Sportivo Palermo: Difference between revisions
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In 1931 football became professional in Argentina, so the Asociación Amateurs Argentina de Football changed its name to "Asociación Argentina de Football" and started its own championship, where 17 teams where inscripted, Sportivo Palermo among them.<ref>[http://historiayfutbol.obolog.com/argentina-1ra-division-asociacion-argentina-1931-198417 Historia y Fútbol Argentino - 1931]</ref> The team played the 1931 and 1932 tournaments, finishing in the last position in 1932 and desaffiliating once the championship was finished.<ref>[http://historiayfutbol.obolog.com/argentina-1ra-division-asociacion-argentina-1932-200237 Historia y Fútbol Argentino - 1932]</ref> <ref>[http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/arg31a.html Argentina 1931 amateur - RSSSF]</ref> <ref>[http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/arg32a.html Argentina 1932 amateur - RSSSF]</ref> |
In 1931 football became professional in Argentina, so the Asociación Amateurs Argentina de Football changed its name to "Asociación Argentina de Football" and started its own championship, where 17 teams where inscripted, Sportivo Palermo among them.<ref>[http://historiayfutbol.obolog.com/argentina-1ra-division-asociacion-argentina-1931-198417 Historia y Fútbol Argentino - 1931]</ref> The team played the 1931 and 1932 tournaments, finishing in the last position in 1932 and desaffiliating once the championship was finished.<ref>[http://historiayfutbol.obolog.com/argentina-1ra-division-asociacion-argentina-1932-200237 Historia y Fútbol Argentino - 1932]</ref> <ref>[http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/arg31a.html Argentina 1931 amateur - RSSSF]</ref> <ref>[http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/arg32a.html Argentina 1932 amateur - RSSSF]</ref> |
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In 1933 Sportivo Palermo merged with [[Club Atlético Palermo]] and the |
In 1933 Sportivo Palermo merged with [[Club Atlético Palermo]] and the recently formed team played the 1933 and 1934 AAF championships as "Atlético y Sportivo Palermo". After the 1934 season the AAF and the Liga Argentina de Football (the professional league) merged to form the "Asociación del Football Argentino" which has remained professional to date. At the end of that season, Sportivo Palermo and Club Atlético Palermo separated. Sportivo kept out of the official tournaments until 1956, when the club was re-affiliated to Association to play the [[Primera D]] championship (then named "Tercera de Ascenso)<ref>[http://historiayfutbol.obolog.com/argentina-3ra-ascenso-afa-1956-291399 Historia y Fútbol - Tercera de Ascenso 1956]</ref> being the last tournament disputed by the squad. In 1984 the club disaffiliated from the Argentine Association definitely and soon later was disbanded. |
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==Notable players== |
==Notable players== |
Revision as of 17:09, 30 March 2012
Club Sportivo Palermo is a defunct Argentine football club that played in the Primera División during the amateur era.
History
On May 18, 1908, Club Sportivo Palermo was established, adopting blue as its jersey color. The great amount of clubs that were founded during the beginning of XX Century in Argentina derivated in the creation of many leagues and associations, which run in line with Asociación Argentina de Football. One of those leagues was the "Federación Argentina de Football", which run until 1914 when it merged with AFA.
Sportivo Palermo wanted to affiliate to the new association, so the team merged with Club Atlas, an institution from La Paternal, Buenos Aires, in 1915. The name "Sportivo Palermo" prevailed over Atlas for the new club. Its home field was placed in Caseros, Buenos Aires, moving to Palermo neighborhood in 1922.[1] In 1917 the club won the Segunda División championship,[2] and three years later Sportivo Palermo took over Asociación Atlética Eureka, another football club which had been promoted to Categoría de Honor division. Palermo's first participation in Primera División was in 1920, playing consecutively in the top division of Argentine football until 1932, when the club merged with Club Atlético Palermo.
At the beginning of 1922 the club managers got a field that was property of then British-owned company Ferrocarril Central Argentino. That land was located in the crossing of Canning Avenue and the railway tracks, near the Rio de la Plata. Sportivo Palermo started to built a stadium there, finishing the works in 1924. [3]
in 1928, Argentina national football team won the silver medal at the Olympic Games, after losing the final at the hands of Uruguay. That squad had six players of Sportivo Palermo in its roster: Paternóster, Weismuller, Zumelzú, Bidoglio, Herman, and Evaristo.
In 1931 football became professional in Argentina, so the Asociación Amateurs Argentina de Football changed its name to "Asociación Argentina de Football" and started its own championship, where 17 teams where inscripted, Sportivo Palermo among them.[4] The team played the 1931 and 1932 tournaments, finishing in the last position in 1932 and desaffiliating once the championship was finished.[5] [6] [7]
In 1933 Sportivo Palermo merged with Club Atlético Palermo and the recently formed team played the 1933 and 1934 AAF championships as "Atlético y Sportivo Palermo". After the 1934 season the AAF and the Liga Argentina de Football (the professional league) merged to form the "Asociación del Football Argentino" which has remained professional to date. At the end of that season, Sportivo Palermo and Club Atlético Palermo separated. Sportivo kept out of the official tournaments until 1956, when the club was re-affiliated to Association to play the Primera D championship (then named "Tercera de Ascenso)[8] being the last tournament disputed by the squad. In 1984 the club disaffiliated from the Argentine Association definitely and soon later was disbanded.
Notable players
- Ludovico Bidoglio (1916-17)
- Juan Evaristo (?-1929)
- Adolfo Zumelzú
References
- ^ "Atlas no hubiera sido Atlas", by Miguel Angel Giordano
- ^ Argentine Football Association Library - Memoria y Balance 1917, page 18
- ^ "Una cancha junto al río", by Carlos Aira, 2012-01-30
- ^ Historia y Fútbol Argentino - 1931
- ^ Historia y Fútbol Argentino - 1932
- ^ Argentina 1931 amateur - RSSSF
- ^ Argentina 1932 amateur - RSSSF
- ^ Historia y Fútbol - Tercera de Ascenso 1956