Harman Patil (Editor)

Corinthian F.C.

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League
  
none

Founded
  
1882

Corinthian F.C. Fair play reigned for football39s first Corinthians FIFAcom

Dissolved
  
1939 (merged with Casuals F.C.)

Ground
  
Queen's Club, Crystal Palace, The Oval

Corinthian Football Club was an English amateur football club based in London between 1882 and 1939.

Contents

The club was founded on 28 September 1882 by N. Lane Jackson, Assistant Secretary of the Football Association (The FA). His intention was to promote sportsmanship and fair play, champion the ideals of amateurism, and “establish a club side to improve the fortunes of a faltering national side” and thus help England challenge the supremacy of the then dominant Scotland national team.

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"Within twenty years the Corinthians were to become the greatest and most attractive team that football had then known. With an intelligent nonchalance and in their tailored shirts and well-cut shorts that brought a quality and culture to the game".

Corinthian F.C. 1000 ideas about Corinthian Fc on Pinterest God Proverbs and Lord

Corinthian FC were famed, above all, for their ethos of “sportsmanship, fair play, [and] playing for the love of the game”.

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‘Corinthian Spirit’, still understood as the highest standard of sportsmanship in any sport, is thought to have been coined in their honour. This spirit was famously summed up in their attitude to penalties; “As far as they were concerned, a gentleman would never commit a deliberate foul on an opponent. So, if a penalty was awarded against the Corinthians, their goalkeeper would stand aside, lean languidly on the goalpost and watch the ball being kicked into his own net. If the Corinthians themselves won a penalty, their captain took a short run-up and gave the ball a jolly good whack, chipping it over the crossbar”.

Corinthian F.C. Corinthian FC Wikipedia

The club’s foreign tours are also credited with having popularised football around the world; they were the first club to take the sport outside Europe; the 2000 and 2012 FIFA Club World Champions, SC Corinthians Paulista, are named after the club (indeed, Charles Miller considered the father of football in Brazil, played for the club in 1892), and the 2015 FIFA Club World Champions, Real Madrid, wear white to this day in their honor.

Corinthian F.C. Corinthian Tours CorinthianCasuals Football Club

The club played at various venues including the Queen's Club, The Oval, and the old Crystal Palace.

On 12 April 1939, the Corinthians played their last match. They merged with Casuals F.C. to form a new club, Corinthian-Casuals F.C.

Corinthian F.C. Corinthian Tours CorinthianCasuals Football Club

History

Given that the club’s constitution declared that it should “not compete for any challenge cup or any prize of any description” the team originally only played friendly matches. An exception was later made for the Sheriff of London’s Charity Shield. The club might have won the FA Cup many times had they competed — shortly after Blackburn Rovers beat Queen's Park in the 1884 final, the Corinthians beat Blackburn 8–1. Similarly, against the Bury side that beat Derby County 6–0 in the 1903 final, Corinthian won 10–3. In 1904, Corinthian beat Manchester United 11–3 which remains United's biggest ever defeat.

Corinthian did, however, supply large numbers of players to the England football team. During the 1880s, the majority of England caps were awarded to Corinthian players and, for two England matches against Wales in 1894 and 1895, the entire team consisted of members of the club, although most of the Corinthian players had another primary club affiliation, usually their University side.

During 'The Split', the 1907–1914 dispute about professional clubs being admitted to membership of the country Football Associations, Corinthian F.C. pledged its allegiance to the Amateur Football Alliance, as did Oxford University and Cambridge University. Corinthian therefore, banned from playing top home opposition by The FA, increased the frequency of their foreign tours; "Corinthian FC had little option but to concentrate on their [footballing] missionary work overseas and of the 131 matches played before 'The Split' was resolved in January 1914, 72 were played abroad".

Among others, Real Madrid were inspired to adopt Corinthian's strip while Sport Club Corinthians Paulista in Brazil and Zejtun Corinthians in Malta adopted their name. After a visit to Sweden in 1904, a Swedish tournament called the Corinthian Bowl was set up in commemoration.

Their tours included South Africa, Canada, the United States, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Spain, Denmark, Holland, Austria, Sweden, Switzerland, Brazil, Ireland, Jamaica and Germany.

England International Players

In all, Corinthian FC had 86 England Internationals, 12 Welsh Internationals, 8 Scottish Internationals and 2 Irish Internationals.

Corinthian's famous players include many sporting polymaths, including Max Woosnam and C. B. Fry.

Danish international Nils Middelboe played for Corinthian after finishing his career with Chelsea.

Many players played for Corinthian as a secondary club while playing for another primary club. The 17 players listed below are those that had Corinthian FC as their principal club:

  • Claude Ashton (1 cap)
  • Alfred Bower (5 caps)
  • Jackie Burns (16 caps)
  • Bertie Corbett (1 cap)
  • Norman Creek (1 cap)
  • Graham Doggart (1 cap)
  • Tip Foster (4 caps)
  • C. B. Fry (1 cap)
  • Kenneth Hegan (4 caps)
  • Arthur Henfrey (4 caps)
  • Cecil Holden-White (2 caps)
  • Anthony Hossack (2 caps)
  • Vaughan Lodge (2 caps)
  • Bernard Middleditch (1 cap)
  • William Oakley (12 caps)
  • Basil Patchitt (2 caps)
  • G. O. Smith (7 caps)
  • Geoffrey Plumpton Wilson (2 caps)
  • References

    Corinthian F.C. Wikipedia