请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 St. Andrew's Athletic Club
释义

  1. History

  2. Notable players

  3. Honours

  4. Legacy

  5. See also

  6. References

{{about|the defunct Argentine football club|similarly named clubs|Saint Andrews F.C. (disambiguation){{!}}Saint Andrews F.C.}}{{Infobox football club
| clubname = St. Andrew's
| image =
| image_size =
| upright =
| alt =
| caption =
| fullname = St. Andrew's Athletic Club
| nickname =
| short name =
| founded = 1890
| dissolved = c. {{Start date and age|1894}}
| American =
| ground = Montes de Oca Ave. 1336,
Barracas, Buenos Aires
| capacity =
| coordinates =
| owntitle =
| owner =
| chrtitle =
| chairman =
| mgrtitle =
| manager =
| coach =
| league = Primera División
| season = 1894
| position = 5th
| website =
| kit_alt1 =
| pattern_la1 = _thin_navyhoops | pattern_b1 = _thin_navybluehoops | pattern_ra1 = _thin_navyhoops| pattern_sh1 = | pattern_so1 = | leftarm1 = | body1 = ffffff| rightarm1 = ffffff | shorts1 = ffffff| socks1 = 000000
| pattern_name1 =
| kit_alt2 = | pattern_la2 = | pattern_b2 = | pattern_ra2 = | pattern_sh2 = | pattern_so2 = | leftarm2 = | body2 =
| rightarm2 = | shorts2 =| socks2 = | pattern_name2 =
| current =
}}St. Andrew's Athletic Club was a football club established in Argentina by Scottish immigrants from the St. Andrew's Scots School, the oldest private school of Argentina.[1]

Playing its home games in Barracas, Buenos Aires, St. Andrew's was the first official football champion of Argentina, when in 1891 the team shared the title with Old Caledonians.[2]

History

The "St. Andrew's Athletic Club" was established in 1890[3] by the homonymous school.[4]. The football team was formed by railway workers.[2]

St. Andrew's A.C. is considered the first Argentine champion ever due to have won (along with Old Caledonians F.C.) the first Primera División championship organized in 1891 by the "Argentine Association Football League", a body founded that same year by fellow student Alec Lamont, although it was disestablished soon after the end of the season. The five teams registered to play the tournament were (apart from St. Andrew's), Old Caledonians, Buenos Aires & Rosario Railway, Belgrano Football Club (predecessor of current Belgrano Athletic Club) and Buenos Aires Football Club (not related to the first football club of Argentina founded in 1867). Hurlingham also registered but did not play any match.[6] The club had its field in Montes de Oca Avenue, Barracas district of Buenos Aires.

The practice of football in Argentina was spread thanks to Lamont and Alexander Watson Hutton, who later established Alumni, the most successful team until its dissolution in 1911.[5]

The first championship started on 12 April and finished on 13 September 1891. At the end of the season, St. Andrew's and Old Caledonians, a team formed by employees of the Scottish company that built the main drainage of Buenos Aires,[4] shared the first position and the Association considered the title shared, but both teams had to play a new match only to award the medals.[6] Therefore, St. Andrew's and Old Caledonians played a new game, played on September 13, 1891 and won by St. Andrew's by 3–1.[7][8][3]

The team disputed only one more tournament in 1894, which was won by Lomas Athletic Club. St. Andrew's finished 5th over 6 teams, having lost 7 games of 10 played. After that season, St. Andrew's FC never played an official football championship again. It is believed that the club was dissolved soon after.

Notable players

  • Charles Douglas Moffatt: Scored all goals in the 3–1 over Old Caledonians at the 1891 playoff match.[9][10][7][11] He also won the first Segunda División championship held in 1899, playing for Banfield.
  • Alec Lamont: An employee of the Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway and also player of St. Andrew's, Lamont was the alma mater for the creation of the Argentine Association Football League, the first football association in the country.[12]

Honours

  • Primera División (1): 1891

Legacy

Being the first Argentine champion gave St. Andrew's fame and prestige. The first crest of Independiente (with the "IFC – Independiente Football Club" initials) was inspired on St. Andrew's.[13] In the 1990s, the original crest of the club was revived for the away jerseys, having been used as emblem since then.

In 2013, the Argentine Football Association listed on its website St. Andrew's as the first Argentine champion,[14] although the title was shared with Old Caledonians[7][15] and the Association did not organise that championship so the body was established in February 1893.[16]

See also

  • St. Andrew's Scots School
  • Club San Andrés

References

1. ^[https://www.clarin.com/deportes/futbol/anos-primer-torneo-legado-perdura_0_NyjprP81W.htmlv A 125 años del primer torneo: un legado que perdura] by Oscar Barnade, Clarín, 13 Apr 2016
2. ^[https://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/suplementos/libero/9-5542-2010-10-24.html El día que los ferroviarios se llevaron las medallas], Página/12, 18 Oct 2010
3. ^La primera fecha! by Jorge Gallego on CIHF, 16 Apr 2016
4. ^"Desempates en el fútbol argentino: 1891–2008", Centro para la Investigación de la Historia del Fútbol (CIHF), 20 January 2009
5. ^Alumni Athletic Club history at RSSSF
6. ^"El verdadero comienzo" by Oscar Barnade, Clarín, 2006
7. ^Argentina 1891 by Osvaldo Gorgazzi on RSSSF
8. ^"Un siglo de fútbol argentino", Clarín, 12 April 1991
9. ^"Los deportistas más destacados del Flores", CEHR
10. ^Historia del Fútbol Amateur en la Argentina, by Jorge Iwanczuk. Published by Autores Editores (1992) - {{ISBN|9504343848}}
11. ^"Desempates en el fútbol argentino: 1891–2008" by Ricardo Gorosito of CIHF
12. ^[https://www.clarin.com/deportes/futbol/Hace-futbol-primer-torneo-local_0_ryRB30XpwQl.html "Hace 120 años, el fútbol tenía su primer torneo local"] by Oscar Barnade, Clarín, 12 Apr 2011
13. ^[https://www.diariopopular.com.ar/deportes/la-historia-la-tienda-que-setransformo-fabrica-cracks-n55154 LA HISTORIA DE LA TIENDA QUE SE TRANSFORMO EN FABRICA DE CRACKS], Diario Popular, 9 Dec 2010
14. ^Campeones de Primera División at Argentine Football Association website
15. ^38 Campeones del Fútbol Argentino 1891-2013 by Diego Estévez – Ediciones Continente – ISBN 9789507543692
16. ^Historia on Argentine Football Association website
{{commons category|St Andrews Scots School}}{{Argentine Primera División former clubs}}

5 : Defunct football clubs in Buenos Aires|Football clubs disaffiliated from the Argentine Football Association|Scottish Argentine|Association football clubs established in 1890|Association football clubs established in 1894

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/26 2:16:46