26.05.2010 11:09
Centenary of first Spanish Championship
Manel Tomàs
On Wednesday 26th May it’s exactly 100 years since Barca won its very first Spanish championship, beating Español de Madrid 3-2 in the final.
It was a brilliant end to an exceptional season but it could all have been so different.
Just a year or so earlier, the Club had been saved from extinction when Joan Gamper took over
as Club president for the first time. By May 1910 the Club had accumulated more than 400 members
– a respectable figure at that time - and had a loyal following of several thousand fans.
Barca’s first treble
In
footballing terms it was a great season and Barca won three official titles – Barca’s
first ever treble! In the Catalan Championship, Barca won all 8 matches in the first round, scoring
46 goals and conceding a miserly 3. This show of strength frightened the opposition so much that
the rest of the teams withdrew from the second round – something that would seem strange
today but was not unknown at the time.
In the Copa de los Pirineos Orientales – the first international tournament the Club
had ever taken part in, with teams from Catalonia, the Basque Country and France – Barca beat
Olympique Cettois in France and went on to defeat Toulouse 2-1 in San Sebastian.
The changing face of football
However, the most significant victory was in the Spanish Championship (now
known as the Spanish (or King’s) Cup). This was the first of 25 victories in the competition
making FC Barcelona the King of the Cups. It was Barca’s first Spain-wide title after coming
close in 1902 and 1909. On 24th May, Barca beat Deportivo Coruña 5-0 in Madrid and two days later
defeated Español de Madrid 3-2 in the final after trailing by 0-2. The winning goal came 5 minutes
before full time and Español missed a penalty when the score line stood at 1-2.
The winning team that day consisted of Solà, Bru, Amechazurra, Arseni Comamala, Peris, Grau,
Hornos, Pepe Rodríguez, Carlos Comamala, Percival Wallace and Carlos Wallace. Barca’s 3 goals
were scored by Carlos Wallace, Pepe Rodríguez and Carlos Comamala, who described his winning third
goal like this: “It was a counterattack and I headed a ball that had been pumped into the
box. Two of us plus my brother went for the shot and it was all so quick that it ended up with 6 or
7 players involved and the ball in the back of the net. Football then was played at a frenetic
almost incredible pace”.
An age of innocence?
The Barca players celebrated their win by sitting in a Madrid park, drinking wine and playing the
guitar. On 28th May they arrived back in Barcelona and were received by thousands of enthusiastic
fans, some of them who knew little or nothing about football but who were carried along by the
euphoria of the moment. Among the crowd were the governing boards of FC Barcelona, the Catalan FA,
a representative the Barcelona mayor and representatives from all the other Barcelona clubs. The
only person missing was the manager – at that time the players organized themselves and the
equivalent of the modern team manager was yet to emerge.
A few days later, on 10th July, the board, led by Club president Otto Gmelin, voted to
celebrate the treble success with a banquet for 200 people in the La Terrasse restaurant. The event
was full of memorable moments: Gamper awarded the players with the traditional champions caps while
team captain, Bruno presented Gamper with a silver desk writing set, telling him: “This is a
demonstration of the players’ feelings towards the person who is the soul of the Club”.
Then all the players received a medal from the Barcelona City Council and to bring down the curtain
on the party one of the players, Carles Comamala, entertained the guests with a rendition of some
of the popular songs of the period, accompanied on the piano by his sister. It was a different
world!