José María Acha | |
Fullname: | José María Acha Larrea |
Birth Date: | 4 September 1889 |
Birth Place: | Las Arenas, Getxo, Spain |
Death Place: | Castillejo de Mesleón, Spain |
Position: | Goalkeeper |
Years1: | 1901–1903 |
José María Acha Larrea (4 September 1889 – 14 May 1929) was a Spanish footballer who played as a goalkeeper for RCD Espanyol between 1901 and 1903.[1] [2] He went to became a lawyer and a sports leader, playing a crucial role in the creation of the Spanish league.[3]
José María Acha was born on 4 September 1889 in Getxo, but it was in Barcelona where he began to play football at Club Español in late 1901, at the age of 12.[2] After a first season with many changes in goal, Acha arrived at the club to provide stability under the posts because despite his tender age and small stature, he was quick and agile.[2] Together with Ángel Ponz, Enrique Montells, Joaquim Carril, and club founder Ángel Rodríguez, he helped Espanyol win its very first title, the 1902–03 Copa Macaya, playing in a total of five matches.[2]
On 17 May 1903, Acha was a substitute to Samuel Morris and Vicente Reig in a friendly match at Muntaner between teams made up of the best players in Barcelona.[4]
At some point in the early 1920s, Acha became the vice president of Arenas Club de Getxo and the one who ran the reins of the club.[3] With his personal wealth he built the Ibaiondo field, which Arenas began using in September 1925, becoming the club’s headquarters of Arenas in its time of splendor.[3]
As the president of the Vizcaya Football Federation in 1925, Acha was one of the architects of the implementation of professionalism in Spanish football, which occurred in 1926.[3] Coincidentally, in 1927, the then Arenas Club president Luis Lazúrtegui was replaced by José Gandarias, who like Acha also had played at the age of 12, doing so for Real Madrid CF, although in a friendly match.[5]
Acha was also one of the basic pillars for the creation of the Torneo de Campeones, a competition to which he provided an organizational scheme similar to that used in England and that served as the forerunner for La Liga, founded in the following year, in 1929, with Arenas Club being one of its founders.[3] [5] [6] For his important role in the founding of the first League championship, he was recognized with a bronze bust given by the rest of the clubs and that today rests in the club offices.[7] [8]
Acha died in a car accident in Castillejo de Mesleón while traveling from Bilbao to Madrid on 14 May 1929, at the age of 40.[3] He died to attend Spain's first match against England, which took place the following day.[3]
RCD Espanyol