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Tie Cup

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Football tournament
Tie Cup Competition
The trophy awarded to champions
Organising body AFA
 AUF
Founded1900
Abolished1919; 105 years ago (1919)
RegionBuenos Aires city
Greater Buenos Aires
Related competitionsCopa Competencia (Arg)
Copa Competencia (Uru)
Last championsArgentina Boca Juniors (1919)
Most successful club(s)Argentina Alumni
(6 titles)

The Tie Cup Competition (also known as Copa de Competencia Chevallier Boutell) was an international football tournament played between representatives of the Argentina and Uruguay Associations. It was one of the earliest international football tournaments played between members of different national football associations, played on an annual basis until 1919.

History

Francis Chevallier-Boutell donated the trophy

The competition was inspired by English FA Cup, with its trophy donated by Francis Hepburn Chevallier-Boutell, president of the Argentine Football Association (AFA), in 1900.

Initially, the competition included a total of four teams, with two from AFA, one from AUF and one from Liga Rosarina. That format remained until 1907, when the cup was contested between one representative each from Argentina and Uruguay. The participants were determined via qualification cups (Argentine Copa de Competencia Jockey Club and Uruguayan Copa de Competencia).

The Tie Cup was played only by First Division teams until 1918 when the Argentine Association stated that clubs from División Intermedia (the second division by then) were added to the competition.

List of champions

Finals

The following list includes all the editions of the Tie Cup Competition:

Keys
Ed. Year Champion Score Runner-up Venue City
1 1900 Argentina Belgrano AC (1) 2–0 Argentina Rosario AC Flores Old Ground Buenos Aires
2 1901 Argentina Alumni (1) 2–1 (a.e.t.) Argentina Rosario AC Lomas A.C. Lomas de Zamora
3 1902 Argentina Rosario AC (1) 1–1 (a.e.t.) Argentina Alumni Sociedad Sportiva Buenos Aires
1–1 (a.e.t.) Sociedad Sportiva Buenos Aires
2–1 (a.e.t.) Sociedad Sportiva Buenos Aires
4 1903 Argentina Alumni (2) 3–2 (a.e.t.) Argentina Rosario AC Sociedad Sportiva Buenos Aires
5 1904 Argentina Rosario AC (2) 3–2 (a.e.t.) Uruguay CURCC Flores Old Ground Buenos Aires
6 1905 Argentina Rosario AC (3) 4–3 (a.e.t.) Uruguay CURCC Sociedad Sportiva Buenos Aires
7 1906 Argentina Alumni (3) 10–1 Argentina Belgrano AC Quilmes A.C. Quilmes
8 1907 Argentina Alumni (4) 3–1 Uruguay CURCC Ferro C. Oeste Buenos Aires
9 1908 Argentina Alumni (5) 4–0 Uruguay Wanderers Belgrano A.C. Buenos Aires
10 1909 Argentina Alumni (6) 4–0 Uruguay CURCC GEBA Buenos Aires
11 1910 (No champion crowned) GEBA Buenos Aires
12 1911 Uruguay Wanderers (1) 2–0 Argentina San Isidro GEBA Buenos Aires
13 1912 Argentina San Isidro (1) 1–0 Uruguay Nacional Racing Club Avellaneda
14 1913 Uruguay Nacional (1) 1–0 Argentina San Isidro Racing Club Avellaneda
15 1914 Argentina River Plate (1) 1–0 Uruguay Bristol Ferro C. Oeste Buenos Aires
16 1915 Uruguay Nacional (2) 2–0 Argentina Porteño GEBA Buenos Aires
17 1916 Uruguay Peñarol (1) 3–0 Argentina Rosario Central Racing Club Avellaneda
18 1917 Uruguay Wanderers (2) 4–0 Argentina Independiente Racing Club Avellaneda
19 1918 Uruguay Wanderers (3) 2–1 Argentina Porteño GEBA Buenos Aires
20 1919 Argentina Boca Juniors (1) 2–0 Uruguay Nacional Sportivo Barracas Buenos Aires
Notes
  1. First playoff
  2. Second playoff
  3. The football division separated from the club, changing to Club Atlético Peñarol in 1913. Peñarol has been recognized by FIFA as the continuity of CURCC. Nevertheless, its main rival, Club Nacional de Football, alleged that CURCC and Peñarol were different clubs which coexisted until 1915, when CURCC was definitely dissolved.
  4. Estudiantes (BA) and CURCC played the final that ended in a 2–2 tie. A second game should have to be played after that, but it never happened and the tournament was therefore abandoned without proclaiming a champion.

Titles by team

Rosario A.C., 1904 winner
Argentine club Alumni (posing with the cup among other trophies) is the most winning team with 6 titles
Montevideo Wanderers with the trophy in 1911
Team Titles Years won
Argentina Alumni 6 1901, 1903, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909
Argentina Rosario AC 3 1902, 1904, 1905
Uruguay Wanderers 3 1911, 1917, 1918
Uruguay Nacional 2 1913, 1915
Argentina Belgrano AC 1 1900
Argentina San Isidro 1 1912
Argentina River Plate 1 1914
Uruguay Peñarol 1 1916
Argentina Boca Juniors 1 1919

Titles by country

Country Titles Teams
Argentina Argentina 13 Belgrano AC, Alumni, Rosario AC,
San Isidro, River Plate, Boca Juniors
Uruguay Uruguay 6 Wanderers, Nacional, Peñarol

Topscorers

By year

Source:

Year Player Goals Club
1900 Spencer Leonard 3 Alumni
1901 Spencer Leonard 2 Alumni
Juan J. Moore Alumni
Julian Parr Rosario AC
Alberto Le Bas Rosario AC
1902 Jorge Brown 4 Alumni
Julian Parr Rosario AC
1903 Jorge Brown 5 Alumni
1904 Arthur Wells 4 Rosario AC
1904 M.O. Wells 4 Rosario AC
1906 Charles Whaley 13 Belgrano AC
1907 Eliseo Brown 10 Alumni
1908 Charles Whaley 5 Belgrano AC
1909 Maximiliano Susan 12 Estudiantes (BA)
1910 Manuel González 11 Newell's Old Boys
1911 Juan O. Gil 6 San Isidro
1912 Julio Fernández 5 San Isidro
1913 Alberto Marcovecchio 9 Racing
1914 Alberto Marcovecchio 5 Racing
1915 Martín Garat 5 Porteño
1916 Guillermo Dannaher 4 Columbian
1917 Domingo Brisotti 4 Banfield
Jorge Calandra Estudiantes (LP)
Pascual Garré Independiente
1918 Pascual Polimeni 5 Porteño
Humberto Libonatti Gimnasia y Esgrima (R)
1919 Alberto Marcovecchio 7 Racing
Ennis Hayes Rosario Central

See also

References

  1. Cup Tie Competition at Historia y Fútbol website
  2. ^ Las finales de la Copa Competencia on ViejosEstadios website
  3. Cup Tie Competition - detailed tournaments - RSSSF
  4. "Felicita a Peñarol" at FIFA.com, 27 September 2011
  5. "Club clásico: Peñarol" at FIFA.com
  6. Argentina - List of Topscorers - Domestic Cups by Pablo Kersevan and Pablo Ciullini on the RSSSF
Tie Cup Finals
Non-CONMEBOL South American official competitions
AFA / AUF
AAmF / FUF
FVF
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