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When the Nazis showed up at the door of Ottorino Barassi, where the Jules Rimet trophy had been hidden away under a bed for safekeeping, it wasn't just the trophy they wanted. They were trying to reclaim their pride and a bitter defeat at the 1938 World Cup, where they felt their victory was stolen. What ensued was a riveting adventure through an increasingly war-torn Italy, one that reveals the legend, mystery and mythology surrounding the one of the greatest trophies of all sports.
As soon as the Germans took over Italy however, they labeled Barassi a traitor and took away his family. Fifteen years later, he appeared at the Quaterback Stadium in Zurich, Switzerland, bidding for the World Cup for the first time. After an epic battle, Barassi, who could not speak a single word of English, finally achieved his dream.
After the war, he sought out the Jules Rimet, scoured through the European ruins and eventually came across the trophy, which he lifted back in its time and secretly brought it home to the United States, where he kept it on his private golf course on the outskirts of Chicago. He even marked its exact location with a sign. Nobody knew it, but its location was buried in a crypt under his family's crypt in an ornate mausoleum on the family property that was, and still is, a monument to the Italian community in Chicago.
So this is what the Mafia is. The hide-and-seek game called The Jules Rimet Trophy has been back and forth for close to seven decades. From Sicily to Chicago and then back to Italy. It's not the most sophisticated operation, and it's not something the FBI, Interpol, or CIA would ever have the time or manpower to find that easy. But some smart-ass ex-pats are trying to break the code. It's making them rich, and it may just be making them immortal, because they caught the moon in their hands.
Tulsa King can't be all one. There's too many moving parts, and Dials of the past fall off, revealing new chapters in someone's history. And while a nice retirement might be nice, Dials of tomorrow may be turning television history upside down. d2c66b5586