Catalan football championship explained

Catalan Football Championship
Founded:1901
Folded:1940
Country:Spain
Champions:RCD Espanyol (9th title)
Most Champs:Barcelona (23 titles)

The Catalan football championship (Campionat de Catalunya) was a football competition in Catalonia and the first football league in Spain before La Liga was established in 1929.

In December 1900, Alfons Macaya, the president of Hispania AC, offered a trophy (the Copa Macaya) to be contested by several football teams from Spain. The league was played between 1901 and 1940 and was cancelled in Francoist Spain after the Spanish Civil War.

History

Early history

See main article: Copa Macaya. In 1901, Hispania AC became the first Catalan champions after winning the inaugural Copa Macaya, the first football championship played on the Iberian Peninsula.[1] The following season, 1901–02, saw FC Barcelona win the title, the club's very first piece of silverware.[2] During the 1902–03 season, two rival competitions were organized with RCD Espanyol winning the Copa Macaya after beating Hispania 3–1 in a title-deciding play-off (as they had finished level on points), while FC Barcelona won the Copa Barcelona. After 1903 the championship was organized by the Football Associació de Catalunya and it became known as the Campionat de Catalunya, and they recognized the Macaya Cup as the first edition of the Campionat de Catalunya. The stand-out players of this Copa Macaya period were Joan Gamper, who was proclaimed the top scorer of the first two tournaments with 31 and 19 goals respectively, and Gustavo Green, who is considered to have been the first great star of Catalan football, winning all the three editions of the Copa Macaya with three different clubs (Hispania, Barça and Español).[3] The winners of the Campionat de Catalunya also began to represent Catalonia in the Copa del Rey. By 1917 the league had turned professional and included a second division.

First dynasty

The first edition of the Campionat de Catalunya in 1903–04 was won by Club Espanyol (now RCD Espanyol), which at the time had Gustavo Green, and also with Ángel Ponz and José Maria Soler. The first dynasty of the Catalan championship came shortly after, when X Sporting Club won it three times in a row between 1906 and 1908. This historic X side had great national figures of that time such as Pedro Gibert, Emilio Sampere, the Massana brothers (Santiago and Alfredo), José Irízar and José Berdié, with the latter four going on to play for Barcelona.[4] On the other hand, FC Internacional achieved three successive runner-up finishes between 1904 and 1906, and interestingly, they lost the title to a different opponent each time: Club Español, FC Barcelona and X Sporting Club respectively. This FCI team had the likes of Paco Bru, Charles Wallace and Enrique Peris, all of which went on to join Barcelona. Naturally, all of these great players joining Barcelona meant a big leap in quality for the club, and as a result, at the turn of the first decade, Barcelona was enjoying its first great team. As well as the aforementioned players, Barça also had the likes of Amechazurra, Romà Forns, Pepe Rodríguez and Carles Comamala, and this team managed to repeat X's feat of winning three championships in a row, doing it so between 1909 and 1911. Their streak came to an end when RCD Espanyol won their second championship in 1911–12, largely thanks to the goalscoring feats of their foreign players such as Frank Allack, captain Victor Gibson and the Wallace brothers, Charles and Percy.[5]

Barcelona dominance

In the 1910s, FC Espanya, propelled by their infamous back line of Hermenegild Casellas and Eduardo Reguera, began to disrupt the monopoly of Barcelona and RCD Espanyol, winning the championship three times in 1912–13, 1913–14 and 1916–17. However, RCD Espanyol managed to form an even better defense whose solo architect was Ricardo Zamora, thus claiming the title in 1914–15 and 1917–18, winning the former after beating Barça 4–0 in the title-deciding play-off, with braces from Juan López and José Maria Tormo. The Catalan Championship then witnessed their third dynasty, which was with no doubt the greatest. At the turn of the second decade, Barça was enjoying its second golden age, which was the legendary team coached by Jack Greenwell, that also included Paulino Alcántara, Sagibarba, Félix Sesúmaga, Ricardo Zamora and Josep Samitier, and this side won 9 out of 10 titles between 1919 and 1928. The only team that managed to break their supremacy was CE Europa in the 1922–23 season, largely thanks to Estebán Pelaó, Manuel Cros and Antonio Alcázar, with the latter netting the only goal of the title-deciding play-off (they had finished tied on points) that gave CE Europa the trophy.[6]

Decline and Collapse

In 1928 three Catalan clubs: FC Barcelona, RCD Espanyol and CE Europa, became founding members of La Liga and the Campionat de Catalunya gradually began to decline in importance during the Spanish Civil War. In the 1930s, the championship was won by either Barcelona or Espanyol, except in 1933-34 when CE Sabadell FC, surprised everyone by winning it against all odds. The last competition was held on 1939-40, and the Campionat de Catalunya ended in the same way it began, with an RCD Espanyol triumph.

Historical classification

The historical classification of Catalonia Football Championship is a classification that compiles all the matches, results, points and goals of all the teams that participated in the Championship of Catalonia football since its inception in 1900 until its disappearance in 1940.[1] The classification includes the results of the Copa Macaya, the Barcelona Cup and the championship of the Football Association of Catalonia, also considered official. The 1902–03 and 1912–13 seasons were contested with two clubs claiming championships. This classification has been done with the data collected through the archives of Los Deportes, Mundo Deportivo, La Vanguardia. Classification may contain errors due to the inaccuracy of the data published in those years,

1 39 644 402 301 42 59 1356 386 970 23 7 7 1900–1901 1939–1940 1
2 37 513 398 231 51 117 922 520 402 9 11 9 1900–1901 1939–1940 1
3 24 241 272 98 45 129 442 530 -88 1 3 3 1914–1915 1939–1940 1
4 18 203 190 89 25 76 323 295 28 3 4 3 1907–1908 1927–1928 1
5 14 195 164 81 33 50 362 260 102 1 6 1 1919–1920 1937–1938 1
6 16 122 175 50 22 103 255 431 -176 0 1 2 1912–1913 (2) 1939–1940 2
7 14 121 136 51 19 66 212 235 -23 0 3 3 1902–1903 (1) 1921–1922 2
8 9 91 110 36 19 55 182 224 -42 0 1 1 1922–1923 1932–1933 2
9 10 85 95 36 13 46 167 191 -24 0 0 3 1901–1902 1916–1917 3
10 8 85 96 38 10 48 174 219 -45 0 1 2 1929–1930 1937–1938 2
11 14 80 119 35 10 74 179 385 -206 0 1 2 1901–1902 1914–1915 2
12 6 61 68 25 12 31 106 107 -1 0 1 1 1933–1934 1939–1940 2
13 4 52 34 25 2 7 109 30 79 1 2 1 1900–1901 1902–1903 (2) 1
14 5 50 66 20 10 36 98 165 -67 0 0 0 1924–1925 1928–1929 4
15 3 33 42 12 9 21 54 100 -46 0 0 1 1931–1932 1933–1934 3
16 4 32 48 13 6 29 72 128 -56 0 0 0 1933–1934 1939–1940 4
17 5 31 40 15 1 24 39 65 -26 3 0 0 1903–1904 1907–1908 1
18 5 28 66 10 8 48 83 217 -134 0 0 0 1923–1924 1932–1933 6
19 4 27 42 12 3 27 38 93 -55 0 0 0 1915–1916 1918–1919 4
20 6 26 50 10 6 34 60 107 -47 0 1 0 1912–1913 (2) 1922–1923 2
21 2 17 30 8 1 21 46 98 -52 0 0 0 1902–1903 (2) 1903–1904 5
22 1 11 16 5 1 10 22 57 -35 0 0 0 1903–1904 1903–1904 6
23 1 10 14 4 2 8 25 24 1 0 0 0 1902–1903 (2) 1902–1903 (2) 5
24 1 8 16 3 2 11 12 95 -83 0 0 0 1903–1904 1903–1904 7
25 1 7 10 3 1 6 9 23 -14 0 0 0 1912–1913 (1) 1912–1913 (1) 4
26 1 7 14 3 1 10 10 25 -15 0 0 0 1902–1903 (2) 1902–1903 (2) 7
27 1 6 8 3 0 5 12 13 -1 0 0 0 1914–1915 1914–1915 7
28 1 6 10 3 0 7 11 25 -14 0 0 0 1912–1913 (1) 1912–1913 (1) 5
29 1 5 4 2 1 1 8 5 3 0 0 1 1912–1913 (2) 1912–1913 (2) 3
30 3 5 27 2 1 24 17 100 -83 0 0 0 1911–1912 1913–1914 5
31 1 4 4 2 0 2 9 8 1 0 0 0 1912–1913 (2) 1912–1913 (2) 4
32 1 4 12 2 0 10 1 30 -29 0 0 0 1909–1910 1909–1910 6
33 1 4 8 2 0 6 0 30 -30 0 0 0 1900–1901 1900–1901 4
34 1 2 12 1 0 11 5 40 -35 0 0 0 1909–1910 1909–1910 7
35 1 2 8 1 0 7 0 54 -54 0 0 0 1900–1901 1900–1901 5
36 1 2 16 0 2 14 4 70 -66 0 0 0 1903–1904 1903–1904 9
Active Club
Club deceased

Champions

Source[1]

SeasonChampions (titles)Runners-upThird placeTop scorer(s)
width=220Player(s) (Country)Goals
1900–01Hispania AC (1)FC BarcelonaJoan Gamper (Barcelona)
1901–02FC Barcelona (1)Hispania ACClub EspanyolJoan Gamper (Barcelona)
1902–03Club Espanyol (1)Hispania ACFC InternacionalGustavo Green (Espanyol)
1902–03FC Barcelona (2)Club EspanyolHispania ACJoan Gamper (Barcelona)
1903–04Club Espanyol (2)FC InternacionalCatalà FCCarles Comamala (Barcelona)
1904–05FC Barcelona (3)FC InternacionalClub EspanyolRomà Forns (Barcelona)
1905–06X Sporting Club (1)FC InternacionalFC BarcelonaRomà Forns (Barcelona)
José Quirante (Barcelona)
Juan Bargunyó (Barcelona)
Virgilio Da Costa (Barcelona)
Guillermo Galiardo (X Sporting Club)
1906–07X Sporting Club (2)FC BarcelonaCatalà FCEmilio Sampere (X Sporting Club)
1907–08X Sporting Club (3)FC BarcelonaFC EspanyaCarles Comamala (Barcelona)
Charles Wallace (Barcelona)
1908–09FC Barcelona (4)FC EspanyaCD EspanyolCharles Wallace (Barcelona)
1909–10FC Barcelona (5)CD EspanyolUniversitary SCCarles Comamala (Barcelona)
1910–11FC Barcelona (6)Català SCUniversitary SCGeorge Pattullo (Barcelona)
1911–12Club Espanyol (3)FC EspanyaFC BarcelonaPepe Rodríguez (Barcelona)
1912–13FC Espanya (1)Club EspanyolUniversitary SCKinké (Universitary)
1912–13FC Barcelona (7)FC Barcelona CAvenç FCApolinario Rodríguez
1913–14FC Espanya (2)FC InternacionalRCD EspanyolGabriel Bau (FC Espanya)
1914–15RCD Espanyol (4)FC BarcelonaFC EspanyaJosé Maria Tormo (Espanyol)
1915–16FC Barcelona (8)FC EspanyaSabadell FCPaulino Alcántara (Barcelona)
1916–17FC Espanya (3)RCD EspanyolSabadell FCAgustín Cruella Tena (FC Espanya)
1917–18RCD Espanyol (5)FC EspanyaFC BarcelonaClemente Gràcia (Espanyol)
1918–19FC Barcelona (9)RCD EspanyolFC EspanyaPaulino Alcántara (Barcelona)
Vicente Martínez (Barcelona)
1919–20FC Barcelona (10)Sabadell FCRCD EspanyolPaulino Alcántara (Barcelona)
1920–21FC Barcelona (11)CE EuropaRCD EspanyolEnrique Alegre (Europa)
1921–22FC Barcelona (12)CE EuropaAvençPaulino Alcántara (Barcelona)
Clemente Gràcia (Barcelona)
1922–23CE Europa (1)FC BarcelonaSabadell FCPaulino Alcántara (Barcelona)
Manuel Cros (Europa)
José Julià (Europa)
1923–24FC Barcelona (13)CE EuropaRCD EspanyolJosep Samitier (Barcelona)
1924–25FC Barcelona (14)RCD EspanyolUE SantsJosep Samitier (Barcelona)
José Luis Zabala (Espanyol)
1925–26FC Barcelona (15)UE SantsSabadell FCJosep Sastre (FC Gràcia)
1926–27FC Barcelona (16)CE EuropaRCD EspanyolJosep Samitier (Barcelona)
1927–28FC Barcelona (17)CE EuropaRCD EspanyolManuel Cros (Europa)
1928–29RCD Espanyol (6)CE EuropaFC BarcelonaManuel Cros (Europa)
1929–30FC Barcelona (18)RCD EspanyolCE EuropaJosep Forgas (CF Badalona)
1930–31FC Barcelona (19)Sabadell FCCF BadalonaEdelmiro Lorenzo (Espanyol)
1931–32FC Barcelona (20)RCD EspanyolCE JúpiterJosep Samitier (Barcelona)
1932–33RCD Espanyol (7)FC PalafrugellJosé Garreta (Espanyol)
1933–34Sabadell FC (1)RCD EspanyolMiguel Gual (Sabadell)
1934–35FC Barcelona (21)Sabadell FCCE JúpiterJosep Escolà (Barcelona)
1935–36FC Barcelona (22)CF BadalonaSabadell FCJosep Escolà (Barcelona)
1936–37RCD Espanyol (8)FC BarcelonaGirona FCMiguel Gual (Barcelona)
1937–38FC Barcelona (23)CE JúpiterCF BadalonaJaime Rigual (Barcelona)
1939–40RCD Espanyol (9)Girona FCFC BarcelonaMartínez Català (Espanyol)

Titles by teams

TeamWinnersRunner-upWinning Years
FC Barcelona1901–02, 1902–03, 1904–05, 1908–09, 1909–10, 1910–11, 1912–13, 1915–16, 1918–19, 1919–20, 1920–21, 1921–22, 1923–24, 1924–25, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1927–28, 1929–30, 1930–31, 1931–32, 1933–34, 1935–36, 1937–38
Club Espanyol / RCD Espanyol / CD Espanyol1902–03, 1903–04, 1911–12, 1914–15, 1917–18, 1928–29, 1932–33, 1936–37, 1939–40
FC Espanya de Barcelona1912–13, 1913–14, 1916–17
X Sporting Club1905–06, 1906–07, 1907–08
CE Europa1922–23
CE Sabadell FC1933–34
Hispania AC1900–01

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Spain - Final Tables Catalonia . 20 May 2020 . . 26 July 2022 .
  2. Web site: Barça Rewind: The first ever title . www.fcbarcelona.com . 23 March 2020 . 23 July 2022 .
  3. Web site: La identidad de Gustavo Green desvelada después de 120 años . Gustavo Green's identity revealed after 120 years . es . . 17 January 2017 . 20 August 2022 .
  4. Web site: Squad of X 1906-07 Campionat de Catalunya . www.bdfutbol.com . 20 August 2022 .
  5. Web site: Squad of Español 1911-12 Campionat de Catalunya . www.bdfutbol.com . 20 August 2022 .
  6. Web site: Manuel Cros, the killer of Europe . www.live-feeds.com . 24 June 2022 . 26 July 2022.