1925 South American Championship Explained

Tourney Name:South American Championship
Country:Argentina
Year:1925
Dates:29 November – 25 December
Num Teams:3
Confederations:1
Venues:2
Cities:1
Champion:Argentina
Count:2
Second:Brazil
Second-Flagvar:1889
Third:Paraguay
Third-Flagvar:1842
Matches:6
Goals:26
Top Scorer: Manuel Seoane
(6 goals)
Prevseason:1924
Nextseason:1926

The ninth South American Championship was held in Buenos Aires, Argentina from 29 November to 25 December 1925.

In 1925, the participating countries were Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay. Chile and Uruguay withdrew from the tournament, making this event the one with the fewest participating teams.[1] The tournament was rescheduled to be held in two rounds.

Argentina won its second continental title.[2]

Squads

For a complete list of participants squads see: 1925 South American Championship squads

Venues

Buenos Aires
Sportivo Barracas StadiumBoca Juniors Stadium
Capacity: 30,000Capacity: 25,000

Final round

Each team played two matches against each of the other teams. Two points were awarded for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a defeat.

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Goal scorers

6 goals

4 goals

2 goals

1 goal

Aftermath

Despite having won the tournament unbeaten, part of the Argentine media considered the team's performance as "poor", highlighting that Argentina was the winner only because of being stronger than the other two participants. Argentine magazine El Gráfico stated Argentina's virtues were decreasing as the competition went by, with such notable failures.

Centre forward Juan Carlos Irurieta was injured in the first match, being replaced by Manuel Seoane, who did not play as good as he used to be because of his change of position (from left insider to centre forward). The media criticised hardly the performances of Garasini, Alejandro de los Santos, Antonio Cerrotti and Juan Bianchi. On the other hand, Domingo Tarasconi, Seoane and Martín Sánchez were mentioned as the most remarkable players. In the case of Tarasconi, his efficient dribbling, passing style and accurate corner kicks were widely praised. Seoane's goalscoring prowess was also mentioned as one of the high points of Argentina, setting a record with six goals in four matches. Nevertheless, Seoane was also criticised for being out of shape due to his overweight.[3]

Another Argentine player harshly criticised was goalkeeper Américo Tesoriere:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Elsey, Brenda. Citizens and Sportsmen: Fútbol and Politics in Twentieth-Century Chile. 1 July 2011. University of Texas Press. 9780292744714. 4 March 2017. Google Books.
  2. https://www.rsssf.org/tables/25safull.html South American Championship 1925
  3. https://www.elgrafico.com.ar/articulo/1088/34004/1925-argentina-conquista-su-segundo-sudamericano 1925. Argentina conquista su segundo Sudamericano