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.

25.4.13

Barcelona- honours











1912 Victory parade 


Copa Macaya 1 win (3 editions)

1901-02

Copa Barcelona 1 win (1 edition)

1902-03

Campionat de Catalunya 22 wins (38 editions)*

1904-05, 1908-09, 1909-10, 1910-11, 1912-13, 1913-14, 1915-16, 1918-19, 1919-20, 1920-21, 1921-22, 1923-24, 1924-25, 1925-26, 1926-27, 1927-28, 1928-29, 1929-30, 1930-31, 1931-32, 1933-34, 1935-36


Copa del Rey 8 wins (36 editions)*
1909–101911–121912–131919–201921–221924–251925–261927–28

Pyrenees Cup 4 wins (5 editions)

19101911,  1912, 1913

La Liga / Primera División 1 win (8 editions)*

1929 



1910 with Pyrenees Cup

1929 

* during our period - that is up until the summer of 1937

24.4.13

The 1870s : Scottish Dominance

An analysis of matches played between Scottish and English club sides in the 1870s reveals a significant Scots superiority.

Wins
Goals
Scottish
42
171
English
9
55
Drawn
3


Queen's Park
44% of these matches involved teams representing Queen's Park, and the dominance they enjoyed in Scottish football was extended into their encounters with English sides.


P
W
D
L
F
A
Queen’s Park
24
21
2
1
85
11

The English teams that played Scottish opponents during the decade represented both the 'gentleman amateurs' (eg: Wanderers, Cambridge University, Clapham Rovers,London Pilgrims, Old Etonians) and the northern and midland clubs that would be at the forefront of developing the professional game (eg: Darwen, Blackburn Rovers, Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest, Stoke). 
There was of course no league football in either England or Scotland during the 1870s. Aside from cup competitions the clubs relied on friendlies. 

Darwen
Here is a list of the club fixtures from 1872-79.








04.03.72 
Wanderers
0
0
Queen’s Park
Oval

30.01.75 
Queen’s Park
6
0
Notts County 
Hampden 1

08.03.75 
Notts County
1
2
Queen’s Park
Trent Bridge

09.10.75 
Queen’s Park
5
0
Wanderers
Hampden 1

06.02.76 
Wanderers
2
0
Queen’s Park
Oval

01.04.76 
Clydesdale    
2
0
The Wednesday
Kinning Park

08.04.76 
Alexandra Athletic
1
0
Sheffield Albion   
Alexandra Pk

07.10.76 
Queen’s Park
5
1
Notts County      
Hampden 1

04.11.76 
Wanderers
0
6
Queen’s Park
Oval

09.12.76 
Queen’s Park
3
0
Cambridge University  
Hampden 1

03.11.77 
Third Lanark RV.
1
1
Sheffield Heeley
Cathkin 1

10.11.77 
Partick
5
0
Darwen
Inchview Pk

17.11.77 
Queen’s Park
6
1
Notts County   
Hampden 1

08.12.77 
Calthorpe
0
8
Queen’s Park XI
Birmingham

10.12.77 
Stoke
0
1
Queen’s Park XI
Sweetings F

15.12.77 
Queen’s Park
0
0
Cambridge University  
Hampden 1

01.01.78 
Darwen
3
2
Partick
Barley Bank

01.01.78 
Sheffield  Albion
1
2
Alexandria Athletic
Sheffield

02.01.78 
Blackburn Rovers        
2
1
Partick
Alexandra M.

19.01.78 
Notts County
1
2
Queen’s Park  
Trent Bridge

09.02.78 
Queen’s Park XI
7
0
Calthorpe
Hampden 1

16.02.78 
Nottingham Forest
2
4
Glasgow Rangers     
Nottingham

18.02.78 
The Wednesday
1
2
Glasgow Rangers  
Sheaf House

13.04.78 
Wanderers
1
3
Vale of Leven  
Oval

20.04.78 
Glasgow Rangers
2
0
Nottingham Forest   
Kinning Park

22.04.78 
Ayr Thistle
0
3
Nottingham Forest    
Ayr

06.04.78 
Manchester Birch
0
6
Queen’s Park
Manchester

21.09.78 
Queen’s Park XI
4
1
Stoke
Hampden 1

25.10.78 
Clapham Rovers
1
5
Glasgow Rangers   
London

26.10.78 
Nottingham Forest
0
2
Glasgow Rangers      
Nottingham

09.11.78 
Partick
2
0
Blackburn Rovs          
Inchview Pk

09.11.78 
Queen’s Park
4
0
Notts County         
Hampden 1

01.01.79 
Sheffield Heeley     
0
2
Third Lanark RV.  
Sheffield

01.01.79 
Darwen
0
7
Partick
Barley Bank

02.01.79 
Blackburn Rovers
2
4
Partick
Alexandra M.

18.01.79 
Nottingham Forest
4
1
Edinburgh University
Nottingham

18.01.79 
Stoke
1
4
Queen’s Park XI
Victoria G

20.01.79 
Birmingham Select
1
4
Edinburgh University
Birmingham

20.01.79 
Aston Villa
1
2
Queen’s Park XI
Perry Barr

01.02.79 
Notts County
0
2
Queen’s Park
Trent Bridge

11.04.79 
Ayr FC
1
2
Calthorpe
Ayr

12.04.79 
Glasgow Rangers
3
0
Nottingham Forest  
Kinning Park

12.04.79 
Manchester Wrs
0
4
Queen’s Park
Manchester

12.04.79 
Mauchline            
3
0
Calthorpe
Mauchline

14.04.79 
Glasgow University
5
2
Calthorpe
Glasgow

25.10.79 
Blackburn Rovers
1
4
Glasgow Rangers      
Alexandra Med.

01.11.79 
Nottingham Forest
6
1
Edinburgh University
Nottingham

08.11.79 
London Pilgrims
0
2
Queen’s Park XI
London

10.11.79 
Stoke
1
2
Queen’s Park XI
Victoria Ground

15.11.79 
Queen’s Park
4
1
Notts County       
Hampden 1

15.11.79 
Aston Villa
4
2
Parkgrove FC              
Perry Barr

25.12.79 
Kilmarnock Ath. 
7
1
Nottingham St.James   
Kilmarnock

27.12.79 
Vale of Leven
5
2
Old Etonians           
Alexandria

30.12.79 
Edinburgh University
3
4
Old Etonians   
Edinburgh



What also began in the latter part of the 1870s was the trickle of Scottish players to join English clubs. Offered sinecure positions in local industries they were tacitly professional.
James Lang (Clydesdale- The Wednesday, 1876), Fergus Suter and Jimmy Love (Partick-Darwen, 1878) and Archie Hunter (Ayr Thistle- Aston Villa, 1878) are early examples. 



Scotland also enjoyed the advantage in the international matches played during the decade.



Wins
Goals
Scotland
4
23
England
2
15
Drawn
2


30.11.72     
Scotland
0
0
England
Hamilton Cres.

08 03.73     
England
4
2
Scotland
Oval

07.03.74     
Scotland
2
1
England
Hamilton Cres.

06.03.75     
England
2
2
Scotland
Oval

04.03.76
Scotland
3
0
England
Hamilton Cres.

03.03.77
England
1
3
Scotland
Oval

02.03.78
Scotland
7
2
England
Hampden 1

05.04.79
England
5
4
Scotland
Oval


Note: the unofficial England Scotland matches of  1870-72 and the Glasgow Sheffield series are not included.