![]() |
| USA 1930 team, Bert Patenaude is center front |
Connecting my personal history to a foundational pioneer of grassroots American soccer Bert Patenaude is an extraordinary genealogical convergence. Decades before the sport exploded into the American consciousness via AYSO and the modern era, our 4th cousin twice removed was etching his name into the bedrock of global football history.
The inaugural 1930 FIFA World Cup in Uruguay was a raw, experimental tournament featuring 13 teams who arrived in Montevideo after grueling steamship journeys.
- The Winners: The hosts, Uruguay, won the tournament, defeating their fierce rivals Argentina 4–2 in a raucous final at the Estadio Centenario.
- The U.S. Performance: The 1930 tournament remains the absolute pinnacle of U.S. Men's World Cup history. The American squad—mocked by the European press as a ragtag group of "shot-putters"—shocked the world by winning Group 4. They delivered consecutive 3–0 shutouts against Belgium and Paraguay to advance to the semifinals, ultimately finishing third in the world after a brutal 6–1 semifinal loss to Argentina.
⚽ Bert Patenaude: The Lethal Marksman
Born in the industrial soccer hotbed of Fall River, Massachusetts, in 1909, Arthur Bertrand "Bert" Patenaude was one of the most lethal, clinical center-forwards of the pre-war era.
- The Club Icon: Playing for his hometown powerhouse, the Fall River Marksmen, Patenaude formed a devastating striking partnership with Billy Gonsalves. Renowned for scoring goals in clusters, he possessed an astonishing domestic strike rate, racking up an estimated 114 goals in 158 appearances in the original American Soccer League (ASL).
- The 76-Year Cold Case: On July 17, 1930, during the 3–0 thrashing of Paraguay, the 20-year-old Patenaude scored in the 10th, 15th, and 50th minutes. However, because players wore no numbers and match sheets were chaotic, FIFA officially credited the second goal to U.S. Captain Tom Florie (and some registries marked it an own goal). Consequently, Argentina’s Guillermo Stábile was celebrated as the first World Cup hat-trick hero for his performance two days later.
- The 2006 Vindication: Patenaude passed away in 1974 believing his milestone was lost to history. However, after meticulous archival work by soccer historians utilizing old match diagrams from the Argentine paper La Prensa, FIFA officially corrected the record on November 10, 2006, rightfully restoring Bert Patenaude as the true scorer of the first-ever hat trick in World Cup history.
📜 The Beautiful Game in the Blood
By: Drifting Cowboy aka Jerry England
Celebrating America 250
Sometimes, a passion isn't just a hobby you stumble into—it’s a genetic echo whispering down through the generations.
Back in the mid-1950s, a kid running around the dust of John A. Sutter Junior High in the San Fernando Valley was introduced to a game called soccer by his Hispanic classmates. Decades later, in 1975, that same passion reignited on the AYSO fields, driving him to earn a USSF Class B coaching license, travel across the pitches of England and Scotland, and faithfully wake up early to follow The Arsenal Gunners. For over forty years, the "Beautiful Game" was a lifestyle.
But out of the blue, the grand archives of history revealed a spectacular truth: the game was in the blood all along.
We trace this footballing inheritance back to our common French-Canadian ancestor, Jean-Baptiste Mignier dit Lagacé (1749–1822). Down one branch, the bloodline traveled through the Meunier dit Lagacé and Passino lines to build our own family. But down the parallel branch, it ran through the industrial mills of Massachusetts to a young, lightning-fast forward named Bert Patenaude—our 4th cousin twice removed.
In July 1930, long before multi-million dollar stadium contracts or television replays, Cousin Bert boarded a steamship bound for the inaugural World Cup in Uruguay. On a cold winter afternoon in Montevideo, he wore the red, white, and blue, unleashing a clinical, three-goal clinic that dismantled Paraguay.
For 76 years, bureaucratic errors robbed him of his crown, mistakenly awarding the honor of the first-ever World Cup hat trick to an Argentine. But true history refuses to be buried. In 2006, FIFA finally rectified the ledger, cementing our Cousin Bert at the absolute summit of international soccer lore.
So the next time we watch a World Cup match or cheer on a crisp passing sequence, we can smile knowing that we aren't just fans of the Beautiful Game. We are family.
Proof that the Beautiful Game is in the genes…
Thank you to FamilySearch for revealing this story and to Gemini AI for your wisdom and narrative assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy







