Asociación Amateurs de Football































Asociación Amateurs de Football
Argentina
Founded 22 September 1919[1]
Folded 28 November 1926; 91 years ago (1926-11-28)[1]
Headquarters Buenos Aires
FIFA affiliation No
President Juan Mignaburu (1919)
A. Beccar Varela (1920–26)

The Asociación Amateurs de Football (AAmF) was a dissident football association of Argentina that organised its own championships from 1919 to 1926. The Argentine Football Association did not recognised those championships until both associations were merged in 1926. Currently all the championships organised by the AAmF are considered officials by the AFA.[2]




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Founding members


  • 3 Champions


    • 3.1 Primera División


    • 3.2 División Intermedia


    • 3.3 Segunda División


    • 3.4 Tercera División


    • 3.5 Copa de Competencia




  • 4 See also


  • 5 Notes


  • 6 References





History




Juan Mignaburu, first president of the AAF.




Adrián Beccar Varela presided from 1920 to 1926.


On 16 March 1919, the Primera División season started with 19 teams taking part of the competence.[3] With the 1919 championship still disputing, the conflict began. The Argentine Association rejected representatives from the clubs Estudiantil Porteño, Independiente, Platense, Racing, River Plate and Tigre. As those teams maintained their position, the Association disaffiliated them temporarily.[4]


Meanwhile, other seven clubs, Atlanta, Defensores de Belgrano, Estudiantes (BA), Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP), San Isidro, San Lorenzo and Sportivo Barracas expressed their solidarity with the suspended clubs therefore the association directly expelled them from the body.[4] With only 10 fixtures played, the championship was suspended and all the matches played until then were annulled.[3] The breakage was related with (among other reasons) the brown amateurism, an undercover way of professionalism where the clubs informally paid salaries and special prizes to their players.[5]


The 13 clubs that had been disaffiliated or expelled from the AFA joined forces to form a new association with the purpose to organise their own championships. The "Asociación Amateurs de Football" was officially established on 22 September 1919, with an assembly held in the Jockey Club on 6 December.[4]


On the other hand, Boca Juniors, Estudiantes (LP), Eureka, Huracán, Porteño and Sportivo Almagro remained affiliated to the official body. On 28 September, both competitions started, the official (AFA) with only those six teams and the dissident (AAmF) with 14 teams (including the addition of Vélez Sarsfield).[3]


Because of the conflict that made the official championship take longer than expected, The AFA tournament was ended up. As a result, Boca Juniors (that was placed 1st at the moment of the decision) was crowned champion with still 14 matches to be played.[6] The AAmF championship was won by Racing Club.[7]


After seven years of championships held that including the trespassing of clubs from a body to another, on 19 November 1926, President of Argentina Marcelo T. de Alvear called both associations to a reconciliation meeting that laid the foundations for a reunification.[8] As a condition to reach an agreement, the AAmF required that all the teams that had played the 1926 AAmF championship (26 in total) remained in Primera División. It was conceded and both associations finally merged on 28 December 1926.[1]


The AAmF also organised its own national cup, the Copa de Competencia, with four editions between 1920 and 1926.



Founding members




  • Atlanta

  • Defensores de Belgrano

  • Estudiantes (BA)

  • Excursionistas

  • Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP)

  • Independiente

  • Platense

  • Racing

  • River Plate

  • Sportivo Barracas

  • San Isidro

  • San Lorenzo

  • Tigre




Champions




Primera División







































Season
Champion
1919
Racing
1920
River Plate
1921
Racing
1922
Independiente
1923
San Lorenzo
1924
San Lorenzo
1925
Racing
1926
Independiente


División Intermedia







































Season
Champion
1919
Barracas Central
1920 General Mitre
1921
Palermo
1922 Argentino del Sud
1923
Liberal Argentino
1924
Excursionistas
1925
Talleres (BA)
1926
Honor y Patria




Segunda División







































Season
Champion
1919
Sportivo Barracas III [a]
1920 Oriente del Sud
1921 Villa Crespo
1922 Nacional (Adrogué)
1923
Acassuso
1924
Racing Club III [a]
1925 Perla del Plata
1926
Racing Club III [a]


Tercera División







































Season
Champion
1919
Racing Club III [a]
1920
Estudiantil Porteño
1921
Almagro
1922
Vélez Sarsfield
1923
Platense
1924
Platense
1925
Sportivo Alsina
1926
Platense



Copa de Competencia























Season
Champion
1920
Rosario Central
1924
Independiente
1925
Independiente
1926
Independiente


See also



  • Copa de Competencia (Asociación Amateurs)

  • Copa Presidente de la Nación

  • Federación Argentina de Football

  • Liga Argentina de Football

  • Argentine División Intermedia

  • Argentine Primera División

  • Football in Argentina



Notes





  1. ^ abcd Reserve teams.




References





  1. ^ abc Historia on AFA website


  2. ^ Campeones de Primera División, AFA website


  3. ^ abc Argentina 1919 on RSSSF.com


  4. ^ abc "Memoria y Balance Asociación Amateurs de Football 1919–1921" – AFA website


  5. ^ "¿A qué hora jugamos?" by Luis M. Leguizamón, Static editions


  6. ^ Argentina: 1ra. División Asociación Argentina 1919, 19 December 2008


  7. ^ Argentina: 1ra. División Asociacion Amateurs 1919 by José Carluccio, 20 December 2008


  8. ^ "Un poco de historia" Archived 2 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine.











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