On that day, the weather in Belgrade was anything but football friendly – it got very cold, and the field was snowed over. Before the game started, fans were clearing the playing field with shovels. The 25,000-seat stadium was packed full at kick-off, and the crowd applauded the Moscow football players from the Central Sports Club of the Armed Forces, CSKA (then the Frunze Central House of Red Army [CDKA]).
Belgrade was the last city on the tour – the Red Army team had won twice and tied once in its previous matches. In the finals, they faced Red Star FC (Fudbalski klub Crvena Zvezda). The football club was founded in early 1945 on the basis of the strongest team in Yugoslavia “Belgrade”, whose players were now almost all members of the Yugoslav national team. In less than a year, Red Star had played 36 games and lost only once, to the team from the Romanian city of Timisoara.
“CDKA, in scarlet shirts and blue shorts, takes the right half of the field”, a Red Star newspaper reporter telegraphed to the editorial office. “The tall, tanned Red Star players are playing on the left. They’re wearing yellow jerseys and white shorts. Each player has his number sewn on the back of his jersey in the English style... Leather ball, swollen in water and covered with mud, is the focus of attention for thousands of pairs of eyes”.
It snowed and rained during the game – the players could not keep the slippery ball. Soviet referee Koltunov gave the Moscow side a free kick in the 25th minute, the goalkeeper failed to catch the wet ball. The Red Army team conceded only one goal in the game.
The game ended 3-1 in favour of the Soviet team.