ^ Kuczmera, Dariusz (7 March 2012). "Wielkie mecze Włodzimierza Smolarka" [Włodzimierz Smolarek's big matches]. Dziennik Łódzki (in Polish). Polskapresse Sp. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
  14. ^ Kukuć, Bogusław (21 July 2003). "Taki był Wielki Widzew" [That was Great Widzew]. Dziennik Łódzki (in Polish). Polskapresse Sp. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  15. ^ Mamrud, Roberto. "Wladyslaw Zmuda – International Appearances". RSSSF. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  16. ^ Klukowski, Tomasz. "Zbigniew Boniek – International Appearances". RSSSF. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  17. ^ "World Cup 1982 Qualifying". RSSSF. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  18. ^ "World Cup 1982 finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  19. ^ Szczepłek, Stefan (20 May 2008). "Dobry człowiek" [A good man]. Rzeczpospolita (in Polish). Presspublica. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  20. ^ a b c Eberson, Sharon (19 September 1985). "'Homesick' Stan Terlecki to leave U.S." Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 12.
  21. ^ "Spirit will not add Albuquerque". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 7 January 1986. p. 26.; Litterer, David; Holroyd, Steve. "MISL 1985–86". American Soccer History Archives. Retrieved 6 August 2012.

okęcie, airport, incident, polish, afera, okęciu, dispute, between, players, technical, staff, poland, national, football, team, november, 1980, starting, team, hotel, warsaw, climaxing, okęcie, airport, incident, insubordination, when, strikes, other, forms, . The Okecie Airport incident Polish Afera na Okeciu was a dispute between players and technical staff of the Poland national football team on 29 November 1980 starting at the team hotel in Warsaw and climaxing at Okecie Airport As an incident of insubordination when strikes and other forms of civil resistance were intensifying in communist Poland it caused a domestic press storm and led to the suspension of several prominent players and the resignation of Ryszard Kulesza the team manager Okecie Airport s 1960s terminal buildings the site of the incident s climax 2003 photograph Jozef Mlynarczyk the team s goalkeeper was hung over when the time came to leave the hotel for the airport having not slept following a night on the town with a friend Kulesza and one of his assistants Bernard Blaut decided to leave Mlynarczyk behind much to the indignation of some of the players including Stanislaw Terlecki Zbigniew Boniek Wlodzimierz Smolarek and Wladyslaw Zmuda Terlecki a stridently pro Western intellectual with a reputation for mocking the communist establishment was particularly angered and drove Mlynarczyk to the airport himself where the players continued their protests Kulesza eventually relented and allowed Mlynarczyk to travel with the team The Polish media took hold of the story and over the following days vociferously attacked the rebellious players Meanwhile Terlecki again defied the communist authorities by arranging for the players to meet Pope John Paul II The Polish Football Association sent Terlecki Mlynarczyk Boniek and Zmuda home and imposed various bans preventing them from playing at the international and club level over the next year Terlecki and Boniek in particular were condemned by the association as insubordinate rabble rousers 1 Smolarek received a more modest suspended ban Kulesza resigned in protest at the sanctions imposed on the players saying they were too harsh Most of the banned players were reinstated during 1981 but Terlecki was not He emigrated to the United States in June of that year and although he returned home five years later he never played for Poland again Contents 1 Background 2 Incident 2 1 Main incident 2 2 Press storm players meet the Pope 3 Aftermath 3 1 Hearings and suspensions 3 2 Reactions 4 Legacy 5 ReferencesBackground editMain articles History of Solidarity and 1980 Lublin strikes nbsp Poland football players at the 1974 FIFA World Cup in West Germany In June 1976 a series of protests took place across communist Poland soon after the government announced plans to sharply increase the fixed prices charged nationwide for many basic commodities Violent incidents occurred in Plock Radom and Ursus as the protests were forcibly put down and the planned price hikes were cancelled 2 These demonstrations and the events surrounding them brought the Polish workforce and intellectual political opposition together and by 1980 a campaign of civil resistance for political change was strongly intensifying 3 Industrial strike action in Lublin in July 1980 the so called Lublin July preceded formation of Solidarity Solidarnosc in the port city of Gdansk during the following months This was the first non communist trade union in an Eastern Bloc country The government took several steps to obstruct Solidarity s emergence enforcing press censorship and cutting off telephone connections between the coast and the hinterland but despite these efforts by late 1980 four out of every five Polish workers were members of the union 4 Poland s national football team managed by Ryszard Kulesza was then regarded as one of the world s best having finished third at the 1974 FIFA World Cup 5 In November 1980 it was ranked sixth in the world by the Elo rating system 6 Later that month the team was preparing for a 1982 World Cup qualifying match away against Malta on 7 December 7 The squad s departure was scheduled for 29 November ten days before the game so the players could attend a training camp in Italy then contest a warm up match against a team representing the Italian league 8 One of Poland s key players at the time was Stanislaw Terlecki a forward whose club was LKS Lodz The son of university lecturers Terlecki held a degree in history from the University of Lodz as well as fervent anti communist political views and a strident attitude regarding their display 9 He was known for openly mocking the establishment with subversive abandon and regularly made jokes in public about communist authority figures and organisations prompting the ire of the Polish Football Association PZPN and the Warsaw police force 1 The first Polish international player with a university degree in anything other than physical education he eschewed the Polish sports magazines read by many of his teammates on road trips in favour of Western news journals such as Newsweek and Time 9 Like many Polish intellectuals he sympathised with movements such as Solidarity 4 9 following their example he twice attempted to unionise Polish footballers during the late 1970s The PZPN blocked both attempts banning Terlecki from all organised football each time first for six months then for a year 9 Incident editMain incident edit nbsp Jozef Mlynarczyk the team s goalkeeper whose alleged drunkenness sparked the dispute Late on 28 November 1980 the night before the team s departure from Warsaw for Italy goalkeeper Jozef Mlynarczyk and forward Wlodzimierz Smolarek both of Widzew Lodz left the Hotel Vera without permission According to Smolarek they did this to get some dinner because they did not like the food at the hotel They met a friend of Mlynarczyk s sports journalist Wojciech Zielinski at the Adria nightclub According to Andrzej Iwan another member of the team the main topic of conversation was Zielinski s estranged wife who had been caught prostituting herself around Warsaw and had since moved to Italy 1 Several Poland players knew her and Mlynarczyk had just been to Italy to play for Widzew Lodz against Juventus According to Iwan the journalist encouraged Mlynarczyk to drink as they talked hoping the goalkeeper might have news of her Smolarek left the club around 02 00 but Mlynarczyk and Zielinski stayed until about three hours later 1 A senior national team official Colonel Roman Lisiewicz of the Polish Army said he saw the goalkeeper and the journalist reach the hotel in a taxi soon after 05 00 but rather than going to his room Mlynarczyk left again with Zielinski before returning around 07 00 1 Tired and hungover Mlynarczyk joined the rest of the players for breakfast and according to Terlecki spent most of the meal getting worked up about possible managerial retribution Mlynarczyk was in such bad shape that he was unable to carry his own bags Smolarek took them for him 10 Next to the team bus one of Kulesza s assistants Bernard Blaut confronted Smolarek and told him Mlynarczyk was to stay behind 10 Smolarek Terlecki and two other Polish players Zbigniew Boniek and Wladyslaw Zmuda both of Widzew Lodz angrily objected and nearly came to blows with Blaut 10 Grzegorz Lato one of the team s forwards did not join the protest but later said he had not thought Mlynarczyk drunk enough to warrant exclusion 11 The team eventually left without Terlecki or Mlynarczyk Terlecki whose own car was on hand drove himself and Mlynarczyk to the airport where the confrontation continued 1 Terlecki tried to stop the many pressmen at the airport from photographing Mlynarczyk by running around yelling and snatching cameras and microphones from their hands Meanwhile the other players attempted to talk Kulesza around telling him Mlynarczyk had serious personal problems Kulesza eventually relented and allowed the goalkeeper to travel with the team 1 Press storm players meet the Pope edit nbsp Pope John Paul II himself Polish met the Poland team at the request of Stanislaw Terlecki one of the players Among the journalists at the airport were Jacek Gucwa of Polish Television Bogdan Chruscicki of Polish Radio and Remigiusz Hetman of the weekly football journal Pilka Nozna 1 News about the incident quickly spread across the country partly because of Terlecki s outlandish actions in the reporters presence Iwan later reflected that Terlecki had made so much commotion it was impossible to sweep everything under the carpet 1 Boniek corroborates this version of events Terlecki was massively to blame He brought Mlynarczyk to the airport in his own car then pulled the plug powering a TV camera out of the wall 1 Grzegorz Majchrzak a historian of the Polish Institute of National Remembrance questions Boniek s words positing that he might have distorted events in an attempt to distance himself from Terlecki 1 The government attempted to use the scandal as a popular distraction aiming to deflect attention from the strikes and other industrial action 12 A number of journalists attacked the players who had supported Mlynarczyk the Przeglad Sportowy sports magazine ran the headline No Mercy for Those Guilty of the Scandal at the Airport while Tempo another journal was similarly severe proclaiming This Cannot Be Tolerated 1 Pilka Nozna condemned the magnificent men who think they can do what they want but at the same time questioned the conduct of the team s non playing staff 1 In the Italian capital Terlecki continued to defy the establishment The players were under strict instructions not to associate with the Vatican while in Rome but Terlecki arranged for them to meet Pope John Paul II who was himself Polish 9 Seeing this as a second act of defiance the PZPN promptly sent Terlecki Mlynarczyk Boniek and Zmuda home escorted by General Marian Ryba of the Polish Army who was also the football association president 1 10 Lech Poznan s Piotr Mowlik replaced Mlynarczyk for the match against Malta 13 which Poland won 2 0 7 Aftermath editHearings and suspensions edit nbsp Ryszard Kulesza the team manager Ryba announced on 1 December 1980 that he intended to bar the dissenting players from the Poland squad 1 When the rest of the team returned to Poland Terlecki once again attempted to form a footballers union Securing the support of 16 other Poland international players he wrote a letter to the PZPN declaring their intention to do so leading the authorities to order them to face a tribunal 9 Only Terlecki Boniek Zmuda and Mlynarczyk continued to endorse the letter when challenged in court 9 On 15 December PZPN officials attempted to reconstruct the night s events asking various players and staff to give accounts of what had happened Several journalists were present The stories told contradicted each other in several places notably regarding how much Mlynarczyk had had to drink The team s technical staff said he had been obviously intoxicated when they had seen him while the goalkeeper insisted he had taken only three glasses of champagne and a sip of beer with his friend 1 Another point of contention regarded the conversation at the airport which had caused Kulesza to yield It was generally agreed that the players had talked the manager around by telling him Mlynarczyk had personal problems but the non playing staff now accused them of emotional blackmail The players said their intention had been to explain the goalkeeper s off field issues to help the manager make a more informed decision 1 Terlecki s answers at this meeting under the questioning of General Ryba a former military prosecutor were typically provocative when the general asked what time Terlecki had left the hotel on 29 November the LKS forward said 08 00 Are you sure it was 08 00 Ryba pressed Are you sure it wasn t 08 02 The player replied that he was not No Maybe it was even 08 03 I don t know this time exactly because I have one of your Russian watches 9 nbsp Antoni Piechniczek replaced Kulesza as manager soon after the incident A week later the PZPN announced its final verdict The only versions of events accepted for consideration were those recounted by Kulesza and Blaut those of all the players and of the team physiotherapist and sport psychologist were dismissed Zmuda and Mlynarczyk were barred from playing for either Poland or their clubs for eight months and Terlecki and Boniek for twelve Smolarek received a two month ban which was suspended for six months 1 Citing their previous records of insubordination and misconduct the PZPN called Terlecki and Boniek rabble rousers 1 Reactions edit Kulesza left his job soon afterwards according to Majchrzak he resigned in protest at the players punishments which he thought were too harsh Officials at Widzew Lodz accused the PZPN of bias saying the association had not supervised the players properly and should shoulder some of the blame Directors at Widzew and LKS Lodz briefly considered resigning their PZPN memberships and organising their own league championship but did not The national team players council at that time comprising Marek Dziuba Pawel Janas and Wojciech Rudy wrote an open letter expressing surprise at what they saw as excessive sanctions against Terlecki Boniek Zmuda and Mlynarczyk They admitted the goalkeeper s conduct had been far from exemplary but contended that the incident was only minor and had been exacerbated by disproportionately prominent and negative press coverage 1 Despite being without some of their top players Widzew Lodz were crowned champions of Poland at the end of the 1980 81 season 14 Ryba left his post in April 1981 along with a number of his contemporaries described by Stefan Szczeplek a sports journalist and football historian as honest officials together with some football friendly Polish Army officers 1 In their place came a number of communist officials most prominently Wlodzimierz Reczek an erstwhile Politburo member who took over as head of the football association despite a reputation for not liking the sport 1 Mlynarczyk Boniek and Zmuda had their bans cancelled early Zmuda and Mlynarczyk returned in the 1 0 home win over East Germany on 2 May 1981 15 and Boniek was reinstated four months later 7 16 The players recall was partly due to the efforts of Kulesza s replacement Antoni Piechniczek to secure their return 12 According to Majchrzak Boniek and Zmuda apologised for their actions before the General Committee for Physical Culture and Sport of the Polish People s Republic the PZPN s governing body but kept this from Terlecki 1 who appealed to have his ban lifted several times but to no avail 9 10 Legacy editTerlecki openly participated in students strikes at his old university in Lodz and across Poland over the next few months providing food to the students by the car load LKS cancelled his registration in early 1981 9 10 Majchrzak stresses that Terlecki was the only player involved in the incident not to regain his place in the Poland team and claims that this was down to an intense grudge held against him by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Secret Police SB Terlecki developed his own theory that the media circus following the airport incident had been deliberately engineered by the SB to head the players off forming their own trade union There were several other incidents of drunkenness involving Mlynarczyk Majchrzak writes but this was the only occasion when any player was punished for it In October 1981 when the team travelled to Argentina Mlynarczyk arrived at Okecie completely drunk according to Iwan 1 but far from reprimanding him team staff gave him even more alcohol during the flight to help ease the pain of his broken finger 1 Poland qualified for the 1982 World Cup with a perfect record 17 and performed strongly in the competition losing to Italy in the semi finals but beating France in a play off to claim third place 18 Kulesza became the manager of Tunisia and later founded a coaching school in Warsaw 19 Saying he was being treated like a leper 10 Terlecki emigrated to the United States in June 1981 and joined the Pittsburgh Spirit of the Major Indoor Soccer League He pursued a new life in America with great vigour 9 Terlecki s on field displays in the U S were widely praised In three seasons with Pittsburgh he became the club s all time top goalscorer but managers reportedly had trouble harness ing Terlecki s fiery temper 20 and his wife Ewa became intensely homesick 9 Terlecki announced his intention to move back to Poland in 1985 saying he believed the political situation had improved and that he wished to reunite his family 20 He returned home the following year 21 and resumed his career in Polish club football 10 He expressed a desire to play for the national team again 20 but was never selected 10 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Majchrzak Grzegorz 22 July 2012 Banda czworga czyli afera na Okeciu Gang of Four the Okecie incident Uwazam Rze in Polish Presspublica 84 87 ISSN 2082 8292 Retrieved 13 June 2014 Falk Barbara J 2003 The Dilemmas of Dissidence in East Central Europe Citizen Intellectuals and Philosopher Kings Central European University Press p 34 ISBN 963 9241 39 3 Smolar Aleksander 2009 Towards Self limiting Revolution Poland 1970 89 In Roberts Adam Garton Ash Timothy eds Civil Resistance and Power Politics The Experience of Non violent Action from Gandhi to the Present Oxford University Press pp 127 143 ISBN 978 0 19 955201 6 a b Barker Colin Autumn 2005 The rise of Solidarnosc International Socialism No 108 Retrieved 4 August 2012 World Cup 1974 finals RSSSF Retrieved 4 August 2012 World Football Elo Ratings Poland World Football Elo Ratings Advanced Satellite Consulting Retrieved 4 August 2012 a b c Poland Fixtures and Results FIFA Archived from the original on 4 June 2007 Retrieved 13 June 2014 Dobrowolski Piotr 17 December 2000 Re prezentacja skandalistow Re presentation of the scandalous PDF Slowo Ludu in Polish Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l Anderson Bruce 15 February 1982 Stan The Fran Free Spirit Sports Illustrated Retrieved 4 August 2012 He was the bread and butter man during student strikes in L odz in 1981 using his connections to get food by the carload for university students And twice he was suspended by the federation the first time for six months then for a year for trying to form a players union a b c d e f g h i Blonski Robert 14 November 2005 Terlecki Zycie zaczyna sie po 50 tce Terlecki Life begins at 50 Sport pl in Polish Agora SA Archived from the original on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2012 Malicki Wojciech Stan wojenny i pilka nozna via Wayback The state of war and football Grzegorz Lato Wspomnienia in Polish Wojciech Malicki Archived from the original on 2 August 2008 Retrieved 4 August 2012 a b Kalwa Andrzej 7 August 2008 Poligon Rola alkohola Proving Ground The role of alcohol Z czuba in Polish Agora SA Retrieved 4 August 2012 Kuczmera Dariusz 7 March 2012 Wielkie mecze Wlodzimierza Smolarka Wlodzimierz Smolarek s big matches Dziennik Lodzki in Polish Polskapresse Sp Retrieved 13 June 2014 Kukuc Boguslaw 21 July 2003 Taki byl Wielki Widzew That was Great Widzew Dziennik Lodzki in Polish Polskapresse Sp Retrieved 4 August 2012 Mamrud Roberto Wladyslaw Zmuda International Appearances RSSSF Retrieved 4 August 2012 Klukowski Tomasz Zbigniew Boniek International Appearances RSSSF Retrieved 4 August 2012 World Cup 1982 Qualifying RSSSF Retrieved 4 August 2012 World Cup 1982 finals RSSSF Retrieved 4 August 2012 Szczeplek Stefan 20 May 2008 Dobry czlowiek A good man Rzeczpospolita in Polish Presspublica Retrieved 4 August 2012 a b c Eberson Sharon 19 September 1985 Homesick Stan Terlecki to leave U S Pittsburgh Post Gazette p 12 Spirit will not add Albuquerque Pittsburgh Post Gazette 7 January 1986 p 26 Litterer David Holroyd Steve MISL 1985 86 American Soccer History Archives Retrieved 6 August 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Okecie Airport incident amp oldid 1221451157, wikipedia, 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