American Cup

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The American Cup (also known as the American Football Association Cup and the American Federation Cup) was the first major U.S. soccer competition open to teams beyond a single league. It was first held in 1885. In the 1910s, it gradually declined in importance with the establishment of the National Challenge Cup. It was last held in 1924. The trophy was made by Tiffany & Co. and is described as "a very elegant sterling silver trophy. It is a vase about thirteen inches high surmounted by a Roman athlete. On either side is a foot ball and goal post, while in front on a large shield is the inscription".[1]

History[]

Founded in 1884, the American Football Association (AFA) was the first non-league organizing body in the United States. Allied with the Football Association, the AFA sought to standardize rules for teams competing in northern New Jersey and southern New York. Within two years, this region began to widen to include teams in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts.[2] Within a year of its founding, the AFA organized the first non-league cup in U.S. soccer history. Teams from New Jersey and Massachusetts dominated the first twelve years. Then in 1897, Philadelphia Manz brought the title to Pennsylvania for the first time. Soccer in the United States went through a downturn in the late 1890s. As a result, the AFA suspended the cup from 1899 until 1906. By that time, the growth in the sport had led to a confusion of rules and standards. This led to a movement to create a truly national body to oversee U.S. soccer. Drawing on both its position as the oldest soccer organization and the status of the American Cup, the AFA argued that it should be the nationally recognized body. In October 1911, a competing body, the American Amateur Football Association (AAFA) was created. It quickly spread outside the northeast U.S. and began its own cup in 1912, the American Amateur Football Association Cup. That year, both the AFA and AAFA applied for membership in FIFA, the international organizing body for soccer. In 1913, the AAFA gained an edge over the AFA when several AFA organizations moved to the AAFA. On April 5, 1913, the AAFA reorganized as the United States Football Association. FIFA quickly granted a provisional membership and USFA began exerting its influence on the sport. This led to the establishment of the National Challenge Cup that fall. The National Challenge Cup quickly grew to overshadow the American Cup. However, both cups were played simultaneously for the next ten years. Declining respect for the AFA led to the withdrawal of several associations from its cup in 1917. Further competition came in 1924 when USFA created the National Amateur Cup. That spelled the death knell for the American Cup. It played its last season in 1924.

List of champions[]

Year Champion Runner-up
1885 Clark O.N.T.
1886 Clark O.N.T.
1887 Clark O.N.T.
1888 Fall River Rovers
1889 Fall River Rovers
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894 Paterson True Blues
1895
1896 Paterson True Blues
1897 Paterson True Blues
1898 Kearny Arlington Paterson True Blues
1899-1905
No competition held
1906 West Hudson A.A. Paterson True Blues
1907 Clark A.A. Kearny Scots
1908 West Hudson A.A. Paterson True Blues
1909 Paterson True Blues East Newark Clark A.A.
1910 Disston A.A. Kearny Scots
1911 Howard and Bullough F.C. Philadelphia Hibernian
West Hudson A.A. Paterson Rangers
1913 Paterson True Blues Disston A.A.
1914 Bethlehem Steel F.C. Disston A.A.
1915 Kearny Scots Brooklyn Celtic
1916 Bethlehem Steel F.C. Kearny Scots
1917 Bethlehem Steel F.C. West Hudson A.A.
1918 Bethlehem Steel F.C. Babcock & Wilcox
1919 Bethlehem Steel F.C. Paterson F.C.
1920 Brooklyn Robins Dry Dock Bethlehem Steel F.C.
Brooklyn Robins Dry Dock Fore River
1922
No competition held
1923 Fleisher Yarn J&P Coats
1924 Bethlehem Steel F.C. Fall River Marksmen

References[]

  1. ^ "A Silver Trophy". (October 4, 1884). Newark Daily Advertiser, p.2 col.5
  2. ^ "Allaway, Roger West Hudson: A Cradle of American Soccer". Archived from the original on May 25, 2009. Retrieved January 29, 2008.

External links[]

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