Tourney Name: | Prince of Asturias Cup |
Year: | 1923–24 |
Dates: | 11 November 1923 – 26 February 1924 |
Num Teams: | 8 |
Confederations: | 1 |
Count: | 1 |
Second Other: | Centro |
Matches: | 8 |
Goals: | 32 |
Top Scorer: | Juan Monjardín (5 goals) |
Prevseason: | 1922–23 |
Nextseason: | 1926 |
The 1923–24 Prince of Asturias Cup was the sixth tournament of the Prince of Asturias Cup, which is an inter-regional football competition contested by the regional selections of Spain.[1] [2]
The pre-favourites to win were the Catalan team because at that time they had great international figures such as the Spanish goalkeeper Ricardo Zamora or the Barcelona players Josep Samitier, the Filipino Paulino Alcántara and the Argentine Emili Sagi-Barba, and they proved the favouritism by prevailing in a dramatic final against a Castile/Madrid XI.[3] [4]
Eight regional federations participated in the 1923–24 Prince of Asturias Cup: Asturias, Biscay, Catalonia, Centro, Gipuzkoa, Galicia, South and Levante.[3]
The 1923–24 Prince of Asturias Cup was played in a knock-out cup format, with the 8 teams having to play each other in four quarter-finals, two semi-finals and one final.[3]
The quarter-final ties were the same as the previous year and so were their participants, now being played on opposite fields, except for the duel between Levante and South, which was played on 11 November at the Mestalla Stadium, and just like in the previous tournament, it was the Andalusians who prevailed, taking a 2–0 lead with goals from Brand and Kinké, but the Valencians were determined in taking revenge and fought back, and remarkably, they managed to level the scores at 2–2 with two goals from local hero Cubells, setting the scene for an epic comeback at Valencia, but the South team found a winner thanks to Spencer and advanced to the semi-finals again.[2] A week later at the San Mamés, Biscay and Asturias faced each other again, and unlike Levante, Biscay actually managed to take revenge, eliminating the champions with a 4–2 win, with goals from Carmelo, Laca and Travieso (twice), while Zabala showed why he had been the top goal scorer of the 1922–23 edition with a consolation goal for Asturias. On 25 November, the remaining two quarterfinals were held with Catalonia beating Gipuzkoa again, but this time the match was dominated by the Basques and also by the controversial work of refereeing, with Olivella and Pellicer scoring the local goals at the Les Corts while Gipuzkoa scored a consolation goal in the second-half through former Real Madrid player, René Petit. At the same time, the Centro Team took revenge on Galicia thanks to a lonely goal from De Miguel, in a totally flooded Madrid Stadium and under infernal weather.[2]
The semifinal matches were played on 27 January 1924. Centro and Andalucía met at the El Metropolitano, with the Castilian team triumphing 2–1, thanks to a first half brace from Monjardín. And at Les Corts, Biscay failed to avenge their "Basque cousins" as they lost to Catalonia due to an early goal from Barcelona player Cristóbal Martí. The final was held on 24 February 1924 at the San Mamés and ended in a dramatic 4–4 draw, courtesy of a last-minute equalizer from Catalonia's Emili Sagi-Barba when there were only two minutes left for the end of extra-time. In the replay two days later, Catalonia beat Centro 3–2 with goals from Carulla, Samitier and Piera.[5] Monjardín scored Centro's two consolation goals and because of it, he was crowned the top goal scorer of the tournament with 5 goals, two in the semi-finals and three in the finals.[2]
Note: In some sources Montes is listed as the goalscorer of Valencia's second goal.[6] ----Note: In some sources Sesúmaga is listed as the goalscorer of Biscay's opening goal[7] while others claim that Biscay's goals came in the form of two braces scored by Carmelo and Laca.[2] ----Note: The game was played under infernal weather.[2] ----Note: In some sources Olivella is listed as the goalscorer of both Catalan goals[8]
Note: In some sources Fuentes is listed as the goalscorer of South's consolation goal[9] ----
See main article: 1924 Prince of Asturias Cup Final.
Rank | Player | Team | Goals | Stage |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 | Semi-finals (2) and finals (3) | ||
2 | 3 | Semi-finals (1) and finals (2) | ||
3 | 2 | Quarter-finals (2) | ||
Finals (2) | ||||
Finals (2) | ||||
Quarter-finals (2) | ||||
The sixth edition of this competition did not achieve the success of the previous one and failed to serve as the basis for forming the Spanish Olympic national team for the 1924 Summer Olympics and after the Spanish failure in Paris, the Prince of Asturias Cup ended up being definitively abolished by the Spanish FA on 26 June 1924.