Badge Size: | 120 |
Founded: | [1] |
Headquarters: | Viamonte 1366, Buenos Aires, Argentina |
President: | Claudio Tapia[2] |
The Argentine Football Association (Spanish; Castilian: Asociación del Fútbol Argentino, pronounced as /es/; AFA) is the governing body of football in Argentina based in Buenos Aires. It organises the main divisions of Argentine league system (from Primera División to Torneo Regional Federal and Torneo Promocional Amateur), including domestic cups: Copa Argentina, Supercopa Argentina, Copa de la Liga Profesional, Trofeo de Campeones de la Liga Profesional and the Supercopa Internacional. The body also manages all the Argentina national teams, including the Senior, U-20, U-17, U-15, Olympic and women's squads. Secondly, it also organizes the women's, children, youth, futsal, and other local leagues.
The AFA also organised all the Primera División championships from 1893 to 2016–17. From the 2017–18 season the "Superliga Argentina", an entity which was administered independently and had its own statute, took over the Primera División championships.[3] Nevertheless, the Superliga was contractually linked with the main football body.[4] The last championship organised by the Superliga was 2019–20, shortly after the season ended the body was dissolved.[5]
The Argentine Association Football League (in English) was founded on 21 February 1893 by Alexander Watson Hutton, considered "the father" of Argentine football.[6] The Argentine Association is the oldest in South America and one of the oldest to be formed outside Europe. In 1906, Florencio Martínez de Hoz became the first Argentine-born president of the association.[7]
In 1912, the president of Gimnasia y Esgrima (BA), Ricardo Aldao, broke up with the association, establishing an own league, the "Federación Argentina de Football" which organized a parallel tournament. Some teams moved to the FAF were Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP), Independiente, Estudiantes (LP) and Atlanta. The league lasted until 1914 when rejoining Asociación Argentina de Football, forming a unique league for the 1915 season.
The second dissident league was formed in 1919 and named "Asociación Amateurs de Football", organizing its own championships (as FAF had done) until 1926 when it merged to the official association. The dissident league included some of the most prominent teams, such as River Plate, Racing, Independiente and San Lorenzo, with the exception of Boca Juniors that remained in the official "Asociación Argentina de Football".
When both leagues merged for the 1927 season, the association was again renamed to "Asociación Amateur Argentina de Football" until the professionalization of the sport in 1931 when it switched to "Liga Argentina de Football". The first round of the recently created professional championship was on 31 May 1931.[1] [8]
Despite football turning professional in Argentina, some clubs wanted to remain amateur, so they formed a new league, the "Asociación de Football Amateur y Profesionales", which organized a parallel tournament until 1934 when the dissident association merged with LAF on 3 November 1934 to form the "Asociación del Football Argentino" which has remained since.[1] [9]
In 2015, during the presidential elections to elect a new president for the body, there were two candidates to occupy Julio Humberto Grondona's chair, Marcelo Tinelli –who wanted a change in how things were going, like eliminating corruption between some clubs and the AFA– and Luis Segura, who had taken charge after Grondona's death, with the intention of extending his mandate.
With 75 presidents of different Argentine clubs voting, on election day something went wrong when the final count resulted in a draw of 38 to 38 (76 votes in total). The explanation given was that one of the electors put a double vote and that mistake was not reported. As a result, the executive committee decided to postpone the election.[10]
After some meetings to put an end to the conflict, both candidates agreed to have another election in June 2016.[11]
In June 2016, AFA president Luis Segura was charged with "aggravated administrative fraud".[12] Segura has been replaced on an interim basis by the AFA's executive secretary, Damián Dupiellet.[13]
In 2017, the association approved the creation of a new entity, named "Superliga Argentina de Fútbol", which would take over the organization of the Primera División championship.[14] The main European football leagues such as the English Premier League or the Spanish La Liga, that are organized by associations dedicated exclusively to those championships and run as separate entities from their respective National Associations, served as inspiration for the creation of the Superliga.[15]
The 2016–17 Primera División championship was the last tournament organized by the AFA. Starting with the 2017–18 season to 2019–20 season, the "Superliga Argentina", an entity administered by itself with its own statute, organised Primera División championships.[3] In March 2020, AFA dissolved the Superliga and took over the Primera División again.[5]
The body has been renamed several times since its establishment in 1893, in most of the cases translating the original English names to Spanish. The list of names is the following:[16]
The list of official competitions organized by the Argentine Football Association since its creation in 1893 are:[20] [21]
Current competitions | |||
width=350px | Name | width=250px | Organised |
---|---|---|---|
1891, 1893–2017, 2020–present | |||
1899–present | |||
1900–present | |||
1969–1970, 2011–present | |||
1986–present | |||
1986–present | |||
1991–present | |||
Primera División B (Futsal) (es) | 1998–present | ||
Torneo del Interior (Women´s) (es) | 2012–present | ||
2012–present | |||
2014–present | |||
Primera División C (Futsal) | 2014–present | ||
2016–present | |||
Primera División D (Futsal) | 2017–present | ||
2018–present | |||
Liga Nacional de Futsal Argentina (es) | 2018–present | ||
Primera División C (Women´s) | 2019–present | ||
2020–present | |||
2020–present | |||
Copa Federal de Fútbol Femenino (es) | 2021–present | ||
2022–present | |||
Torneo Promocional Amateur | 2024–present | ||
1905–1936 | |||
1913–1933 | |||
1913–1914 | |||
1913–1958 | |||
1920–1926 | |||
1927–1989 | |||
1939–1949 | |||
1943–1945 | |||
1944–1948 | |||
1950–2023 | |||
1958 | |||
Torneo Regional (es) | 1967–1985 | ||
Torneo del Interior (es) | 1986–1995 | ||
1993 | |||
1995–2014 | |||
1995–2014 | |||
2005–2014 | |||
Torneo Nacional de Futsal (es) | 2008–2017 | ||
2013–2014 | |||
Torneo Federal B | 2014–2017 | ||
Torneo Federal C (es) | 2015–2018 | ||
2016 |
The following table include competitions organized by dissident associations.[21]
Other competitions | |||||
width=250px | Name | width=130px | Time | width=270px | Association |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1920–1926 | Asociación Amateurs de Football | ||||
1920–1926 | |||||
1932–1933 | Liga Argentina de Football | ||||
1932–1933 | Liga Argentina de Football |
Official Association
Asociación del Fútbol Argentino | |||
width= px | Period | width=200px | President/s |
---|---|---|---|
1893–1896 | Alexander Watson Hutton | ||
1897–1898 | Alfredo P. Boyd | ||
1899 | Charles Wibberley | ||
1900–1905 | Frank Chevallier Boutell | ||
1906 | Florencio Martínez de Hoz | ||
1907–1908 | Emilio Hansen | ||
1909–1914 | Hugo Wilson | ||
1915–1917 | Adolfo Orma | ||
1918–1919 | Ricardo Aldao | ||
1919–1921 | Federico Luzio | ||
1921–1922 | Benjamin Toulouse | ||
1922–1924 | Aldo Cantoni | ||
1924–1926 | Virgilio Tedin Uriburu | ||
1926 | Natalio Botana | ||
1927–1929 | Adrián Beccar Varela | ||
1929–1932 | Juan Pignier | ||
1932 | Carlos Anessi | ||
1932–1933 | Silvio Serra | ||
1933–1934 | José Claisse | ||
1934 | Alejandro Russo | ||
1934 | Tiburcio Padilla | ||
1935 | Ernesto F. Malbec | ||
1936 | Ángel Molinari | ||
1937–1938 | Eduardo Sánchez Terrero | ||
1939–1940 | Adrián Escobar | ||
1941–1943 | Ramón Castillo | ||
1944 | Jacinto Armando | ||
1945 | Agustín Nicolás Matienzo | ||
1946 | Eduardo J. Avalos | ||
1947 | Pedro Canaveri | ||
1948–1949 | Oscar Nicolini | ||
1949 | Cayetano Giardulli | ||
1950–1953 | Valentín Suárez | ||
1954–1955 | Domingo Peluffo | ||
1955 | Cecilio Conditi | ||
1956 | Arturo Bullrich | ||
1957–1965 | Raúl Colombo | ||
1966 | Francisco Perette | ||
1967–1968 | Valentin Suárez | ||
1968 | Armando Ramos Ruiz | ||
1969 | Aldo J. Porri | ||
1969 | Oscar L. Ferrari | ||
1969–1971 | Juan Oneto Gaona | ||
1971–1973 | Raúl D'Onofrio | ||
1973 | Horacio Bruzzone | ||
1973–1974 | Baldomero Gigan | ||
1974 | Fernando Mitjans | ||
1974–1976 | David Bracuto | ||
1976–1979 | Alfredo Cantilo | ||
1979–2014 | Julio Grondona | ||
2014–2016 | Luis Segura | ||
2016–2017 | Armando Pérez | ||
2017–present | Claudio Tapia[22] |
Dissident Associations
Federación Argentina de Football | |||
width= px | Period | width=200px | President/s |
---|---|---|---|
1912–1914 | Ricardo Aldao |
Asociación Amateurs de Football | |||
width= px | Period | width=200px | President/s |
---|---|---|---|
1919 | Juan Mignaburu | ||
1920–1926 | Adrián Beccar Varela |
Liga Argentina de Football | |||
width= px | Period | width=200px | President/s |
---|---|---|---|
1931 | Julio Planisi | ||
1932–1934 | Eduardo Larrandart | ||
1934 | Tiburcio Padilla |