34°34′24.70″S 58°27′47.43″W / 34.5735278°S 58.4631750°W
Full name | Belgrano Athletic Club | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Union | URBA | |||
Nickname(s) | Marrón | |||
Founded | 17 August 1896 | |||
Location | Belgrano, Buenos Aires, Argentina | |||
Ground(s) | Estadio Belgrano Athletic | |||
President | Marcelo Ruiz [1] | |||
Coach(es) | Francisco Gradin (h), Luis Gradin (h), Diego Gradin, Guillermo Tramezzani | |||
League(s) | Top 12 | |||
2022 | ? | |||
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Official website | ||||
belgranoathletic |
Belgrano Athletic Club is an Argentine amateur sports club from Belgrano, Buenos Aires. One of Argentina's oldest institutions still in existence, Belgrano was one of the four clubs that founded the Argentine Rugby Union in 1899.[2] The senior team currently competes at Top 12, the first division of the Unión de Rugby de Buenos Aires league system.
Belgrano Athletic was one of the most prominent teams during the first years of football in Argentina, having won three domestic league titles, one national cup and two international cups. Belgrano's arch-rival during those years was Alumni, also from Belgrano neighborhood.[3] Belgrano disaffiliated from the Argentine Association in late 1910s, focusing on rugby union and other sports. Football is no longer practised at the club.[4]
Belgrano's field hockey team currently takes part of Metropolitano championships organised by the Buenos Aires Hockey Association.
The club's facilities are divided between two locations: its main building (Sede Virrey del Pino) sited in Belgrano and another one located in Pilar (Anexo Pinazo).[5]
Apart from the sports mentioned above, several activities are practised at the club nowadays, such as bowls, contract bridge, cricket, squash, swimming, and tennis.[6]
History
editThe beginning: Football
editThe club was formed from the merger of Buenos Aires and Rosario Railway A.C. and St. Lawrence Club (a neighbour institution which had been formed shortime ago) on 17 August 1896.[7] The recently created "Belgrano Athletic Club" took over the land (and field) rented by the BA&RR on Virrey del Pino and Superí to set their headquarters.[8]
Belgrano AC participated in the Primera División from 1896 to 1916. The squad won three league titles in 1899, 1904 and 1908, and also won a number of other tournaments including domestic cup Copa de Honor and international competitions Tie Cup (in 1900) and Copa de Honor Cousenier (1907).
Belgrano Athletic played one of the earliest football rivalries against Belgrano neighbours Alumni, the most successful team of Argentine until its dissolution in 1911. Both teams were so strong that they won all of the thirteen league titles contested between 1899 and 1911 (that was the last year of Alumni football team competing in Argentine league, being officially dissolved in 1913).[9]
Belgrano AC would achieve a historic victory over River Plate, defeating the Millonario 10–1 in 1912. That was the worst defeat of River Plate in club's history.[10]
Despite being one of the most notable football teams during the first years of that sport in Argentina, Belgrano was relegated from the Argentine Primera División, along with Quilmes in 1916.[11]
Belgrano never returned to the first division, and the club later disaffiliated from the Argentine Association, focusing on the practise of other sports, mainly rugby union.[12][3]
Rugby union
editBelgrano Athletic rugby union team is one of the most successful teams in the Unión de Rugby de Buenos Aires, having won a total of 10 provincial titles.[13] In 1899, along with club Buenos Aires, Lomas, Flores[14] and Rosario AC, Belgrano became a founding member of the "River Plate Rugby Championship", the origin of today's Argentine Rugby Union.[2]
The first title obtained in rugby union was in 1907, playing 16 matches with 13 victories, 1 drew and only 2 lost. The team scored 233 points and only received 29 at the end of the tournament. That same year the club built the stadium's grandstands (commonly made of woods by the time) with a capacity of 600. In 1909 the Government of Argentina approved the statute (rules) of the club.[15] Its main rivals are Belgrano district's other big club, Alumni. In 2016, Belgrano won its 11° URBA championship after 48 years without league titles. Belgrano defeated former champion Hindú at the final, played in San Isidro.[16][17]
Field hockey
editBelgrano is founding member of the Argentine Hockey Association, established in 1908. The club has more than 400 registered female players that are part of 25 teams. Club teams play their home matches at the two artificial turf pitches in Sede Pinazo, while the Virrey del Pino Field is used only for training sesions.[18]
Team image
editUniform evolution
editIt is believed that the first Belgrano A.C. football squad wore black (or dark grey) and gold shirts, as they were depicted in early team photos. In 1907 the club adopted the Buenos Aires and Rosario Railway corporate colours (red, green and silver) as most of the club members were employees of that company. In 1919 Belgrano A.C. changed its colours again, adopting the brown (specifying "chocolate" tone according to the statute of that time) and gold of the FC Central Argentino's coaches.[19]
- Notes:
- ^ This uniform has been worn as the away kit by the rugby team, as a tribute to the football squad of the club
Venue
editBelgrano's home venue (popularly known as "Virrey del Pino" because of its location on Virrey del Pino and Superí streets in Belgrano) host rugby and cricket match. After some time playing on Pampa and Melián streets, the club acquired that land in 1902 to two of its members, Charles Dickinson (who was also a notable footballer of the club)[20] and Roberts.
The first grandstands were built with wood from surplus railway material. By 1910, the field had an official grandstand, with roof,[21] named "Donald Forester", which has remained up to present days.[22]
Honours
editCricket
edit- Primera División (45): 1902–03, 1905–06, 1906–07, 1907–08, 1908–09, 1910–11, 1911–12, 1914–15, 1918–19, 1923–24, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1931–32, 1932–33, 1953–54, 1954–55, 1955–56, 1958–59, 1961–62, 1965–66, 1967–68, 1968–69, 1969–70, 1970–71, 1973–74, 1974–75, 1980–81, 1981–82, 1983–84, 1984–85, 1988–89, 1989–90, 1991–92, 1997–98, 2001–02, 2005–06, 2010–11, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2019–20, 2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23 [23]
Football
editNational
edit- Primera División (3): 1899, 1904, 1908[24]
- Copa Honor MCBA (1): 1907
International
edit- Tie Cup (1): 1900
- Copa de Honor Cousenier (1): 1907
Rugby union
edit- Torneo de la URBA (11): 1907, 1910, 1914, 1921, 1936, 1940, 1963, 1966, 1967, 1968, 2016
Field hockey
edit- Women's
- Metropolitano Primera División (4): 1942, 1946, 1949, 1974
Notable athletes
edit- Charles Edgard Dickinson, former football captain that scored the first Argentina national team goal ever in an official match. It was against Uruguay on 20 July 1902. Argentina won 6–0.[25][26][27]
- Arturo Forrester, the first Argentine footballer to score against a British team. It was in the match v Southampton FC, when the English side toured on South America in 1904.[28][29]
- A.C. Addecott, former football captain.[30]
- Arnold Watson Hutton (1911–14),[31][32] forward, previously in Alumni,[33] also international with Argentina.
- Jeannette Campbell, silver medalist swimmer at the 1936 Olympics.[34][35]
- Lisandro Arbizu, rugby union footballer for Los Pumas.[36]
- Magdalena Aicega, field hockey captain of Las Leonas.[37]
- Rosario Luchetti, field hockey player of Las Leonas.[38][39]
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ Comisión directiva, retrieved 25 May 2019
- ^ a b "Hechos históricos de la Unión" at UAR website
- ^ a b Trece décadas (1891-2016). El otro Belgrano campeón by Oscar Barnade on Clarín, 26 Oct 2016
- ^ Historia Marrón: la última conquista de Belgrano en fútbol on BAC
- ^ Sedes on BAC website
- ^ Deportes – Belgrano AC official site Archived 18 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Clubes del barrio. Belgrano Athletic Club o BAC on Belgrano News
- ^ Historia on BAC
- ^ "Alumni: en el nombre del fútbol", Clarín, 2003-04-24
- ^ ""River Plate en la era amateur 1901–1930"". Archived from the original on 9 October 2016. Retrieved 29 February 2012.
- ^ "Asociacion Argentina de Football – 1916", RSSSF Archived 23 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ 1946. CINCUENTENARIO DEL BELGRANO ATHLETIC CLUB on El Gráfico (originally published in 1946)
- ^ Todos Los Campeones de La URBA (in Spanish)
- ^ Fundación del River Plate Rugby Union Championship on Atlético del Rosario website, 10 Apr 2019
- ^ "Belgrano y Alumni en sus comienzos"
- ^ "Belgrano rompió el maleficio: tras 48 años es campeón del torneo de la URBA al vencer a Hindú", La Nación, 15 Oct 2016
- ^ "Histórico: Belgrano Athletic venció a Hindú y vuelve a ser campeón tras 48 años", Minuto Uno, 15 Oct 2016
- ^ Hockey overview on BAC
- ^ "Hoy celebramos 115 años" – Belgrano AC official blog
- ^ Caras y Caretas, 31 Aug 1912
- ^ "Belgrano" on Viejos Estadios
- ^ Estadio de Belgrano Athletic on Estadios de Argentina
- ^ Primera División (campeones) on Cricket Argentina website
- ^ Campeones del Fútbol Argentino on AFA website, 13 Jul 2015
- ^ Colección 100 años de fútbol – Historia ilustrada del fútbol uruguayo, Franklin Morales
- ^ Historia Del Fútbol Amateur En La Argentina, Jorge Iwanczuk (1992)
- ^ Sócrates (15 September 2023). "Carlos Edgard Dickinson". Por la Pelota. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
- ^ El fútbol curioso, Clarín, 26 Dec 1998
- ^ Se fue Arturo Forrester, El Gráfico, 1959
- ^ "Belgrano y Alumni en sus comienzos"
- ^ Belgrano Athletic 1 – Boca Juniors 1 (match chronicle) on Historia de Boca
- ^ Argentina - Five or More Goals Scored by One Player in a Match on the RSSSF
- ^ Alumni on Scots Football Worldwide
- ^ De la pileta del Belgrano Athletic a la Alemania nazi on La Nación, 2 Aug 2016
- ^ LAS MEJORES: JEANETTE CAMPBELL by Martín Estévez on El Gráfico, 18 Nov 2014
- ^ Lisandro Arbizu: “Fue muy fuerte ser capitán de Los Pumas” on Córdoba XV, 4 Aug 2020
- ^ Magui Aicega: “Le di todo al hockey, y el hockey me dio todo”, interview to Aicega on BAC
- ^ La verdad de Charo Lucchetti on La Capital (Rosario)
- ^ Perfil de Rosario Lucchetti on ESPN.ar
External links
edit- Official website
- Fans blog (outdated)