Showing posts with label Spartak Moscow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spartak Moscow. Show all posts

12.7.16

Nikolai Starostin


Strictly speaking this falls outside our era. Nikolai Starostin lived at 19a Ulitsa Tverskaya (Moscow) from 1961, when his playing days were long behind him, until his death in 1996.
Starotsin, who held the honour Hero of Socialist Labour and was a 3 time recipient of the Order of Lenin, also spent 11 years as a political prisoner (1942-53).
We'll include him here though for the role he played in developing Spartak Moscow, who emerged from the local Moscow scene to become the great populist side in the Soviet Union.
Notice how the colour scheme of the building next door resembles the Spartak jersey!


See also:
http://gottfriedfuchs.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/peoples-team.html
http://gottfriedfuchs.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/starostin-brothers.html

4.11.15

Starostin Brothers


Petr, Аndrei, Аleksandr & Nikolai

The years from the Great October Revolution (1917) to the end of the Great Patriotic War (1945)  saw football in the Soviet Union progressing in relative isolation. 
The Soviet Union did not join FIFA, and they did not participate in the Olympic Games.
On the domestic front national club competitions came into being in the mid 1930s. 
There were Spatrakaids and Workers Olympiads, but in terms of truly representative international football the Soviet Union was limited to a few friendlies which are considered unofficial.* 

On the Moscow football scene this was the era of the Starostin brothers. All 4 played for Spartak Moscow and the teams from which that great club evolved :



Nikolai started serious football at the age of 15 with Russian Gymnastic Society (РГО)
He later played for:
 Moscow Sport Club (1922)
Krasnaya Presnya (1923 - 1925)
Pishchevik (1926-1930)
Promkooperatisa (1931, 1934)
Dukat (1932 - 1933)
Spartak Moscow (1935 - 1936)

He played in RSFSR Championship winning sides in 1922, 1927, 1928 & 1931.

Represented Moscow (1922-35) and the RSFSR (1928-30).
He was awarded the Master of Sport of the Soviet Union.






Aleksandr
Clubs:
РГО (1918 - 1921),
МКС (1922)
Krasnaya Presnya (1923 - 1925)
Pishchevik (1926 - 1930)
Promkooperatisa (1931, 1934)
Dukat (1932 - 1933)
Spartak Moscow (1935 - 1937)

 RSFSR Championship 1927, 1928,  1931 & 1932.

Soviet Championship  1935, 1936 (autumn).
Aleksandr represented the Soviet Union 11 times in 'unofficial' internationals. 




Andrei played youth football with МКС
His club career then followed the familiar Spartak pedigree: 
Krasnaya Presnya (1925)
Pishchevik (1926 - 1930)
Promkooperatisa (1931, 1934)
Dukat (1932 - 1933)
Spartak Moscow (1935 - 1941)

 RSFSR Championship 1931

 Soviet Championship  1935, 1936 (autumn)** 
Andrei represented the Soviet Union 10 times in 'unofficial' internationals. 








Petr
Promkooperatisa (1931,1934)
Dukat (1932 -1933)
Spartak Moscow (1936-38)
RSFSR Championship 1931
Soviet Championship 1935, 1936 (autumn)** 








*http://gottfriedfuchs.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/moscow-petrograd-vs-sweden-norway-and.html


*http://gottfriedfuchs.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/soviet-union-v-turkey-1924-1935.html


** won further honours post 1937.

31.8.15

Народная команда - The People's Team


Krasnaya Presnya 1924


Although the name Spartak was not adopted until 1935, Spartak Moscow can trace their history back to 1922.
The club came into being when the Communist Party committee in the Sokolniki region of Moscow brought about the merger of two multi-sport clubs, the RGO (Russkoe gimnastisticheskoe obshchestvo) and the OFV (Obshchestvo fizicheskogo vospitania). The club was initially named Moscow Sports Circle of Krasnopresenskoga Region (МКС)  but after one year became Krasnaya Presnya. 

Nikolai Pashintsev, president of the Party's Krasnopresenskii Region Executive Committee, was the team's chief patron, and the clubs 'branding' changes tended to reflect C. Pashintsev's involvement in various organizations.
Over the next 12 years the club was associated with a succession of different organizations- I hesitate to call them sponsors as the Soviet Union was a Socialist state. 


When the club were seeking a new name in 1935 Nikolai Starotsin was inspired by Raffaello Giovagnoli's novel Spartacus, and the qualities that this name evoked ( according to Starotsin 'courage, the will to fight, endurance and strength, loyalty to ideals').
Here is a timeline of the various guises the club took during the first 12 years of its existence. 



Year
Name

English
Origin / Patronange
1922
Московский кружок спорта Краснопресненского района (МКС)
Moscow Sports Circle of Krasnopresenskoga
Region
(MKS)

Krasnaya Presnya is a
district in Moscow.  The Communist Party and Komsomol were influential in the development of the club and its facilities.

1923
Красная Пресня
Krasnaya Presnya
1926
Пищевики
Pishchevik
The union of workers employed in the food packaging industry.

1931
Промкооперация
Promkooperatisa
A collective retailing organization.

1932 – Дукат (Dukat)
During 1932 a significant portion of Promkooperatisa’s squad moved to Dukat. Dukat was the trade name of a tobacco manufacturer- Comrade Pashintsev was involved in the company and his influence led to the players moving there.
However, Dukat was actually a separate organization and Promkooperatisa continued to operate, and it is debatable whether Dukat should be seen as a part of the heritage of Spartak or as something of an aside.

1932
Промкооперация
Promkooperatisa


1935
Спартак (Москва)

Spartak Moscow


Summary of the club achievements 1922-1937:




Spring
Autumn
Cups

1922
MKS
Moscow Championship 2nd Division – finished top of a 6 team league with a 100% record.

Moscow Championship 2nd Division- not completed.
Maytova Cup winners.
Red jerseys.
1923
Krasnaya Presnya
Moscow Championship- winners- won a play-off.
Moscow Championship-
Finished last in a 4 team league.


1924
Moscow Championship- winners (6 teams).

Moscow Championship- 2nd (4 teams).
Won Tosmena Cup, beating Spartak Petrograd in the final.

1925
Moscow Championship- outcome is unknown.

Discovery Cup Winners.
1926
Pishchevik

MGSPS Championship- 2nd in a 14 team league.


Sky blue jerseys
1927
Moscow Championship- 3rd (6 teams).
Moscow Championship- winners (6 teams).


Red and white stripes.
1928
Moscow Championship- 3rd (6 teams)


White with a red horizontal band on the chest
1929
Moscow and Trades Unions Championship – winners. (knockout format).
MGSPS and MSFK Championship- 2nd (8 teams ).
Won Tosmena Cup beating Pishchevik Leningrad in the final.

1930
Moscow Championship winners (4 teams).
Moscow Championship 8th (8 teams).


1931
Promkooperatisa
Moscow Championship- 7th
Won a tournament contested by the physical culture co-operatives of Moscow, Leningrad and Kharkiv.

1932
Very little evidence remains from these  seasons due to a lack of press coverage of football.

1933
1934
Moscow Championship winners (8 teams).
Moscow Championship 4th (8 teams).
MGSFK tournament winners.
All-Union co-operatives competition winners.

Red with a white band on the chest.
1935
Spartak
Moscow Championship-3rd (8 teams).






Spartak and Dinamo were excused from the Autumn competition in the interests of the national team.
Won a cup competition for various ‘Spartak’ clubs in the Soviet Union – 6 in all!
1936
Soviet Union Championship- 3rd
(7 teams).
Soviet Union Championship- winners (8 teams).


1937
Soviet Union Championship- 2nd
(9 teams).




31.10.13

Спартак



Football has been played in many places and against some impressive backdrops, but this takes some beating! Red Square, Moscow. St Basil's behind one goal, Lenin's Mausoleum and the walls of the Kremlin along one touchline and the GYM Central Store along the other.
An exhibition match was planned for Sportsman’s Day (6th July 1936). Originally Spartak were to take on their rivals Dynamo.  Dynamo, however, withdrew from the fixture and Spartak provided both teams. The playing surface was a thick matting laid over the cobbles of Red Square. 
Leading Soviet dignitaries were present, including Comrade Stalin himself.  The exhibition was originally planned as a half-a-hour match, but was extended to 43 minutes because Stalin was so absorbed in the proceedings. 
The 'Spring' half of the 1936 season finished a few weeks after this match, with  Dynamo as champions and Spartak in 3rd place. In the Autumn season  Spartak claimed their first title. 



26.4.13

Soccer—The Game of the Working Class (2)

Spartak play an exhibition match in Red Square, 1936

A further extract from Serious Fun: A History of Spectator Sports in the USSR by Robert Edelman (1993)- reproduced without permission.

The Problem of Professionalism Before the League's Formation

The creation of the league that spring would force Soviet players and coaches to organize their efforts in a more consistent and permanent manner. They were now to devote the bulk of their energies to sports, a change that meant less time for work and raised the issue of professionalism. While the extent of the league's demands on players' time was indeed new, many of the practices and customs of professional sports had been common in Soviet soccer well before 1936. As early as the 1920s, Soviet athletes were being paid, and this fact was generally known among the sporting public.
Competition for the best players had been keen throughout the NEP period. Under-the-table payments, no-show jobs, and better housing were just a few of the standard inducements employed by the leading clubs, and these matters were widely discussed in the press. While accounts of professionalism were nearly always critical, they were such a journalistic staple that there can be no doubt that the practices they condemned were widespread. The semi capitalist world of the NEP had its shady operators who found in soccer a
ripe object for fun and profit. As Moshe Lewin has said, "NEP had its share of venality, crooked business deals, and ways to spend the profits, including night clubs, cafés chansants, gambling dens, and houses of prostitution."
Inevitably, as in the West, less-than-upright figures were drawn to so significant an object of public attention as soccer. While some of this activity slacked off during the First Five-Year Plan, it quickly resumed, even before the creation of the soccer league.
In any competitive situation, amateur or professional, teams seek to attract the best possible players within, and often outside of, the rules agreed upon by the competitors. Even if early Soviet soccer had been amateur, some player movement would have occurred, but in a fully amateur situation, one could expect most players to stay with their original clubs. Movement from group to group, not to mention city to city, signified that players put their individual welfare above that of the collective. This practice was seen by
many critics as a sign of professionalism, a negative development. However, in the conditions of the NEP, gate receipts were still an important element of a team's survival. As everywhere else, excellence on the field meant success at the box office. Semicapitalism gave rise to semiprofessionalism.
The demand for good players appeared very quickly, and the ablest soon found their services in demand. They could shop themselves to the highest bidders. As early as 1926, Krasnyi sport lamented that this process had been going on for some time, and it stressed that the methods of attracting good players were primarily financial:

These "well-known" players move about according to their own taste. Little by little, with the approach of the close of the transfer period, a small but substantial number of players appears, ready to sell themselves to whomever they want to, whenever they want. [They ask] only the highest price. . . .It is especially shameful that organizations that are not what they seem to be take part (of course not openly) in the financing of these "commerical" operations. These organizations are interested in setting up strong teams for their groups in
the name of "hurrah patriotism" and with the aim of collecting thousands in gate receipts.
Two years later, the weekly Fizkultura i sport lamented this same process and remarked that many players had played for a different team every year. The magazine also ran a large editorial cartoon that satirized the annual movement of players from team to team.
At the heart of this process was the phenomenon that became known as chempionstvo. The members of many sports societies began to object that their organizations were devoting too much attention to attracting and supporting elite athletes. As a result, the physical education of the working masses was being neglected. This criticism was not directed simply at those athletes who, by virtue of their talents, happened to be successful: "The dispute is not simply about 'champions' but about those 'champions' who, having achieved something, bargain for themselves, seeking a comfortable place from the institution for whom they will appear. . . . It is necessary to struggle decisively against those organizations engaged in the 'buying and
selling' of champions. . . ."
The abandonment of the New Economic Policy did little to stem this phenomenon. The market for stars may have been less overtly financial with the coming of the first Five-Year Plans, but by the mid-'thirties, top athletes still found many suitors for their services. In 1933, the sports press was again complaining about this practice, and two years later, Krasnyi sport detailed an elaborate ring of "sports businessmen" who traded in players. Both the businessmen and the players received such sizable sums as three thousand rubles for these "transfers." By the end of 1935, the practice had become so widespread that the Central Committee of the Komsomol and the All Union Council of Physical Culture (VSFK) published a resolution decrying player transfers.
Rewards of this sort were not entirely unreasonable, since big-time soccer was in the process of becoming a full-time occupation. Nikolai Starostin has recalled that, in the early 'thirties, teams practiced three times a week and played games on Sunday. Players on city selects and national teams would be taken from their work for long periods of time, and the top teams would spend as much as a month preparing for the season in the south.
Mikhail Iakushin recounts that he enrolled in an engineering institute in 1935 but soon found that soccer demanded so much time that he had to abandon his studies.

3.10.12

Soviet Union 1936

Here are some team photographs from the 1936 seasons of the Soviet Union league.


 Spartak Moscow  (Autumn winners)

 Dinamo Moscow (Spring winners)

Lokomotiv Moscow


 Torpedo Moscow-  Группа Б (Group B)