In the first round of the tournament, the hosts from Sweden went out in the opening match against the Netherlands. Fighting back from a 1–3 deficit with half an hour to go, Sweden only lost 4–3 on a goal scored by Dutch player
Jan Vos in
extra time. At
Tranebergs Idrottsplats, Austrian football pioneer
Hugo Meisl was the referee as Finland beat Italy, also in extra time. In the second round, Finland won again, this time beating Russia, who had received a
bye in the first round. By this stage, Great Britain team entered the contest, drawn to play against
Hungary at
Olympiastadion. Great Britain was
captained by
Vivian Woodward, a record-scoring centre-forward from
Chelsea, who had formed part of Great Britain's gold medal winning side of the
1908 Summer Olympics. Led by forward
Harold Walden, who scored six goals, Great Britain defeated Hungary by 7–0. In the semi-final round, Walden scored all four goals as Great Britain defeated Finland 4–0. In the other semi-final Denmark beat the Netherlands 4–1; the Dutch consolation goal put behind goalkeeper
Sophus Hansen by Danish defender
Harald Hansen. For the second successive time, the final would pair Great Britain with Denmark, and like in 1908, the team representing Great Britain would win gold medals, although this game would be closer than the 4–2 score-line suggested. With no rule allowing
substitutions, Denmark played with ten men after the 30th minute when
Charles Buchwald was injured and had to be taken from the pitch on a stretcher. A
consolation tournament ran conjunctively with the tournament proper paired the losers of the first and second rounds, and was eventually won by Hungary, although no medals were awarded for the top three finishers in that tournament. German player
Gottfried Fuchs equalled the record for most goals in an international (set by Dane
Sophus Nielsen in the
1908 Olympics) with 10 goals for
Germany against
Russia; this record stood until 2001. ==Bracket==