Showing posts with label Magazines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magazines. Show all posts
23.9.17
Santiago FC
Alfredo Miqueles and Héctor Ramírez of Santiago Football Club pictured in 1926, the year the club won the Copa Chile de la Asociación de Football de Santiago.
The image was reversed in production.
Here it is the right way round.
26.7.17
Calciatore di mistero
I initially thought 'Genoa Cricket and Football Club' when I saw this handsome fellow, but the colours are reversed.
Maybe just some random guy?
7.7.17
Amsel Ignác
15.04.28: Amsel Ignác, The Spider, puts the ball over his crossbar during Ferencváros' 5-1 win over Kispest.

Between 1921 and 1931 Amsel represented Hungary 9 times, but was only on the winning side once. On a positive note he became the first Hungarian goalkeeper to save a penalty in internationals (v Austria, 1923).
10.12.16
3.12.16
Free Kicks at Football
Here is a link to this interesting football pamphlet, published in Glasgow in 1882: http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/month/jan2004.html
30.3.16
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.
21.3.15
Our Leading Football Players,1888
The term Football was used in the Victorian press to refer to both Association and Rugby, sometimes creating the impression that the differences in the codes were negligible and that the games retained a common flavour. In fact the South Wales and Yorkshire press, though reporting almost exclusively on the handling code, hardly ever used the word Rugby in their columns. So , when the Boy's Own Annual featured a picture spread of Leading Football Players both codes were represented. I've italicized the Rugby players.
1 P.M Walters (Old Carthusians, Oxford University & England)
2 D Drummond - the only Drummond I could identify as playing top class Association or Rugby in 1888 was George "Geordie" Drummond of Preston North End.
3 Sam Thompson (Preston North End & Scotland)
4 J.R Dewhurst (St.Thomas's Hospital & England)
5 Rawson Robertshaw (Bradford & England)
6 G.L Jeffery (Blackheath & England)
7 W.N 'Nuts' Cobbold (Old Carthusians, Cambridge University & England)
8 T.W Blenkiron (Old Carthusians, Cambridge University)
9 H Springmann (Liverpool & England)
10 E Wilkinson Bradford
11 A. E Stoddart (Blackheath, England & The British Isles)
12 A.M Walters (Old Carthusians, Cambridge University & England)
13 L Owen- I have been unable to identify this player. I can find no L Owen playing for any of the major Rugby teams listed in 1888 or thereabouts. Association players of the era included G. Owen of Bolton Wanderers. and the brothers Billy and George Owen of Chirk and Wales.
14 Fred Dewhurst (Preston North End & England)
15 John Forbes (Vale Of Leven, Blackburn Rovers & Scotland)
16 George Haworth (Accrington & England)
17 Patrick Hamilton Don-Wauchope (Fettes Lorettonian & Scotland)
18 John Goodall (Preston North End & England)
19 W.F Holms (Edinburgh Wanderers & Scotland)
20 H.B Tristram (Richmond & England)
3.2.15
Lo Sport Fascista - February 1933
Mussolini, although not a great football fan, realised the propaganda potential of sport and exploited the success of Italian sportsmen during the Fascist Era for these purposes.
The player featured on this magazine from February 1933 is Bologna centre forward Angelo Schiavio.
Schiavio spent 16 seasons at Bologna (1922-1938), scoring 109 goals in 179 Serie A appearances and 242 senior goals in a total of 348 appearances. In the 1931–1932 season he was Capocannoniere with 25 goals. He featured in 4 scudetto winning squads and won the Mitropa Cup twice.
His international record with Italy (1925-1934) was 15 goals in 21 matches, He won Olympic Bronze (1928) and was a World Cup Winner (1934), scoring the winning goal in the final. Schiavo also featured in 2 successful Coupe Internationale européenne campaigns.
22.1.15
Sport-Magazin - August 1935
This was the team, consisting of 11 Hungary internationals, that lined up in the semi final of the Mitropa Cup against Austria Vienna.
Kronenberger was also known as Lajos Korányi.
I really like József Háda's goalkeeper's jersey.
21.8.14
Los grandes centre- forwards
This page is taken from an edition of Mundo Uruguayo published in 1930, the centenary of the nation. The issue was titled 'The Resurgence of the Nation' and focused on the triumphs of the Uruguay national team in the 1920s. The magazine was published on July 18th, the day of the hosts' first ever World Cup match.
The 4 centre forwards featured are:
Jose Piendibene (Peñarol )
Over 500 games for Peñarol .
40 Uruguay caps (1909-21), 20 goals.
South American Championship Winner 1916, 1917 & 1920
Pedro Petrone (Nacional)
29 international appearances (1923-30, his last appearance being on the day the article appeared, 18.07.30).
24 goals.
World Cup winning squad 1930.
Olympic Gold Medalist 1924,1928.
South American Championship Winner 1923,1924.
Carlos Scarone (Nacional)
25 appearances (1909-22) 18 goals
South American Championship Winner 1917
Rene Borjas (Wanderers)
7 appearances (1923-28) 3 goals.
Olympic Gold Medalist 1928.
South American Championship Winner 1926.
The 4 centre forwards featured are:
Jose Piendibene (Peñarol )
Over 500 games for Peñarol .
40 Uruguay caps (1909-21), 20 goals.
South American Championship Winner 1916, 1917 & 1920
Pedro Petrone (Nacional)
29 international appearances (1923-30, his last appearance being on the day the article appeared, 18.07.30).
24 goals.
World Cup winning squad 1930.
Olympic Gold Medalist 1924,1928.
South American Championship Winner 1923,1924.
Carlos Scarone (Nacional)
25 appearances (1909-22) 18 goals
South American Championship Winner 1917
Rene Borjas (Wanderers)
7 appearances (1923-28) 3 goals.
Olympic Gold Medalist 1928.
South American Championship Winner 1926.
3.8.14
José Nasazzi and women (#2)
Nasazzi , looking as uncompromising as ever, knee bandaged, is flanked by two rather operatic looking ladies draped in Uruguayan flags.
As effective World Champions Uruguay were confirmed as host nation for the inaugural World Cup at the 18th FIFA congress at Barcelona in 1929.
18.3.14
1928
Ángel Melogno (Bella Vista) - inside forward
Juan (Eduardo) Martinez (Miramar Misiones)- right half
Alvaro Gestido (Peñarol)- left half
Antonio Campolo (Peñarol)-wing
René Borjas (Montevideo Wanderers)- centre forward
Fausto Batignani (Liverpool- Montevideo) - goalkeeper
Domingo Tejera (Montevideo Wanderers)- full back
Adhemar Canavesi (Bella Vista) - full back
Juan Píriz ( Nacional)- centre half
José Nasazzi (Bella Vista) - defender
During 1928 the magazine Mundo Uruguayo featured these lovely art deco inspired covers showing players who had been a part of the Olympic gold medal squad.
Juan Martinez is included (most records show him as Eduardo Martinez)- Martinez was known as the 23rd Olympian- he was sailing as a replacement for Andrade. Andrade however, relented from his earlier refusal to travel and displaced Martinez from the squad.
Of the players pictured Nasazzi, Gestido, Campolo, Píriz and Borjas played in either the final or the replay.
Canavesi's contribution is well known.
26.12.13
Football- C.B Fry 1895
More from the pen of the illustrious C.B Fry. This article appeared in the Badminton Magazine in 1895.
FOOTBALL
By C. B. Fry
North of the Tweed football begins almost as soon as the first
old cock-grouse falls, a crumpled mass of feathers, into his native
heather. In England it comes in with the partridges, though
in the South the ball, whether oval or round, is scarcely set
rolling in a genuine sense until the fat pheasants are hustled out
of their summer holiday. In fact, the farther south you go the
later the game begins in earnest. The reason for this is not quite
clear. The area of the football-playing world is hardly large
enough to admit of much variation in climatic conditions. As
soon as the game is possible in Glasgow it can be played in
London, but, in spite of a due regard for the laws and regulations
of the governing bodies, real interest in what sporting journalists
delight to call ' our winter pastime ' is all abroad in the North long
before it is in the South. Perhaps an explanation of this may
be found in the fact that cricket holds a stronger sway and lives a
longer annual life in the South. The sphere of county cricket
extends no farther north than Lancashire and Yorkshire, and
though there is plenty of club cricket in Scotland and the Border
counties, the game has no strong hold upon the public at large.
Towards the end of the summer, even in Yorkshire, Lancashire,
and the Midlands, the interest in cricket palls visibly before that
in football. On a Saturday afternoon at a League match in one of
the great football centres there are twice as many spectators as
appear during all three days of an inter-county cricket match in
the same district, Many people attribute the wane of interest in
cricket at Nottingham to the particular style adopted by the great
batsmen of the county, and no doubt there is some truth in this idea;
but it is not quite the whole truth, for it is almost certain
that the intense local enthusiasm tor football, which after all 13
merely in a state of suspended animation in the summer, has
killed the older and more deliberate love of watching cricket.
Apart from this particular instance, the great and widespread
interest in football is a manifest fact. So much so, that now a
days it is frequently urged that cricket can no longer be regarded
as our ' national game ' in the true sense of the word. Football,
it is claimed, has now the first place in the popular heart, and
therefore has every right to be honoured with the title so long
enjoyed by the other and older game. At first sight there seems
to be some, justice in this claim. These, we are led to believe, in
spite of the result of the General Election, are the days of democracy
and radicalism. The nation, we are told, is a democracy, and the
game of the people must be accepted as the game of the nation.
Certainly football is a more democratic game than cricket. It
could hardly be otherwise, for, from a popular point of view, the
former game has several decided advantages over the latter. It is
much easier to play, far more readily organised, requires infinitely
less elaborate preparations or equipment, and, finally, it is not only
much cheaper, but brings in more money. Perhaps this last consideration ought not to enter into a discussion of the relative
merits of two English games, but unfortunately it does, and that
to a very pronounced degree. Besides, the games are being
discussed from a democratic point of view, which makes the
aspect practical rather than ideal. At any rate, the fact remains
that a man who owns some boots, some shorts, and a shirt, has all
that is necessary for a football match, whether it be between
England and Scotland or two villages. Stockings are sometimes
worn, also shin-guards, but they are luxuries and far from in-
dispensable. Similarly, a club which has the run of a moderate-
sized paddock can play any number of matches without much
outlay of capital. The quality of the turf does not make a -vital
difference to the game, and if it degenerates into mud a foot deep,
cinders are easily obtained at a small cost, and the mixture makes
a playable surface. Most people prefer good turf, but nearly
every footballer has gone through'with a fairly good game on
such a ground.
The result of all this is that football is within reach of absolutely
everybody. Cricket, even in its most simple and primitive form,
costs money and entails forethought and trouble. One club can
scarcely challenge another until it possesses at the very least two
bats, four bails, six stumps, and some kind of imitation, however
distant, of a good pitch. Without pushing the point quite so far,
football is certainly the more feasible game of the two from the
working-man's point of view, especially as a match of any class what-
ever can be won, lost, or drawn in the comparatively short time of
an hour and a half. On the other hand, the large majority of men
cannot spare the time even to play in a one-day cricket match,
much less to spend three whole days at a county fixture. After
all, it is much more satisfactory to pass an hour or so at a good
football match and see the whole game, than it is to drop in for
the same time in order to see Grace batting and find that for once
in a way he is not at the wickets. These considerations, of
course, appeal to busy men of every class, as well as to the toiling
operatives of the Northern towns. Most of the latter, by the way,
seem to take a holiday from Saturday morning till Monday night
in the football season. Otherwise it is impossible to account for
the huge crowds at League matches on both days, even if allowance
be made for a large leisured class and five or six hundred solemn-
looking gamins who always manage to slip in without paying.
In a sense, then, football is the game of the busy classes, and
consequently of the people. But that does not make it the
national game. The fact is that there is an essential difference
between the interest taken in the two games. The interest in
football is more or less local, and as such it is, at any rate in the
North, almost a passion. The interest of the average man in
cricket is wider and much more free from partisan spirit. The
crowds who flock to see two football teams play in the North or
Midlands like a good match, but their predominating desire is to
see their own champions win, and this desire is made the more
intense by the fact that the players are fellow-townsmen with
whom they are in touch, or whom perhaps they know personally.
Nowadays, it is true, most of the Northern Association teams
are composed of invaders from across the Border ; but these are soon
identified with their new home, and become to all intents and
purposes natives. The result is that sometimes more interest is
taken locally in a League than in an International match. With
cricket the case is different. However fond a man may be of the
success of his own county, he will never for a moment regard an
ordinary first-class fixture with the same interest as a match
between England and Australia. Prince and peasant, man-about-
town and city clerk, are all equally keen to see how the various
games are going on and what the great players of the day are
doing with bat or ball. The bare result of a football match is
enough for most people, but nearly everyone likes to know how a
cricket match is won and all about it. Practically speaking, every
one takes an interest in cricket and knows something about the
various matches at any particular time. In the case of football
the interest is very great, but is confined to a narrower section of
the community. Upon these grounds it seems clear that, in spite
of the great favour in which football is held, especially by the
working classes, and the intensity of local keenness about it,
cricket can still claim for itself a wider and more truly public
interest. Moreover, cricket has stood the teat of time, and can
point to very many years of continued popularity ; whereas
football, in its present state, is a new development, and, to a certain
extent, may be said to owe the enormous interest it excites to a
species of sudden rage.
Football, then, has not yet proved its right to dethrone cricket
from its position as the typical British game. Still, the very fact
that it has nearly succeeded in doing so shows that it is a magnificent sport, whether it is played under the Association or the
Rugby rules. As a game, its one great drawback is that no man
can continue playing it for long. Many of the most active
cricketers of the day, who score their hundreds without any dis-
comfort to themselves, would find themselves very much at a loss
if they once more went into a ' scrum,' or attempted the arduous
duties of centre half-back. Nor can it be denied that football,
grand game as it is, is really more suitable for boys than for men.
A footballer is at his best from twenty to twenty-five years of age.
Even during that period he will be lucky if he escapes without a
good share of accidents which he never dreamt of in his school
days, when he and his opponents were lighter and less breakable.
As a matter of fact, the dangers of football are much overrated by
those who have not played it ; but it is only to be expected from
the nature of the game that there should be some chances of
accidents when the opposing sides are mixed compositions of
light and heavy men. The former are liable to be hurt, however
unintentionally, by the latter ; and the stronger brother finds bis
weight rather against him in the event of a sudden fall. Still,
accidents are possible in cricket also, and, in a man who has once
tasted the pleasure of a fine game of football, the instinct of self-
preservation becomes almost extinct. It is a fact, moreover, that
the dashing player who never hesitates is less liable to be hurt
than one who is inclined to take care of himself and avoid
collisions. After all, the percentage of players who are hurt is very small, and even if it were not so the game would be played
just the same.
It is a popular error among many of the uninitiated to
suppose that Rugby is more dangerous than Association. The
truth is that accidents are much rarer in the latter game, hut
when they do occur are more likely to be of a serious nature. In Rugby small injuries are more frequent than in Association, but
one rarely hears of anything more terrible than a broken leg or
arm. In both games, but in Association especially, accidents
very seldom occur among good players. Clumsy men with
erratic feet do more harm than any amount of fair, hard charging.
There are some tricks, happily rarely practised now except by
third-rate professionals, which are dangerous. Tripping and
ducking are bad enough, but no punishment could be too severe
for the man who gives or receives a charge with his knee raised.
Referees ought to be empowered to turn off the field any player
who uses this evil stratagem. It cannot be done without intention ; it is hard to detect, and very dangerous indeed. However,
the third-rate professional and his amateur imitator are rare now,
and no one need anticipate any accidents except those that happen .
occasionally in fair play. Players themselves do not think much
about such mischances. Interested relatives and ignorant critics
do. As for nervous parents, they need have no fear; for boys
cannot hurt one another much at football if they are allowed to
play only with those of their own size. However, accidents or
no accidents, the game is worth the candle, if we are to accept
the verdict of the majority of players.
A more interesting question than that of the respective
dangers of Rugby and Association is that of their relative merits
as games. It is a significant fact that they do not thrive well side
by side. Except in a few very large towns, the two games do not
flourish together. In all provincial districts the one game or the
other is paramount in any given place. Even at the Universities,
the interest in ' Soccer ' is nearly swamped by that in ' Rugger.'
If the two teams are playing simultaneously in the parks at
Oxford, some thousands watch the one game, while two men, five
boys, and a nursemaid lend their countenance to the other. At
Birmingham, on the contrary, the supporters of Association would
outnumber those of the rival code by about five hundred to one.
A man who has played both games will not be able to give
a very decided answer if asked which be prefers. They are both
excellent, and he knows it. The bigoted Association player thinks
Rugby scrimmaging very slow, objects to the frequency with
which the game is stopped by the referee, and cannot away with
the shape of the ball or the fact that it may be handled. Finally, he argues that if the hands are allowed to aid the players the
game is no longer football. The Rugby enthusiast votes the
other game aimless, finicky, and unexciting ; nor can he appreciate the difficulty of passing the ball accurately with the feet
from man to man.
It is, probably, equally hard to become highly proficient at
either game, but it is easier to become a moderate Rugby player
than it is to attain fair skill at Association, Moreover, a man
who has been brought up to Association can pick up the other
game much more readily than a confirmed Rugby player can
learn the art and science of the dribbling code.
Another advantage which Association has over Rugby is the
fact that it is far less at the mercy of the weather. A very wet
ground makes a farce of the latter, and frost practically renders it
impossible. Association can be played, and played well, in the
mud, or on an icebound surface, though naturally it is not as
good to play or watch under these circumstances. Upon the whole.
Association is the faster and more open game, but it can produce
nothing to equal the excitement of a good round of passing among
three-quarter-backs, or of a fine run by an individual. A very
moderate exhibition of Rugby is always entertaining to the spectator, but Association poorly played is dull in the extreme. To
be worth watching, Association must be played by good teams,
and even then the spectator does not really appreciate it unless
he understands the niceties of the game. This, of course, applies
to Rugby to a certain extent, but for some reason or other the
latter game is more easily understood, and appeals more readily
to the Philistine. It satisfies at once two elementary sporting
instincts— the desire to see men run as fast as they can, and the
appreciation of some form of rough-and-tumble. The machine-
like combination which is the ideal form of the Association game,
if tempered with dash and speed, is often liable to degenerate
into what is called ' piffling,' and into clever but useless tricks
meant to catch the gallery. The fact that every inch of ground
is valuable in the Rugby game saves it from the possibility of this
fault.
Between Association as played by the Corinthians or Sunderland, and Rugby as played by Blackheath or Newport, there is
not much to choose. A proposal has lately been made to make a
compromise between the two games by reducing the Rugby side
from fifteen to thirteen players, and using an Association hall.
The idea is not new, but hitherto it has never been seriously
entertained. Whether or not such rules will ever supersede the two standard codes is doubtful, but they would certainly make a
good game. It would be faster than Rugby, though the ball
would be more difficult to handle and less adapted for drop-
kicking or punting any distance. In practice, all sorts of new
rules and constant modifications of them would probably be found
necessary. But the proposal seems worth a trial.
There would be, however, some serious drawbacks to an
amalgamation of the two games. As it is, there are too many
leagues, combinations, and cup competitions in both games, too
much professionalism in Association, and a very undesirable
necessity for complicated legislation and undignified diplomatic
arrangements in Rugby. The question of professionalism in
football is a difficult and delicate subject to touch upon. It is
impossible to regard it as an unmixed good, and it is rash, under
existing conditions, to condemn it unreservedly. Again, there are
several kinds of professionalism, and more than one way of
looking at them. The origin of the paid player is easy to trace.
As soon as it was found that football excited interest and drew
large crowds of spectators ready to pay for seeing the game, clubs
began to charge entrance-money. They soon found themselves
with large balances at their banks. The players naturally, if
working-men and not well off, saw no reason to prevent their
reaping some advantage from this. Clubs began to pay their men
according to their gate receipts. Now, at first sight, there does
not appear much unfairness in this. The money was there, and
the men needed it. It was easy to argue that as their efforts
produced the money, it was only just that they should enjoy some
of it. Payment of players was illegal under the laws of the
Association. But it was a fact, and soon discovered. There was a
great struggle, and eventually professionalism was legalised. This,
of course, entirely altered the character of the game. The modem
legalised professional is quite a different person from the secretly
paid player of some years ago. The latter was an unqualified
evil. He pretended to be one thing, and was another. He was
supposed to be playing the game for sport, but really almost lived
upon it. His justification was that he loved the game, and wanted
to play, but could not afford to do so. Why should the man with
means be able to enjoy himself in this respect while the poor man
could not ? Consequently, he accepted surreptitious payment for
broken time besides his out-of-pocket expenses. The modem
football professional, like his cricketing brother, sells his labour
openly. It is his profession, and from this point of view he is no
more to be condemned than a skilled mechanic or an actor. It is from another point of view that professionalism was so
strongly condemned in Association, and that the introduction into
Rugby is still so strenuously opposed. Football, it was, and is,
argued, is a game or a sport, and ought not to be a profession ; payment of players means ruin to the game as such, and, in addition,
it is possible for everyone to play it without receiving more than
compensation for out-of-pocket expenses. The position is quite
tenable, and from the point of view of the good of the game it
has, in the opinion of very many people, been amply justified by
what has happened in the Association game since the legalisation
of professionalism. It is sometimes argued that professionalism
exists in cricket, and no exception is taken to it in this case.
Why, then, should there be such strong objections raised against
a similar institution in football ? The answer is, that in cricket
the professional is a necessity if first-class cricket is to continue.
There must be practice bowlers, and men to coach young players.
Further, cricket takes up so much time that it is impossible to
find enough amateurs who can afford to play continuous three-
day matches or to get sufficient practice for first-class proficiency.
Again, cricket as a profession is quite different from football. A
professional cricketer can get employment and a livelihood from
eighteen or nineteen years of age until he is almost an old man.
He can begin with a small engagement to a club, become a county
player, and when his powers begin to fail can either return t%
small club cricket or obtain a situation as coach at a school. He
can also save money and invest it in some business. A football
professional has a very short career. He is liable to be incapacitated in any match he plays, and must then turn his attention else-
where for his daily bread. Some football professionals, especially
the Scotchmen, have a keen eye for business, and turn their great
but transient reputations to good account. Many of them receive
shop or public-house businesses as bribes to transfer their allegiance
from one club to another ; but this does not come to all. On the
whole, then, football as a profession is bad for the man as well as
for the game.
As far as the game is concerned, the only good professionalism
has done is that it has raised the standard of excellence, and in
some ways improved the science of the game. The theory of
combination and machine-like passing is the product of northern
professional football, and it has quite superseded the old individual
dribbling game. But this is hardly enough to justify professionalism, for the development might have come without it. The argument in favour of professionalism arises from an entirely different point of view. It does not concern the game as
a sport at all. The enormous interest taken in football proves it
to be admirable as an entertainment for the people. They go to
watch the games by thousands, and it is far better that their
sporting instincts should be satisfied thus than that they should
spend their Saturday afternoons loafing at public -houses, or
attending less innocent forms of entertainment. To provide
enough of this spectacular football without professionalism is
almost impossible. The number of clubs playing good football
would be too small, or the required amount of proficiency to
render the entertainment a good one would be wanting. It may
be pointed out that there is spectacular football without professionalism in the Rugby districts. But as yet the Rugby game
has not become quite such a recognised form of entertainment as
the Association.
This justification of professionalism concerns the philanthropist more than the true lover of football ; but it is difficult to
see on what other grounds a really good case can be made out for
the paid football player. The compromise between outright
professionalism and the pure amateurism which is said to be
impossible for the working-man is the legalisation of payment for
broken time. The reason why the Rugby Union so strongly
oppose this is, that they regard it as the thin end of the wedge
which will inevitably bulge out into pure professionalism. The
history of Association football emphasises the reasonableness of
this contention.
With professionalism come leagues, combinations, and a
multitude of cup competitions, which are really mere devices
for making matches more interesting. No one would wish the
great cup competitions to be abolished ; but when there are too
many smaller imitations, genuine inter-club matches go to the
wall, and the game loses thereby. There is no doubt that the
Rugby game is at present in a far healthier state than the Association, in spite of wars and rumours of war, and all the dark
insinuations about veiled professionalism. This almost seems to
justify those who declare that it is better for the game to have
nominally no professionalism, and take the chance of secret sins
by weaker brethren, than it is to risk the cut-and-dried league
match or the circus performance defined up North as a ' friendly.'
When an inter-club match is called a 'friendly,' the inference as
to what a league match means is fairly easy. At any rate, professionalism has to a large extent spoilt Association football as a
recreation. The ordinary amateur can scarcely get an Association game, except in London or the southern districts. He must either
learn to play Rugby, or give up all idea of continuing on his free
afternoons the game that he loved so much at school or at the
'Varsity. Football is too good a game to be spoilt, and it will
be a thousand pities if professionalism kills it. May that evil
day never come ! It will be a national calamity.
18.10.13
Teams That Have Won The Football Association Cup - C.B Fry (1902)
Fry in his Rugby kit
It is widely known that he was invited to take the throne of Albania. He was also an admirer of Hitler, who he met, and a lifelong sufferer of mental disorder.
This article in The Strand Magazine was published in 1902- the year that Fry played for Southampton in the FA Cup final. The previous year he had appeared in an international against Ireland.
We have pleasure in announcing that we have made arrangements with Mr. C. B. Fry, who is not only the greatest athlete alive, but also the most entertaining writer on all subjects connected with athletics...
http://archive.org/stream/TeamsThatHaveWonTheAssociationCup/TeamsThatHaveWonTheAssociationCup_djvu.txt
http://ia700400.us.archive.org/10/items/TeamsThatHaveWonTheAssociationCup/TeamsThatHaveWonTheAssociationCup.pdf
4.8.13
Tewfik Abdallah
Al Ahly's Tewfick Abdallah played for Egypt in the 1920 Olympics alongside Hussein Hegazi. The 23 year old inside forward then moved to England and joined Derby County. It is likely that this was a result of his knowing the club’s Scottish full-back, Tommy Barbour, who had served in Egypt, where Tewfik had played against the British Army. Tewfik came to the UK to develop his career in engineering, but he was able to play plenty of football during his stay. He spent two seasons at Derby County, playing 15 League games (Division 1 &2) and scoring 1 goal. He then spent a season in Scotland with Cowdenbeath and also turned out for Welsh side Bridgend Town in The Southern League before returning to League football with Hartlepools United in 1923-24 (11 appearances, 1 goal).
In 1924 Tewfick moved to the United States where he played for a succession of clubs (Providence Clamdiggers, Fall River Marksmen, Hartford Americans, New York Nationals).
He managed the Egypt national team in the 1940s.
2.8.13
The Association Football Crisis by H Hughes- Onslow
This remarkable (to our eyes) article by Hughes-Onslow was published in the Badminton Magazine of Sports and Pastimes in 1907. The social context can be determined by the subjects of some of the other articles in the magazine: A Curious Hound-breeding Experiment, Capturing Wild Elephants in Mysore, Hints on Cycling to Hounds, Deer-Taking at Eridge Park...
It is worth noting also that the author of the article was honorary chairman of the Amateur Football Association, and that at the time he was writing the AFA were at loggerheads with the FA over the status of amateur clubs.
Hughes-Onslow says that the Association game has gone bad. The reasons for this are clear to him (and one suspects that his readers by and large agreed). Uneducated working men were playing the game. Worse than that, they were governing it. They lacked the moral fibre to maintain high standards of fair play and gentlemanly conduct. This situation was further compounded by the fact that there were paid professionals and therefore a win at all costs ethos which negated whatever sense of fair play they may have possessed.
Men of his social class, Hughes-Onslow asserts:
do not care to engage in a game in which it is commonly necessary for the referee to interfere on the ground of deliberate foul play.
Hughes-Onslow then goes on to use the penalty kick as an example of all that is wrong with the modern game. He illustrates his case with the myth making story of the Corinthian FC's refusal to score from or save penalties. That this was common practice is apocryphal, neither B.O Corbett or Norman Creek make reference to this being usual in their histories of Corinthian. In a 1907 tour match against Western Province in South Africa there was an incidence of Corinth (in the person of their skipper and goalkeeper T.S Rowlandson) deliberately missing a harshly awarded spot kick. The match ended in a rare defeat for Corinthians. The records show that they regularly scored penalties.
Another instance of a penalty being deliberately missed that I have come across was by the great Vivian
Woodward playing for England (Amateur) v France. Woodward thought the referee had been harsh and England were already about 10-0 up if memory serves me correctly.
Anyway,back to...
Of all the various forms of sport actively practised by readers of
this magazine, I suppose that the game of football in any form
can hardly be described as the most popular, and this for a variety
of reasons, the principal of which is no doubt that the average
player who does not make the game the most serious business of his
life begins to deteriorate more or less rapidly at the age of thirty at
latest, and often, indeed, finds it necessary to retire from active
participation in the game at a much earlier age. The opportunities
peculiar to football, and necessarily ineradicable from it, of foul
play and personal violence consequent upon loss of temper — opportunities of which no counterpart occurs in such games as cricket and
golf, where the element of frequent corporal collision is absent —
undoubtedly tend to drive away such athletes as can afford to take
their exercise in hunting and other more expensive forms, not at all
because they are afraid of sustaining any bodily injury, but because
they disdain to retaliate in breach of the rules and spirit of the
game, and do not care to engage in a game in which it is commonly
necessary for the referee to interfere on the ground of deliberate
foul play. A bad-tempered or unscrupulous opponent at cricket is
undeniably a nuisance, but some other expression must be found to
describe what he can be on the football field. Football also demands
for its enjoyment a higher standard of physical condition than any
other game played with a ball, except perhaps water polo, and so it
comes about that among the more highly-educated classes it is
adopted as the principal form of regular exercise by comparatively
few, and by those never for many years. Yet I venture to assume
that almost every male reader of this magazine has at some time of
his life played football sufficiently to accept the proposition that the
whole range of sport affords nothing finer than the test of strength,
courage, endurance, and, above all, skill, to be encountered in the
short hour-and-a-half occupied by a well-contested game. Many
of my readers, no doubt, having been educated at one of our
principal public schools, belong to the class known, for want of a
better term, as "Old Boys," and have experienced the joy of battle
in the form of a house-match. Like me, they may have passed the
hour of active participation in such delights, but it is the interest
of such as these that I desire to enlist in the following remarks.
I am about to speak of Association football, and I am aware
that a considerable number of my readers who have played only
the Rugby game are inclined to take but little interest in the other.
To such I appeal as belonging to a body of sportsmen which has
throughout the history of their game sternly resisted the evil of
professionalism ; and in case it may persuade them to persevere
further with the reading of this article, I proceed to publish,
without leave, what seemed to me at the time a singularly foolish
observation made by an old friend of the football field, who like
myself went to Eton in the very early eighties, but afterwards
diverged so far from my own humble path as to become captain of
the England eleven against Scotland, and the best forward I ever
saw. In the course of the journey to play a match in Suffolk last
season several of us were discussing the unwelcome fact that a game
of Rugby football had been started at Eton to the obvious prejudice
of our "Old Boy" club which plays Association, and I, as an official
of the club, was endeavouring to find some means of putting a stop
to this evil. My colleague sharply checked my admiration of him
by " confessing " (as he called it) a furtive affection for the Rugby
game, which I willingly concede is quite as much like the Eton game
as is the Association game in its present form.
As many readers are aware, the present condition of affairs in
Association football is far from satisfactory. We are, in fact, if I may
be allowed the expression, passing through a grave political crisis
the nature of which should, I think, in the interests of both parties
to the dispute, be made known as widely as possible. The original
cause of the trouble is, of course, the introduction of professionalism ;
that is, the sanction given by the Football Association some twenty
years ago to the payment of players. The sportsman who is not a
football player will probably ask why this should cause any more
trouble than it has done at cricket. The answer is, first, that cricket
affords practically no opportunity for foul play which cannot easily
be checked ; and, secondly, that the vast popularity among the less
highly-educated classes of the game of Association football as a
spectacle has led to the formation throughout every centre of
industry in England of purely professional clubs, whose representatives, imbued with ideas necessarily different from those of the
amateur, who plays the game merely for recreation, have by their
numbers and persistency absorbed into their own hands practically
the whole government of the game.
Cricket is saved from a similar fate by circumstances other than
those which I have already indicated. For one thing, owing to the
heavy expenses involved, it is, at all events, difficult to make even a
first-class county club — unless it be in the very front rank — pay its
way by means of the "gate" alone, whereas it is comparatively easy
to obtain by similar means funds sufficient to keep going as a profit-
able concern a football club whose players are exclusively professional.
Again, in the case of cricket, every first-class club has at least a
substantial number of pure amateurs on its own committee of
management, while an amateur captain is in charge of each team in
almost every match. If this were so in football the present unhappy
condition of affairs could never have arisen, and there is nothing in
cricket which in any way corresponds with the professional football
club, or with the governing body of the game, composed mainly of
the representatives of such clubs. In the football world of to-day
there are paid secretaries of clubs and of district associations, paid
referees and contributors to the press, and innumerable other less
direct methods of making a profit out of football otherwise than by
actually playing the game. And it is men who by such means as
these find in football a substantial source of income, that most of us
amateurs consider unfitted to interfere, as members of the body
governing amateurs and professionals alike, in the control of the
game which we desire to preserve as a sport. By the rules of the
Football Association a professional player is ineligible for a seat on
the Codicil. We have heard much of late of the Council's determination to compel the district associations to "fall into line" with
regard to the admission of professional clubs to membership ; but we
would like to see, in the first place, this plausible policy of conformity applied without distinction to those who make an income
out of the game, whether they do so by means of their skill on the
field or by other (and not necessarily more honourable) means.
At this stage I should like to dispose of two possible misapprehensions. First, whatever may have been the opinion of amateurs
with regard to the original introduction of professionalism, the
amateur player of to-day has no objection, and throughout the
present controversy has been careful to disclaim any, to the professional player, or to playing with or against him, merely because he
is paid for his services. Secondly, by foul play I mean something very
different from mere rough play. The honest, straightforward charge
with the shoulder, with which we were all familiar in our house-match
days, although it may conceivably be carried to undesirable extremes,
has always been cherished by the genuine amateur ; but the tendency
of professional government has been to render it illegal in common
with foul play of the kind which I am about to mention. This latter
consists almost entirely of tripping, and is, unfortunately, only too
easy to practise. A player beaten by an opponent who has got the
ball past him and put himself out of reach of a shoulder charge may
still make a certainty of bringing the opponent down by means of
an obviously hopeless attempt to reach the ball with his foot ; or
again, when the beaten player is pursuing an opponent whose
speed he can equal but not exceed, the opponent's downfall may
easily be effected by (if I may borrow an expression from the race-
course) "striking into " his heels in the feigned attempt to pass him
on the far side. I have read in the press of an art cultivated by
unscrupulous players who are said to be able, while appearing them-
selves to be the victims of foul play, nevertheless to inflict a serious
bodily injury upon the innocent but apparently aggressive opponent.
To the best of my knowledge nothing of the kind has ever existed,
and the foul play that has brought about the administrative interference to which amateurs object is designed not to effect bodily
injury, but merely to rob an opponent of victory.
Foul play of this sort has led to the general result that in most
matches between even high -class professional teams the referee's
whistle stops the game every two or three minutes; and there is
this further development, of which I regret to say many instances
occurred in the final tie of the Association Cup last spring, that
a beaten player when deprived of the ball will throw himself down
and claim a foul against his opponent ; and as a particular result
arising out of the same evil I may mention the "penalty-kick,"
a comparatively modern innovation highly distasteful to amateurs,
and quite unnecessary so far as their methods of play are concerned. This penalty, I should perhaps explain, is or may be
awarded in every case where the defending side is guilty of intentional foul play within a certain marked area in the neighbourhood
of goal, and consists in the right to a shot at goal from a spot
marked immediately in front of the goal, no defending player except
the goal-keeper being allowed to take any part in the game while
the kick is taken. It would no doubt be an excellent thing if the
referee had power to award a goal in any case where he is satisfied
that an act of foul play has prevented a goal from being scored ; but
1 Of course I do not include "off-side," or " hands " used otherwise than in defence
of goal, both of which are generally quite unintentional.
the present rule provides a remedy which in extreme cases, such as
the use of the hands in front of goal by a player other than the
goalkeeper, is obviously inadequate, and in other cases may be quite
unnecessarily severe. The attitude of the best class of amateur
toward this rule, as also that of the leaders of professionalism
towards the amateurs, is neatly illustrated by a couple of events which
occurred during the tour of the Corinthians in South Africa during
the English summer of 1903. The Corinthians are recruited almost
exclusively from Old Boy clubs, and represent all that is best in
amateur football. Not unnaturally they were anxious that through-
out their tour the game should be played according to their ideas
as regards foul play. With a referee of the pronounced professional
type it is never long before a penalty-kick is awarded against one
side or the other, and it happened that a local referee penalised the
Corinthians in this way. The Corinthian captain of that time,
a man who has done in a long career at least as much good for
amateur football as any other that ever played the game, was
fortunately himself in charge of the team and rose to the occasion.
In a word, he explained to the opposing captain his opinion that
if any member of his side had in the opinion of the referee by means
of foul play deliberately prevented his opponents from scoring a
goal the penalty ought to be a goal without any uncertainty, and
thereupon he ordered his goal-keeper to stand clear of the goal so
as to allow the opponents to score the point without opposition.
Not long afterwards the converse case arose, a penalty-kick
being awarded to the Corinthians for something which, in the
opinion of their captain, did not amount to deliberate foul play. He
accordingly took the kick himself, and deliberately put the ball off
the field as far from the goal as he could. Nothing in my opinion
could have been better calculated than this sportsmanlike action to
ensure the remainder of the matches throughout the tour being
played in the best possible spirit without any attempt at fouls,
and I expect most of my readers will approve of the policy ; but if
they do they will be in conflict with a large section (not amateur, I
need hardly say) of the Council of the Football Association, many
of whom were in favour of calling upon the Corinthian captain for
an explanation of his reprehensible, and in their view, I suppose,
unsportsmanlike, conduct.
Upon the death of my late lamented friend and colleague,
Arthur Dunn, a competition confined to Old Boy clubs was
founded in honour of his memory, and, as may be suppposed, the
ties are played off with no less keenness than if they were house
matches. The competition is now in its fifth season, and applications to be allowed to join in it are continually coming in from fresh
clubs. I suppose I have been present at something like twenty
matches played in the competition, and I am glad to say that I
never once saw the game stopped for foul play. Our idea is that
a player guilty of foul play ought to be regarded in the same light as
a man who, when armed with a gun, shoots by accident a fellow-
sportsman or by design a fox in a hunting country, and as I have
indicated above, the result is entirely satisfactory.
From the instances which I have given it will no doubt easily
be understood that the breach between the amateur and professional elements in the game has been gradually widening for many years
past, and I can now pass on to the present crisis. By the rules of
the Football Association every club must be affiliated to some
subsidiary District Association, which manages the affairs of its own
district subject to the supreme control of the Football Association.
To some extent the jurisdictions of the District Associations overlap
each other ; every club affiliated to the London Association, for
example, being eligible for membership of the Associations of either
Middlesex, Essex, Surrey, or Kent. Some two years ago the council
of the London Association, which had previously been confined to
amateur clubs, at the dictation of the Football Association proposed
to alter their constitution so as to admit to membership the professional clubs — some ten in number — whose headquarters were within
the territorial jurisdiction of the London Association. These
professional clubs, I may mention, disclaimed from the first any
desire to be affiliated, but the proposal was supported by Lord
Kinnaird, who is President of the London Association, the Football
Association, and also of my club. As President of the Football
Association, Lord Kinnaird succeeded another famous Old Etonian,
Sir Francis Marindin, who retired in consequence of his objection to
the failure of the Council to consider sufficiently the interests of
amateurs, and in supporting the proposal Lord Kinnaird stood
alone among representative Old Boys. I know of one other Old
Boy who professes a similar conviction, but has certainly no claim
to represent his club, and, indeed, I should be much interested to
learn the name of a single member of that old and famous club who
shares his views. Of him I need merely say that, judging only from
what I have seen of his contributions to the literature on the subject,
I welcome him as one of the most valuable friends of our cause.
The Old Boy clubs, the great majority of which belong to the
London Association, were as the result of the experience afforded by
the history of the Football Association unanimous in opposing the
proposal to admit professional clubs to membership of the London
Association on the ground that, if admitted, the representatives of
professional clubs would, by their persistency and pecuniary interest
in the matter, sooner or later secure a controlling majority of seats
on the Council ; and the result was that the motion was rejected,
not being carried by the necessary two-thirds majority prescribed by
the rules. About December 1905 certain officers of the Football
Association proposed as a compromise that the London Association
should admit to membership professional clubs within the jurisdictions of the Associations of Middlesex and Surrey, and that the
two last-named Associations should continue as before to admit
only amateurs. This proposal was peremptorily rejected by the
Council of the London Association as " unsatisfactory," presumably
because they did not wish to lose the subscriptions of the amateur
clubs which would be transferred to the other Associations, and the
original motion was brought on again at a special general meeting
of the London Association on 6th February last. A good deal of
canvassing was done by the supporters of the Council, and there is
abundant evidence that on their side advantage was freely taken of
the fact that, whereas the rules of the Association provide that each
senior club should be entitled to send two representative members,
and each junior club one such member, to vote at general meetings,
the notice convening this meeting invited the clubs to send
representatives, ignoring the necessity for such representatives to
be members of the clubs whom they might purport to represent.
A moment's reflection will show the enormous advantage gained
by our opponents who took the view that a vote might be tendered
on behalf of a club by a person who was not a member of it. I am
aware of an assertion that illegal voting of this kind occurred on
both sides, and my answer is that whereas the party to which I
belong have in their possession numerous letters indiscriminately
soliciting tickets of admission, no one, so far as I know, has ever
offered to produce such a document emanating from our side, or
suggested a fragment of evidence in support of the charge. Again,
the rules of the London Association provide that "no alteration shall be made in the rules . . . unless supported by, at
least, two-thirds of those present.'' Each representative as he
entered the room was required to state in writing his name and
that of the club which he claimed to represent, and he thereupon
received a voting-paper with which he could, if he wished, record
his vote there and then, without waiting to hear the discussion.
Every vote so tendered was accepted and counted, and at the conclusion of the meeting the result was announced by the chairman,
Lord Kinnaird, in substance as follows : — 607 voting papers were
issued (or in other words, as we think, the number of those present
within the meaning of the rule last quoted was 607). Of these, 562
voted, 376 for the motion, and 186 against. Two-thirds of 607 being
404.66, it seemed to us, especially having regard to the fact that all
those who left before the poll took place were allowed to vote if
they wished, that the motion was lost ; but another view com-
mended itself to the chairman. By the ingenious assumption that
those who voted before the poll was taken were " present," and that
all those who for any reason did not see fit to vote (even though
they might have remained in the room till now) were not present,
he arrived at the conclusion that the number of those present was
562, and that two-thirds of 562 being 374.66 the motion was accordingly carried with a vote and a fraction to spare. Rather a doubtful
short head, I think you will agree ! I have had a good deal to do
with both lawyers and sportsmen, and indeed I claim to belong to
both classes myself, but I do not hesitate to express the opinion that
in order to find an argument in favour of this decision it would be
wiser to consult a member of that profession which a friend once
described to me as being frequently mentioned in the Gospels,
but never, so far as he knew, with any pronounced marks of
approval.
Immediately upon hearing the chairman's declaration the
leaders of the minority demanded a scrutiny of the votes, and
according to the report of the meeting which appeared in the
Sportsman of the following day the chairman announced that a
scrutiny would be held ; but nevertheless all subsequent efforts to
obtain from the Council of the London Association any definite
promise to hold a scrutiny proved entirely unsuccessful, and on
22nd February the representatives of the dissenting clubs forming
the minority held a meeting and appointed a committee to deal with
the matter. This committee, on 3rd March, wrote to the Secretary
of the Football Association requesting the Council to receive a
deputation to discuss, first, the decision of the London Association
with regard to the meeting of 6th February ; and secondly, the
possibility of forming an Amateur Association to be affiliated to
the Football Association. On 22nd March the Secretary replied
that, in the opinion of his officers, the first point was entirely a
matter for the London Association and not for the Football
Association, and that the second point would be considered at a
meeting to be held on 2nd April. So far as I know, no such
meeting was ever held, nor has the matter ever received any further
consideration by the Football Association. About this time a
number of the dissentient clubs, who although met on all sides by
a blank refusal to consider their grievances were nevertheless
actuated by the desire to find a peaceful solution of the difficulty,
affiliated themselves to one or other of the still purely amateur
Associations of Middlesex and Surrey, so that by merely dropping
their subscriptions to the London Association they might still
remain duly affiliated to a District Association governed according
to their own ideas. Thereupon the officers of the Football Association, with that high courage which disdains to accept any offer of
help out of a difficulty, altered their rules so as to prohibit any
withdrawal from membership of a District Association, even for the
purpose of transfer to another such Association, except by leave of
the Football Association.
The last door of escape having been in this way closed against
them, the dissentient clubs, with the object of discovering some
means of securing justice, formed a combination which they called
the Amateur Defence Federation, and the committee of this body
among other steps took that of recommending certain clubs to
abstain from entering for the London Association Cup Competitions.
The Council of the Football Association promptly called upon them
for an explanation of their conduct, and in reply the committee of
the Amateur Defence Federation delivered a written statement
setting out in full detail, but without any of the comments which I
have made, the bare facts briefly recorded above from December
1905 onwards. On 5th November the Council of the Football
Association met to consider the explanation, and without making
the smallest attempt to dispute any fact alleged or to answer any
argument contained in the statement, after some discussion
baldly resolved that it was " unsatisfactory," and without more
words called upon all clubs who had joined the Amateur Defence
Federation immediately to withdraw therefrom. The principal
subject of the discussion which I have mentioned was whether the
epithet should be "unjustifiable" or "unsportsmanlike," and no
one suggested that the explanation deserved more courteous consideration than this blunt resolution. In my time the Council of
the Football Association has stigmatised as " unsportsmanlike" the
conduct of an Old Boy club which in a hard frost postponed an
Amateur Cup tie overnight without consulting the referee. Unfortunately now the same Council has regarded our conduct as
" unsatisfactory," and we are left with the consolation that we have
so far escaped the charge of being discourteous.
In deference to this last decision of the Council, at a meeting of
the Amateur Defence Federation held on 27th November it was
resolved that the Federation should be disbanded forthwith, and a
Committee was formed to take the necessary steps to call a General
Meeting of the Football Association to review the Council's decision
of 5th November. This is the position of matters as I write, and it is
not for me to attempt to forecast further developments. There are
reasons to anticipate that the Council may probably endeavour to
find some ground — I cannot think what — for depriving all clubs
which joined the Amateur Defence Federation of the right to play
against any other club under the control of the Association. One
effect of this would be to leave the Corinthians unable to find a
team in England fit to play against them, a contingency which I
understand even the Council themselves regard in the light of a
calamity, and another effect would be to inflict a grave hardship on
many provincial clubs by depriving them, for a time at all events, of
the possibility of finding any opponents within reach.
It has been urged upon me by one of the leaders of the professional party — I presume with the object of persuading my party
to submit without question to the wise judgment of the Council —
that it would not look well for "amateurs to break off" from the
Association and give ground for the comment, just or unjust, that
they consider themselves too good to play with the poorer classes.
The suggestion that such a comment might be made is only too well
founded, and I quote it as a specimen of the methods which are
employed against us in this controversy. It can hardly be necessary
for me to point out that the amateurs had exhausted every resource
to avoid a split with the Association before they formed their Defence
Federation, and if there be a split it will come about only through
the suspension of the amateurs by the Football Association, upon
the head of whose Council the whole blame will rest. To sum up,
speaking merely for myself, it seems clear that the amateurs are
determined to resist by all legitimate and honourable means that
illegal policy of coercion the object of which is to force them
ultimately to submit to professional government. Unless I am very
much mistaken the only possible solutions are that the Football
Association will either abandon that policy or drive the amateurs to
form a separate association, and one or other of these alternatives
must in my opinion be realised before the beginning of next
football season.
I trust that in this article, the inevitable length of which I
regret, I may have succeeded in explaining the controversy sufficiently to enable any sportsman who may wish to do so to interest
himself in the further developments which must now be rapidly
approaching.
Another instance of a penalty being deliberately missed that I have come across was by the great Vivian
Woodward playing for England (Amateur) v France. Woodward thought the referee had been harsh and England were already about 10-0 up if memory serves me correctly.
Anyway,back to...
The Association Football Crisis
By H. Hughes-Onslow
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