Friday 31 May 2013

The Birth Of South American Football

An historic journey through the birth and early years of South American football. From the first UK migrants to superstars in today's game like Messi, Cavani and Neymar. 

 
Brazil's footballing superstar Pele kisses the World Cup trophy.
South American Footballing Legend Pele


Collectively, the three South American footballing giants, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay, have been crowned World Champions on nine occasions. Between them they have competed in 11 of the 19 finals played.

The inaugural FIFA World Cup finals were hosted by the eventual winners and reigning Olympic champions Uruguay, who were crowned World Champions in 1930 after a 4-2 victory against Argentina in front of a 95,000 crowd in Montevideo. Having not competed in the finals of 1934 and 1938, Uruguay made their post WWII return to the competition tw
enty years and two finals later, where they repeated their triumph of 1930 in another all South American final, defeating hosts Brazil 2-1 in Rio de Janeiro. With Brazil going into the match as overwhelming favourites, the 1950 final would go down as one of the greatest upsets in World Cup history. The game would also be remarkable due to the attendance of 200,000 spectators. A World Cup record that will surely never be broken.

Brazil of course, would go on to win five of the following 14 competitions. Becoming the first country to win the trophy away from their own continent, as a 17 year-old Pele took the 1958 Swedish finals by storm. Meanwhile, Argentina would have to wait until a Buenos Aires final, 20 years later, to lift the ultimate prize in football. A feat they repeated in Mexico City in 1986.

On Thursday, June 12, 2014, the world will be watching as once again, the brilliant Brazilian hosts kick off the 20th FIFA World Cup Finals in Rio De Janeiro. All eyes will be on global footballing superstars, Messi, Neymar and Cavani, as they attempt to take back the greatest prize in football from European hands, and return the World Cup to South America for a 10th time.

 

‘Today there will be a football match at Palermo; we believe it will be the first kick off ever given in Buenos Aires, and we understand that half the town will be there if the weather proves favourable.’  

The (Argentine) Standard, 25 May, 1867.

 

The Pioneers


By the 1860’s, there was a thriving British community in Argentina. The country, incorporated into the United Kingdom’s informal empire, had seen an influx of British settlers stretching back almost 60 years. However, it was British investment in the development of the Argentine railway system that paved the way for the arrival of tens of thousands of migrant Victorian construction workers and civil engineers to Buenos Aires.

Railway workers, James and Thomas Hogg were amongst the many who braved the 7000 mile ocean crossing to the promise of a new life. And it would be the Yorkshire born brothers whom, on 20 June, 1867, organised an Association Football match in the Argentine capital. The first ever official match to be played on the continent of South America.
After having placed a notice in the Buenos Aires English language newspaper, The Standard, seeking to bring together fellow migrants with an interest in playing the game of football, the brothers Hogg, alongside three fellow northern Englishmen and railway workers, Thomas Jackson, Thomas Barlow Smith, and Walter Heald, went on to form Buenos Aires Football Club.


The inaugural match, played at the Buenos Aires Cricket Club Ground, in the capital’s neighbourhood of Palermo, was contested between 16 players, with each team wearing red and white caps respectively. The game kicked off at 12:30pm and, finishing two hours later, it was reported that James Hogg’s ‘Rojos’ triumphed with a 4-0 victory over the  ‘Blancos,’ captained by his older sibling Thomas. And South American football was born.


 

“This is the best hobby and the easiest and most affordable one for the middle and working-class youth.”  

Thomas Hogg, 20 June, 1867.

 

Whilst it was the Hogg brothers who had laid the footballing foundations in the new world, according to the Asociación del Fútbol Argentino, the crucial building blocks that enabled the advancement of the game were put in place by ‘the father of South American football’ Alexander (Alejandro) Watson Hutton.

As one of around 500,000 immigrants who had arrived in Argentina within a two year period, the Glaswegian born Edinburgh University graduate disembarked in Buenos Aires in 1882,  initially to oversee the running of St Andrews School. There he would introduce Association Football as a fundamental component of the schools physical education programme. Shortly after, Watson Hutton would go on to found his own educational establishment, The English High School, where eventually, the Gorbals born schoolmaster would create the now legendary Alumni Athletic Football Club.


Between 1900 and 1911, Alumni would be crowned Argentine Primera División champions on no less that 10 occasions, their only blip coming in 1904 as they finished runners-up to Belgrano Athletic. This impressive run of success was a fitting tribute to Watson Hutton who had, on February 21, 1893, reformed the Argentine Association Football League. The first league to be recognised outside of Great Britain, and one which Hutton would preside over as President, until his retirement in 1911.


The first decade of the 20th century would see the branching out of the Argentine railway development into neighbouring Brazil, Uruguay, Chile and beyond. The expansion of the railway brought with it Association Football to those countries, which in turn would be the catalyst for the further spread of the game across a continent and crucially, for the first ‘international matches’ to be organised and held across South America.

 

The Second Wave


Seeking to build upon the growth in popularity of the game, both in participation and as a spectator sport, in 1909, the Argentine and Uruguayan associations devised an ambitious plan to invite professional English clubs on an official footballing tour of both countries. In March 1909, Everton Football Club received a letter from Frederick J. Wall, Secretary of the English Football Association, cordially inviting the club, who had finished as 1908/09 runners-up in the English First Division, to embark on a ground breaking tour of Argentina and Uruguay. Everton were requested by the FA to select a team of first class players to participate in a series of games in South America against several Argentine and Uruguayan clubs, as well as the 1908/09 English Second Division runners-up, Tottenham Hotspur. The North London club, as Everton before them, eventually agreed to take up the FA’s extraordinary offer.

The invitation, documented within the 1908/09 Everton Football Club Minutes Book, records the South American FA’s offer of payment for first class travel to the continent, as well as covering all hotel expenses for twenty days for the teams players and two accompanying Directors of the club. In accepting the invitation Everton would, alongside the Spurs team, write footballing history as the first clubs to undertake such an epic overseas football tour.


In April 1909, Everton Football Club registered 13 players who would take the 14,000 mile round trip from Southampton to Buenos Aires. Travelling alongside the chosen players, the Everton Directors leading the party to Argentina, were Mr E. Bainbridge and Mr A. Wade.


The secretary of Everton confirmed the club's decision to go ahead with the series of matches, noting the duration of the tour in his minutes as ‘to last 9 weeks (3 weeks travelling each way & 20 days in Argentina).’


With the offer accepted, Everton received notice from FA Secretary Mr. Wall, of the booking of berths for a party of 16, on a ship set to sail from Southampton to Buenos Aires on 14 May, 1909.


The 16 strong Everton party left Liverpool Lime Street Station for London Euston on 13 May, arriving in good time at Southampton docks for boarding upon the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company ship, RMS Aruguaya.


Seemingly, the Tottenham team were less prompt, rolling up at the docks only to find the steamer had cast off without them. Reportedly leaving them no other option but to appropriate a Southampton registered tugboat to pursue RMS Aruguaya down the Solent. The steamer eventually slowing to allow the undoubtedly sheepish Spurs party the opportunity to board the South America bound ship.


On June 5th, 1909, after three weeks at sea, football history was made when, within hours of the teams’ disembarkation at Buenos Aires, Everton and Tottenham Hotspur, played out the first ever professional football match in South America. A 2-2 draw in front of 10,000 supporters in Palermo, the exact same suburb of the Argentine capital where, 31 years earlier, the Hogg brothers had organised the very first game of Association Football. A fortnight later, Everton would inflict a 4-0 defeat on the North Londoners. Spurs’ only reverse in their seven games on the tour.


In just 20 days, the English clubs would face a hectic schedule coming up against Alexander Watson Hutton’s famous Argentinian champions Alumni, who fielded Hutton’s son in both games. As well as matches played against Rosario, Argentinos, and an Argentinian football league XI, both teams would also travel to Montevideo to face a Uruguayan league representative side.


Whilst the crowds flocked in their thousands to see the home sides take on the might of English football, it was left to Mr. Bainbridge to keep the ardent supporters back in Liverpool informed of the progress of their team on the faraway continent. With the Liverpool Echo’s coverage of the tour, including match reports, based on the Everton Director’s telegrammed daily diary.


The nine week tour of South America undertaken by Everton and Tottenham was deemed a resounding success for all involved. Those 32 men were the second wave of football pioneers. Following in the footsteps of the Hogg brothers, Thomas Jackson, Thomas Barlow Smith, Walter Heald and ‘the father of South American football’ Alexander Watson Hutton and many more besides.  The footballing forefathers who perhaps unwittingly but nevertheless, had been responsible for the rapid growth and advancement of a game that has since become a legacy intrinsically woven into a continents culture.


Fast forward almost 115 years exactly from the day Everton met Tottenham in Buenos Aires and again, it will be the South American continent hosting the greatest footballing show on Earth. Once more, it will undoubtedly be the three dominant South American countries that will go into the 20th FIFA World Cup finals right up there as favourites to lift the famous trophy.


Thankfully for all disciples of the beautiful game, for all those who have, and continue to wonder at the skill, style and tenacity of South American football, it is to these men, who brought with them a love of the sport to a far flung continent, The South American Football Pioneers, who we should all be eternally grateful. 
They certainly have a lot to answer for.


Everton Football Club - South American Tour Squad:
 

Berry, Balmer, Maconnachie, Harris, Taylor, Adamson, Clifford, Jones, Lacey, Freeman, White, Rafferty and Mountford.

Tottenham Hotspur Football Club - South American Tour Squad:



Boreham, Coquet, Wilkes, Bull, Steel, MacFarlane, Curtis, Minter, Tull, Clarke, McConnor, Morris and Middlemiss.

Tour Results:
 
05 June: Everton 2 -2 Spurs
10 June: Alumni 2 - 2 Everton
13 June: Uruguay XI 1 - 2 Everton
19 June: Spurs 0 - 4 Everton
20 June: Liga Argentina 0 - 4 Everton



10 June: Uruguay XI 0 - 8 Spurs
13 June: Argentinos 0 - 1 Spurs
16 June: Liga Argentina 1 - 4 Spurs
20 June: Rosario 0 - 9 Spurs
24 June: Alumni 0 - 5 Spurs

 

Acknowledgements:
 
The goldmine that is, http://www.evertoncollection.org.uk/home
http://www.topspurs.com/
http://www.afa.org.ar/

 

The Save Grassroots Football Campaign

Meet Kenny Saunders, founder of the Save Grassroots Football campaign. This worthy cause is sweeping across football in Britain as it aims to change the landscape of the game for players, coaches, officials and parents. 

 

The Save Grassroots Campaign say poor pitches and amenities threaten the amateur game.
Abject amenities threaten amateur football across the UK

 

Grassroots football is in real danger; squeezed by near intolerable financial pressures, local authorities are no longer able to support the grassroots game. With dilapidated facilities, abject amenities and poor pitches being cited as reasons for both declining participation and a disincentive to attract new players, many of those on the front line are convinced that if nothing is done to address the threat, the gradual extinction of urban grassroots football is more than a mere possibility.

The issues are numerous, the concerns irrefutable and the consequences for the national sport would doubtlessly be far reaching. It is a bizarre state of affairs then, that in this global footballing day and age of millionaire superstar players, billionaire club owners and multi billion pound Premier League broadcasting rights deals, the very lifeblood that feeds the professional game could be on the verge of being severed.

In 2010, Sport England, the organisation responsible for funding grassroots sports, published its Active People Survey. The study presented a worrying 3 year trend of declining participation in football with a decrease of more than 143,000 regular active players. Worryingly, the survey pointed to a ‘significant decrease’ in participation in football in the 16-19 age group.

It is a trend more than familiar to Woolton FC junior football club Kenny Saunders, senior coach at the club which boasts 55 teams as well as 135 5-6 year olds. Size, however, is no benchmark for great facilities; according to Saunders, “We haven’t even got a toilet.” The Liverpool-born youth coach has set in motion a campaign to challenge football's governing bodies to face up to, and deal with, the real issues they are facing.

“Government cuts mean that local authorities are no longer able to fund grassroots football. Fees for basic facilities are climbing to the point where ordinary people are being priced out of our national sport.”

For Saunders, it doesn’t end with government cuts, “The Football Foundation, FA and Premier League are all out of date with what is happening in grassroots football and lack of funding since 1999.” It’s a worringly accurate statement. The Premier League currently invest only 1% of their revenue in grassroots football – a figure which they claimed would rise to 5% in 1999. Fourteen years on and nothing.

The Save Grassroots Football campaign has the support of Bolton North East MP David Crausby who has set up an e-petition calling on the Premier League to increase its financial assistance to grassroots football. In the last year the Premier League has contributed £12m to the Football Foundation from an income of a mammoth £1.26bn. Of the £12m contribution, £6m is actually diverted to an agreed stadium investment fund for non-league clubs. Taking the latest Premier League television rights deal into account, that huge annual income figure is set to increase by £1.25bn. With global rights, this figure could rise to as much as £5bn over the next three years. Campaigners are requesting the multi-billion pound body raise its funding contribution of annual earnings from 1% to 7.5%.

Crausby, who in 2012 backed an early day motion in parliament which called for a 50% windfall tax on Premier League broadcasting deals, with the proceeds going to the Football Foundation, said: “Owners, players and agents are making billions of pounds out of these huge TV deals, but without proper funding for decent facilities we can’t develop the players of the future or encourage more children to get involved with our favourite sport. The Premier League has had plenty of opportunities to act in the interest of the sport, but we continue to see the money hoarded at the top. I think it is time to look at new solutions.”

The Bolton North East MP’s e-petition has received the backing of Labour MP for Liverpool Walton, Steve Rotheram, and Luciana Berger, Labour & Co-operative MP for Liverpool Wavertree. A HM Government e-petition needs to secure 100,000 signatures in order for a Parliamentary Debate to be triggered.

With interest in the cause boosted by social media, the Save Grassroots Football campaign’s rapidly growing support coincides with this week's launch of the English Football Association’s ‘national facilities strategy.’ The FA is guaranteeing £150m over three years to improve dilapidated urban football facilities including enhancement of 3,000 grass pitches, a pledge to lay 100 new artificial pitches and the renovation of 150 more. The strategy also prioritises new build and improvement of changing facilities and toilets, small grant programmes for smaller clubs and the possibility of larger grassroots clubs becoming the owners of the pitch they currently play on.


Some may question whether the Premier League as a body and its member clubs actually need to invest in grassroots football. Aside from their responsibility as the most powerful organization in domestic football, Saunders says, “The Premier League clubs need grassroots football because that is where the future Gerrard’s and Rooney’s come from.” Very true. If the English game is to compete against the very best in Europe, the facilities for coaches and players will need to improve.


The concern for the Save Grassroots Football campaign is the FA’s strategy will not be funded by new money, but instead be a re-routing of the Football Foundations £50m annual budget. Funded by the FA, the Premier League and Sport England, this allowance is highly unlikely to be increased. Kenny Saunders is unimpressed by the FA’s announcement.


“It's a disgrace what the FA have announced, we need so much more investment from them and the Premier League. Facilities are horrendous, worse than they were when I was playing as a boy 40 years ago.”

"We've had to call off matches in 11 of the last 13 weekends and we don't have any toilets. We're going to cut off the lifeblood of the game, our young players, if we're not careful."

Saunders has already resorted to extreme measures to bring the issue to the wider public. “In November last year Sefton Borough Council were increasing pitch fees in mini soccer from £150 to £600 and 11-a-side pitches from £550 to £1600. I organized, from the Liverpool area, a boycott of the week ending 1st/2nd December. We had 9000 kids not playing which it is something I did not want to do but I felt that I had to for their cause. We had a demonstration on the 2nd which was well attended by children, parents, Sky Sports, BBC, Granada etc. with maximum publicity. A week later the council ripped the consultation document up, first time in 100 years, and the fees in Sefton remained the same.”

It was an extreme measure but it ended up with a long term solution. The hardest thing for many coaches is the challenge in facing such a predicament. The army of youth coaches in the UK execute their job for one reason; to improve the standard of the game and to positively impact on children’s lives. To stop them from playing is about as extreme a measure as any coach could ever resort to. In the world’s wealthiest football nation it’s beggars belief that in 2013 this is still an option many coaches are having to consider.

For Kenny Saunders and the countless volunteers like him up and down the country, it is at grassroots and amateur level where football matters and matters most. It is a tradition to be proud of, nurtured and cherished. Football brings people and communities together; it always has and always should. It is a cause worth fighting for and undoubtedly the Save Grassroots Football campaign is determined and ready to battle for the future of the beautiful game.


Perhaps it’s appropriate to give the final word to Saunders, “My fears are if we don’t do something, grassroots football will finish in a matter of years. However with this campaign and e-petition we, the people of grassroots football up and down the country, can have a massive say to what goes on in the future.”

Don’t be the one who only talks. Do something and join the volunteers, children, parents, referees and coaches who make grassroots football the beating heart of our national game.



Support the Save Grassroots Football campaign by signing the petition:

http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/46134

Follow the campaign on Twitter: @savegrassroots