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29.7.15
Bus Parade
The civic parade for a victorious team is now one of the great traditions in world football, dating back to Blackburn Olympic's FA Cup winning celebrations in 1883.
In the 1915-16 season Bethlehem Steel became the first team to complete a National Challenge Cup and American Cup double.
28.7.15
Spain 1929
A splendid photograph from an interesting blog.
Gorgeous strip on the Spain team that famously defeated England at Madrid's Estadio Metropolitano on May 15th 1929. The great Ricardo Zamora sports his trademark cricket sweater.
27.7.15
Association Football by J.L Jones (1904)
I cannot find words strong enough to express my disapproval. The habit of smoking, once started, may lead to grave disasters.
Jack Jones (1904)
Jack Jones was born in Rhuddlan but grew up on Merseyside. Early in his career he played for Bootle, but his first taste of League football came at Grimsby Town. His talent as a cricketer took him to Sheffield United Cricket Club and he then also signed for the Sheffield United Football Club. After 3 seasons at Bramall Lane Jones moved to Tottenham Hotspur. The fact that Tottenham were then in the Southern League meant that United didn't receive a transfer fee. United were further angered as the club had secured Jones a cricket coaching position at Rugby School.Jones enjoyed 7 years at Tottenham Hotspur, and was captain of the FA Cup winning side in 1901. An outside left, he represented Wales on 21 occasions.
26.7.15
Artistic License
This large ceramic tile was produced by the Spode company in the 1870s. There is some lovely detail in evidence, such as the construction of the ball and the costumes of the players. However, a closer look at the jerseys reveals some artistic license. Is it fair to assume that the rose and the thistle motifs are meant to suggest that what we are seeing here is an England v Scotland clash, played out against a backdrop of rolling hills?
England, of course, have never sported the rose as a national football emblem (it has always been the crest of the Rugby Union team). The thistle is usually Scotland's Rugby emblem, but the Association team adopted it in the 1890s before a return to the lion rampant that had featured from the first ever international. The combination of hooped jerseys (navy and white) and the thistle emblem might have appeared in 1881, but those jerseys were collared.
See also: http://gottfriedfuchs.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/egg-chasers.html
25.7.15
The club named after a horse...
Club Atlético Porteño (Buenos Aires) was originally formed in July 1895 as Club Atlético Capital. The founders were Irish immigrants . They gambled the club kitty om a horse called Porteño. The horse won, and the club flourished, so they changed the name of the club to that of the horse.
They rose to the Primera División in 1907 and remained there until until 1928 . When Argentinian football was professionalised in 1931 the football club dropped out of the league. Porteño is now predominantly a Rugby Union club.
Porteño won the Federación Argentina de Football Primera División in 1912 and 1914 and the Copa de Competencia Jockey Club in 1915 and 1918.
Porteño also featured in 2 annual interleague contests , the Copa Rosario (Culaciatti) and Copa Mariano Reyna, in which they represented the Asocación Argentina de Football against Liga Rosarina (invaribaly Rosario),
The team photo comes from the 1919 Copa Rosario final, which Porteño won 1-0.
The stripes were Royal blue and white.
21.7.15
Italy 1910
25 footballers identified as 'probables ' for the future Italian national team by Lettura Sportiva in February 1910.
The first Italian XI in May of that year featured 10 of these players (marked *), and 19 of those featured eventually represented their country. It seems surprising that Genoa CFC or Torino are not represented.
The players (and their clubs) are as follows:
Andrea Doria
Luigi Marchetti
? Ansaldo
Francesco Cali*
Of the 3 players from the Genoese club only the defender Francesco Cali (who had previously represented Switzerland) attained international honours.
Juventus
Giovanni Goccione
Alfredo Ferraris
Ernesto Borel
Umberto Pennano
None of these players made the international XI.
Club Internazionale
Virgillio Fossati*
Internazionale had only been founded in 1908, and this was the year of their farcical first scudetto. Centre half Fossati was killed in battle in 1918.
Club Ausonia
Giuseppe Rizzi*
Attilio Trerea*
Franco Bontadini
All 3 were capped. Bontadini was selected for the first international but couldn’t
play due to medical school commitments. When selected for international duty he had moved on to Internazionale.
Ausonia Football Club was a Milan based team that folded in 1912.
Milan Foot-Ball and Cricket Club
Pietro Lana *
Aldo Cevenini*
Gustavo
Carrer
All three represented Italy.
Unione Sportiva
Milanese
Franco Varisco *
Mario De Simoni*
Arturo Boiocchi *
USM originally wound up in 1928
Pro Vercelli
Giovanni
Innocenti
Giuseppe
Milano
Felice Milano
Guido Ara
Pietro Leone
Carlo Corna
Angelo Binaschi
Carlo Rampini
Pro Vercelli were the big guns of Italian football, and the inclusion of 8 of their players shows how highly they were regarded. However, in between the publication of this magazine and the selection of the first Italian XI Pro Vercelli were ostracised for their refusal to play Internaziuonale in a championship play-off, instead fielding a team of 11-15 year olds (of which more soon!). As a consequence of this the Pro Vercelli stars had to wait a while for their international debuts.
18.7.15
Arsenal
A football signed by the Arsenal team of 1936. The signatures are:
Norman Sidey
A centre half (which was now a central defensive position rather than a playmaker), he played 45 games for Arsenal (1932-38).
Bobby Davidson
The man who had to shoulder the onerous billing of being the next Alex James. Davidson played
63 games and scored 15 goals (1935-1937) but had the reputation of being a 'difficult personality' and moved on to Coventry City.
George Male
The fullback played 321 games for Arsenal (1930-48) He captained England 6 times in his 19 international appearances.
Alex James
Among the greatest footballers of all time, James was the man who developed the role of the inside forward into something more approaching the modern midfielder.
George Cox
In 2 seasons Cox played 7 games for Arsenal. He then moved on to Fulham, but his career never really took off.
Peter Dougal
A peripatetic Scottish inside forward whose many clubs included FC Sete in France.
Jackie Milne
A versatile winger, playing either left or right, Milne was at the club from 1935 to 1937 and played 54 games, scoring 19 goals .
Bob John
Welsh international (15 caps) half back. John was with Arsenal from 1922 to 1937, making 470 appearances.
Cliff Bastin
By the age of nineteen Bastin had won a League title, the FA Cup and been capped for England, making him the youngest player ever to achieve all three.
He played 399 games for Arsenal having joined from Exeter City as a 17 yr old. An outside left, he won 21 caps. He suffered with deafness.
Les Compton.
A full back and later a centre half, he represented England twice and was associated with Arsenal for 22 years, playing over 250 matches.
George Allison (Manager)
Given the unenviable task of succeeding the most innovative manager in the history of football Mr Allison did a more than decent job. An old school secretary manager with little involvement in coaching or tactics he led the Gunners to 2 league titles and 2 FA Cup wins. In the 1939 film The Arsenal Stadium Mystery, he had the prophetic line: It's one-nil to the Arsenal. That's the way we like it.
Joe Shaw (Assistant Manager)
Shaw had joined Arsenal as a player in 1907. On retiring in 1922 he joined the coaching staff and became caretaker manager when Herbert Chapman passed away. He oversaw the winning of the 1933-34 League title.
Arsenal players on a training walk.This form of fitness preparation has now fallen out of favour.
9.7.15
Football publications of the 1860s
The Laws of the Game
Shortly after the Football Association formulated The Laws of the Game in 1863 they were published by John Lillywhite of Seymour Street in a booklet that cost a shilling and sixpence.
Kicking the ball- simply explained with the aid of annotated diagrams(!)
Beeton's Football
In 1866 cricket writer Frederick Wood produced Beeton's Football. The Beeton's series covered a wide range of subjects, and was an offshoot of the legendary Beeton's Book of Household Management.
The book contained hints on diet and preparation (avoid foods and habits which are injurious to the wind and general powers of endurance), and illustrated guidance on how to best kick the ball.
the 98 page octavo book cost a shilling .
The book contained hints on diet and preparation (avoid foods and habits which are injurious to the wind and general powers of endurance), and illustrated guidance on how to best kick the ball.
the 98 page octavo book cost a shilling .
Sporting Life 07.02.66
Routledge's Handbook of Football
The next publisher to respond to the growing popularity of football was G. Routledge and Sons. Their 60 page Handbook of Football appeared in 1867.
The quality of the advice, which might, to modern ears, sound quite naive, is indicative of the rudimentary state of the game at this point in time:
For excellent fellows at football the prettiest costume is a coloured velvet cap with tassel, a tight striped jersey and white flannel trousers. It is a good plan, if it can be previously so arranged, to have one side with striped jerseys of one colour, say red, and the other with another, say blue. This prevents confusion and wild attempts to run after and wrest the ball from your neighbour. If you have the good fortune to own a copy you could expect to get £500 for it at auction.
The Football Annual
The Lillywhite family had been publishing cricket books since 1848.
The first John Lilywhite's Football Annual appeared in 1868. It was edited by Charles Alcock, and was called The Football Annual from 1869 to 1908 . The annuals are exceedingly rare and are commonly known as Charles Alcock's Football Annual.
'Published with the sanction of the Football Association', the annual was a combination of rule book, instruction manual, and club directory. It contained advertisements for sports goods.
The 85 page 1868 edition covered both Association and Rugby codes.
6.7.15
National Challenge Cup Winners 1930-32
A look at the winners of the United States' National Challenge Cup in the early 1930s reveals the following interesting sequence:
1930
The Fall River Marksmen of the Atlantic Coast League defeated Bruell Insurance of Cleveland over 2 legs. At New York Polo Grounds (30.03.30) Marksmen won 7-2. Jimmy McAuley (3),Werner Nilsen (3) and Alex McNab were the scorers. Luna Park, Cleveland hosted the second leg on 06.04.30- , Marksmen winning 2-1, with goals by McNab and Bob McAuley.
Fall River Marksmen don't appear in the league tables for the 1931 season, as the club had relocated to New York and had become the New York Yankees. However, for the National Challenge Cup they played under the name of Fall River Marksmen, having entered the tournament before the move to New York.
In the final the Marksmen/Yankees faced Chicago Bricklayers.
The 1st leg at the Polo Grounds (05.04.31) finished 6-2, Bert Patenaude scoring 5 goals and Bill McPherson 1.
Bizarrely the rules of the contest meant that a 1-1 draw in the 2nd match (played at Chicago's Mills Stadium 12.04.31) meant that a 3rd match was required. (Billy Gonsalves scored the Fall River goal).
The deciding game at Sparta Stadium ,Chicago, was played on 19.04.31. Alex McNab had broken his arm in a midweek friendly and Fall River played the entire match with 10 men , winning 2-0 with goals from Patenaude and Gordon Burness.
1932
The New York Yankees relocated after just one season, becoming The New Bedford Whalers. Under their new guise they again reached the final of the National Challenge Cup, where they defeated Stix, Baer & Fuller of St. Louis.
Both games were played at Sportsman's Park, St. Louis. On 26.03.32 the result was a 3-3 draw (some discrepancies exist over the identities of the scorers). The following week Whalers won 5-2.White, Nilsen, Gonsalves, McPherson and Florie scored the goals.
Marksmen 1930
|
|
1st leg
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2nd leg
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Johnny Reder
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Johnny Reder
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Bob McAuley
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Charlie McGill
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McArthur
|
Bob McAuley
|
Bill McPherson
|
Bill McPherson
|
Priestley
|
Priestley
|
Bobby Ballantyne
|
Bobby Ballantyne
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Alex McNab
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Alex McNab
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Billy Gonsalves
|
Billy Gonsalves
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Werner Nilsen (Gavin)
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Werner Nilsen
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Jimmy McAuley
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Bert Patenaude
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James Tec White
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James Tec White
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Marksmen (New York Yankees) 1931
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||
1st leg
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2nd leg
|
3rd leg
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Johnny Reder
|
unchanged
|
Johnny
Reder
|
Charlie McGill
|
Charlie
McGill
|
|
Augusto John Rebello
|
Augusto John Rebello
|
|
Bill McPherson
|
Bill
McPherson
|
|
Johnny Caldwell
|
Johnny
Caldwell
|
|
Bobby Ballantyne
|
Bobby
Ballantyne
|
|
Alex McNab
|
||
Werner Nilsen
|
James Tec White
|
|
Bert Patenaude
|
Bert
Patenaude
|
|
Billy Gonsalves
|
Billy
Gonsalves
|
|
James Tec White
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Gordon Burness
|
New Bedford Whalers 1932
|
|
1st leg
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2nd leg
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Watson
|
unchanged
|
Augusto John Rebello
|
|
McMillen
|
|
Johnny Caldwell
|
|
Montgomerie
|
|
Bill McPherson
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|
Tom Florie
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|
Billy Gonsalves
|
|
Werner Nilsen
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|
James Tec White
|
|
Alex McNab
|
Some players of note:-
Johnny Reder
Born in Poland, Reder also played baseball for Boston Red Sox.
Bob McAuley
Born in Glasgow, raised in Montreal. McAuley later played for Glasgow rangers, Chelsea and Cardiff City and won 2 caps for Scotland in 1931.
Bill McPherson
Began his career with his hometown club Greenock Morton and joined Beith before emigrating to the USA,
Bobby Ballantyne
Another Glasweigian , he later returned to Scotland and played for Aberdeen and St Johnstone.
Alex McNab
Another nastive of Greenock who played for Greenock Morton. Represented scotland twice in 1921. Went to the states in 1924
Werner “Scotty” Nilsen
In a team of many Scots it was Norweigian Nilsen who was known as Scotty. He moved to the USA as a 19 year old. Represented the USA at the 1934 World Cup. Was also a male model!
Billy Gonsalves
Adelino Gonçalves was born in Rhode Island, his parents were from Madeira . Played for the USA in the 1930 and 1934 World Cups. His professional career spanned 25 years.
Jimmy McAuley
An Irishman who had played for Ards before moving to the USA where he first played for Philedelphia Celtic.
James Tec White
Another Scotsman, White played for Albion Rovers, Maidstone united and motherwell before Sam Mark persuaded him to join Fall River Marksmaen.
Charlie McGill
McGill had previously played for Third Lanark.
Bert Patenaude
A native of Fall River, he played for the USA at the 1930 World Cup.
Tom Florie
Played for the USA in the 1930 and 1934 World Cups.
Johnny Reder
Born in Poland, Reder also played baseball for Boston Red Sox.
Bob McAuley
Born in Glasgow, raised in Montreal. McAuley later played for Glasgow rangers, Chelsea and Cardiff City and won 2 caps for Scotland in 1931.
Bill McPherson
Began his career with his hometown club Greenock Morton and joined Beith before emigrating to the USA,
Bobby Ballantyne
Another Glasweigian , he later returned to Scotland and played for Aberdeen and St Johnstone.
Alex McNab
Another nastive of Greenock who played for Greenock Morton. Represented scotland twice in 1921. Went to the states in 1924
Werner “Scotty” Nilsen
In a team of many Scots it was Norweigian Nilsen who was known as Scotty. He moved to the USA as a 19 year old. Represented the USA at the 1934 World Cup. Was also a male model!
Billy Gonsalves
Adelino Gonçalves was born in Rhode Island, his parents were from Madeira . Played for the USA in the 1930 and 1934 World Cups. His professional career spanned 25 years.
Jimmy McAuley
An Irishman who had played for Ards before moving to the USA where he first played for Philedelphia Celtic.
James Tec White
Another Scotsman, White played for Albion Rovers, Maidstone united and motherwell before Sam Mark persuaded him to join Fall River Marksmaen.
Charlie McGill
McGill had previously played for Third Lanark.
Bert Patenaude
A native of Fall River, he played for the USA at the 1930 World Cup.
Tom Florie
Played for the USA in the 1930 and 1934 World Cups.
4.7.15
Goodison Park
'The first purpose built football stadium in England'- Goodison Park opened on 24 August 1892. FA dignitaries Lord Kinnaird and Frederick Wall were present, but strangely there was no football match- a 12,000 crowd saw athletics followed music and a fireworks display.
Everton's first game at the new stadium was on 1st September 1892 when they beat Bolton Wanderers 4-2. 2,000 less people were present than had been for the fireworks!.
The first Everton XI to take to the pitch at the new stadium was:
Jardine, Howarth, Dewar, Boyle, Holt, Robertson, Latta, Maxwell, Chadwick, Millward.
The same line up faced Nottingham Forest in the opening League fixture on September 3rd (a 2-2 draw).
Out of Doors magazine commented in October 1892:
No single picture could take in the entire scene the ground presents, it is so magnificently large, for it rivals the greater American baseball pitches. On three sides of the field of play there are tall covered stands, and on the fourth side the ground has been so well banked up with thousands of loads of cinders that a complete view of the game can be had from any portion.it appears to be one of the finest and most complete grounds in the kingdom...
Jardine, Howarth, Dewar, Boyle, Holt, Robertson, Latta, Maxwell, Chadwick, Millward.
The same line up faced Nottingham Forest in the opening League fixture on September 3rd (a 2-2 draw).
Out of Doors magazine commented in October 1892:
No single picture could take in the entire scene the ground presents, it is so magnificently large, for it rivals the greater American baseball pitches. On three sides of the field of play there are tall covered stands, and on the fourth side the ground has been so well banked up with thousands of loads of cinders that a complete view of the game can be had from any portion.it appears to be one of the finest and most complete grounds in the kingdom...
The illustration above shows the friendly between Everton and Heart of Midlothian on November 12th 1892. The match ended in a 2-0 victory for the hosts. The drawing shows the Gwladys Street End and Goodison Road - the old St Luke's Church is in the background. The corner flags look like they belong on a crazy golf course.
Liverpool Mercury - 21.11.92
1.7.15
Campeonato Sud Americano de Football
1916
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1916
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Uruguay
|
Isabelino Gradín (Uru) 3
|
Isabelino Gradín (Uru)
|
Argentina
|
1917
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1917
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Uruguay
|
Ángel Romano (Uru) 4
|
Hector Scarone (Uru)
|
Uruguay
|
1919
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1919
|
Brazil
|
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Uruguay
|
Arthur Friedenreich & Neco (Br) 4
|
Arthur Friedenreich (Br)
|
Brazil
|
|
1920
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1920
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Uruguay
|
Jose Perez & Ángel Romano (Uru) 3
|
José Piendibene (Uru)
|
Chile
|
Noteworthy for a 6-0 win for Uruguay over Brazil. Uruguay won all 3
of their matches, scoring 9 goals in the process.
|
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1935
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1921
|
Argentina
|
Argentina
Brazil
Paraguay
Uruguay
|
Julio Libonatti (Arg) 3
|
Américo Tesoriere (Arg)
|
Argentina
|
Paraguay’s first appearance. Their opening match, against Uruguay,
was only their 7th international. They beat the champions 2-1.
Withdrew: Chile
|
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1922
|
Brazil
|
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Paraguay
Uruguay
|
Julio Francia (Arg) 4
|
Agostinho Fortes Filho (Br)
|
Brazil
|
Moved from planned venue Chile in order to mark 100 years of
Brazilian independence. All the matches were played at Estadio das
Laranjeiras. At the conclusion of the tournament Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay
were tied on 5 points- Brazil only having 1 win to the other countries’ 2. Uruguay then withdrew, leaving Brazil and
Paraguay to play off for the championship. Brazil won 3-0.
Paraguay’s 10 outfield players had walked off the pitch in the 79th
minute of their defeat to Argentina, but this went unpunished by the
authorities.
|
1923
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1923
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Brazil
Paraguay
Uruguay
|
Pedro Petrone (Uru) & Vicente Aguirre (Arg) 3
|
José Nasazzi (Uru)
|
Uruguay
|
Used as a qualifying tournament for the 1924 Olympics. All matches
were played at Estadio Gran Parque Central. The tournament was decided in the
final match played, Uruguay beating Argentina 2-0.
Withdrew: Chile
|
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1924
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Chile
Paraguay
Uruguay
|
Pedro Petrone (Uru) 4
|
Pedro Petrone (Uru)
|
Uruguay
|
Paraguay declined the offer to host the tournament.
It was instead played at Estadio Gran Parque Central in honour of Uruguay’s
triumph at the 1924 Olympics.
Withdrew: Brazil
|
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1925
|
Argentina
|
Argentina
Brazil
Paraguay
|
Manuel Seoane (Arg) 6
|
Manuel Seoane (Arg)
|
Argentina
|
Only 3 teams competed. Chile withdrew in response to their poor
showing in 1924 when they lost all 3 matches and conceded 10 goals, Uruguay
because of splits in the governing bodies.. Note the unusual presence of a black player in the Argentina side- Alejandro De Los Santos of El Porvenir- the first black man to represent Argentina.
Withdrew: Chile, Uruguay.
|
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1926
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Bolivia
Chile
Paraguay
Uruguay
|
David Arellano (Chile) 7
|
Jose Andrade (Uru)
|
Chile
|
Bolivia entered for the first time and shipped 24 goals in 4 matches,
although it was Paraguay who suffered the worst loss- 8-0 to Argentina.
Withdrew: Brazil
|
1927
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1927
|
Argentina
|
Argentina
Bolivia
Peru
Uruguay
|
5 players scored 3 goals.
|
Manuel Seoane (Arg)
|
Peru
|
The tournament served as a qualifier for the 1928 Olympics. Peru
participated for the first time.
37 goals were scored (6.17 per match) with both Argentina and Uruguay
scoring 15 goals.
Withdrew: Brazil, Chile, Paraguay
|
1929
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1929
|
Argentina
|
Argentina Paraguay
Peru
Uruguay
|
Aurelio González (Par) 5
|
Manuel Nolo Ferreira (Arg)
|
Argentina
|
No contest was held in 1928 due to the absence of Argentina, Chile
and Uruguay at the Olympics.
Withdrew: Bolivia, Brazil, Chile
|
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1935
|
Uruguay
|
Argentina
Chile
Peru
Uruguay
|
Herminio Masantonio (Arg) 4
|
José Nasazzi (Uru)
|
Peru
|
Relations between Argentina and Uruguay had effectively been severed
following the 1930 World Cup and the 2 sides didn’t meet for 2 years. The
resumption of the South American Championship also
served as a qualifying competition for the 1936 Olympics (although ultimately
neither Argentina nor Uruguay travelled to Berlin for financial reasons).
It was an additional tournament- no trophy was awarded.
Withdrew: Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay
|
1937
Winners
|
Entrants
|
Top Scorer
|
Player of Tournament
|
Hosts
|
|
1937
|
Argentina
|
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Paraguay
Peru
Uruguay
|
Raúl Toro (Chile) 7
|
Vicente de la Mata (Arg)
|
Argentina
|
Brazil returned after a 4 tournament / 12 year
absence. They were defeated by Argentina in a play-off. 2 extra time goals won it for Argentina,
who had previously beaten Brazil earlier in the tournament.
69 goals were scored (4.31 per match).
Withdrew: Bolivia, Colombia.
|