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'Charles William Alcock' (
December 2,
1842 -
February 26,
1907) was an influential
English sportsman and administrator. He was a major instigator of the development of both international
football and
cricket, as well as being the creator of the
FA Cup.
Biography
Born in
Sunderland[1], his family moved south at an early age. Educated at
Harrow School, Alcock was a keen schoolboy footballer, and formed the ''Forest'' club with his elder brother, John, in
1859. He was then a prime mover in the
1863 foundation of Forest's more famous successor,
Wanderers F.C., who were initially a predominantly Old Harrovian side. As a player, Alcock was renowned as a hard-working centre-forward with an accurate shot. On
March 6 1875, he captained
England against
Scotland, scoring a goal in a 2-2 draw. The match proved to be his only international game.
Football
On
July 20 1871, Alcock, in his position as
FA Secretary, proposed
'''That it is desirable that a Challenge Cup should be established in connection with the
Association, for which all clubs belonging to the Association should be invited to compete''
'. Thus, the
FA Cup - the world's first national football tournament, based on Alcock's experience of inter-house '
sudden death' competition at Harrow - was born. Fifteen teams took part in the first competition in
1872, with Alcock fittingly captaining the winning
Wanderers side.
It was then Alcock's idea that led to the statement,
'''In order to further the interests of the Association in Scotland, it was decided that during the current season, a team should be sent to Glasgow to play a match v Scotland''
' in the FA's minutes of
October 3 1872. The world's first international match took place between England and Scotland on
November 30 1872, with Alcock ruled out of the England side which drew 0-0 at the
West of Scotland Cricket Ground in
Partick through injury. Instead he represented his country as
Umpire, with the England captaincy awarded to
Cuthbert Ottaway.
After joining the FA committee in
1866, Alcock served as FA Secretary from
1870 to
1895, before serving as Honorary Treasurer and Vice President. Alcock also
refereed the
1875 and
1879 FA Cup Finals, and was the
journalist responsible for compiling the first "Football Annual" in
1868.
Alcock was the first to use the term "combination game" to describe the predecessor of the modern passing football game in
1874: "Nothing succeeds better than what I may call a 'combination game'"
†
Cricket
In
cricket, Alcock captained
Middlesex in the first county match in
1867, before playing for
Essex. He played only one
first-class fixture, for
MCC, in
1862 (Essex was not yet a first-class county).
[2]
Between
1872 and
1907, Alcock served as secretary of
Surrey. Repeating his interest in sporting internationals, he arranged the first cricket
Test Match to be played in England, England against
Australia at the
Kennington Oval in
1880. He also edited the ''Cricket'' newspaper for almost a quarter of a century, and edited
James Lillywhite's Cricketers' Annual from
1872 to
1900.
Charles Alcock is buried in West Norwood Cemetery in South London SE27.
[3]
References
Print
★
†Alcock, Charles. ''Football: our winter game''. 1874.
ISBN
★
Booth, Keith. ''The Father of Modern Sport: The Life and Times of Charles W. Alcock'', Parrs Wood Press. 2002. ISBN 1-903158-34-6
Internet
1. Place of birth: Ancestry.co.uk website. '(Registration required)'
2. Statisticsat CricketArchive.co.uk website.
3. Burial confirmation: ''Friends of West Norwood Cemetery'' website.
External links
★
British Football Legends profile
★
Wisden tribute to mark the centenary of the first Test played in England
★