[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/Jump to content

1941–42 Santosh Trophy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1941–42 Santosh Trophy
National Football Championship
Tournament details
CountryIndia
Final positions
ChampionsBengal (1st title)
Runner-upDelhi

The 1941–42 Santosh Trophy was the first edition of the Santosh Trophy, the main state competition for football in India. It was held in July, 1941. Bengal won the title beating Delhi 5–1 in the final.[1]

Ten teams entered the tournament but Dacca Sporting Association withdrew.[2] Matches were played across the country and the final was played in Calcutta.[3]

Preliminary matches

[edit]

Zone A

[edit]

Zone B

[edit]
Delhi0–0Rajputana
Delhi
Delhi5–1
replay
Rajputana
Delhi

Zone C

[edit]
  • Bengal received a walkover as Dacca withdrew drew to communal riots. The match was scheduled to be held in Dacca on 13 July.[4]

Bihar1–0United Provinces
Patna
Bengal0–0Bihar
Patna
Bengal4–0
replay
Bihar
  • Bachchi Khan
  • Somana
  • D Banerjee
Patna
Referee: H. Cage

Zone D

[edit]
Mysore3–0Madras
  • Nanjunda
  • Karim
  • Habib
Report
SIAA Grounds, Madras
Referee: PN Ramachandran
Bombay4–1Mysore
Langton
Hill
Bhimrao
Report Nanjunda 13'
Referee: Swallow

The score was 1–1 at half-time.

Semifinals

[edit]
Delhi3–2NWIFA
Delhi
Referee: Harnam Singh
Bengal1–0Bombay
P De Mello 65' Report
Referee: T Shome

Final

[edit]

There was a shower before the final and both teams started cautiously. The gates for the match was 6175 rupees and 4 annas (Rs. 6175.25). The Bengal-Bombay semifinal at the same venue collected 6492 rupees and 8 annas.

De Mello scored the first goal in the fourth minute directly from a corner kick, an "Olympic Goal". "The ball came in the trek of an archaic parabola and swerved into the net within the far post."[8] Hameeduddin equalised in the ninth minute with a rising shot, from a pass by Atma Ram. In the 22nd minute, the Delhi goal keeper Daley missed by a center by Noor Mohammad. The ball was headed on by D. Banerjee for De Mello to score his second goal. Bengal led 2–1 at half time.

The third Bengal goal came in the eighth minute of the second half, Banerjee playing an angular shot from the right across Daley from a pass by Bhattacharjee. Bhattacharjee scored in the 16th and 23rd minutes, Sunil Ghosh providing both assists. Ghosh suffered a head injury at the start of the match but returned in the eleventh minute.

Bengal was presented the trophy by Mrs H.R. Norton, the wife of the President of Indian Football Association. The chief guests for the final were Mrs Norton and B. C. Ghosh, the vice president of the IFA.[8]

Bengal5–1Delhi
  • P De Mello
  • A Bhattacharjee
  • D Banerjee
Report
  • Hameeduddin
Referee: P. Misra

Squads

[edit]
  • Bombay : F. E.Edden (captain, Bombay Gymkhana); James (British Infantry) and S. Thompson (H.V.M.); Raja (B.E.S.T), Alexander (Y.M.C.A) and Telang (B.E.S.T); Bhimrao (Y.M.C.A), Rashad (Muslim Sports), Hill (British Infantry), Butchi (B.E.S.T) and Langton (British Infantry). Reserves : Drynan (GK, Heavy Battery), Higgins (Heavy Battery), Osbourne (Police), Karunakar (Caltex) and Swami (W.I.A.A) [9]
  • Mysore : Kadirvelu; Habeeb and Atkinson; Sheriff, Khader and Chinnaswamy; Nanjunda, Laxminarayan, Swaminathan, Murgesh and Rahmat [7]
  • Delhi : Daley; Kaul, Qamaruddin, Yousuf, Afzal and Sardar Mirza; Habeed, Nawab, Akhtar, Atma Ram and Fayaz Khan
  • Rajputana : N Lodrick; H. Dean, A Rahim; Mobeen Ahmad, Sajjad Mohammad, Samiullah; Mumtaz Ahmed, Atta Mohammad, Debi Singh, Wahiduddin and Sikandar Khan [7]

Notes

[edit]

Some of the teams were referred to after their football associations. This article uses the names by which the teams came to be known.

  • IFA Bengal (Indian Football Association) - Bengal
  • WIFA Bombay (Western India Football Association) - Bombay
  • NWIFA (North West India Football Association) - Punjab and Balochistan
  • Delhi FA - Delhi

References

[edit]
  1. ^ IFA beat Delhi in football final, Bombay Chronicle, 27 July 1941
  2. ^ Inter Provincial Football, Bombay Chronicle, 18 April 1941
  3. ^ Schedule, Bombay Chronicle, 14 June 1941
  4. ^ Dacca withdraws due to riots, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 7 July 1941
  5. ^ Bengal's comfortable win, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 22 July 1941
  6. ^ Mysore defeat Madras, 3-0, 7 July 1941, Amrita Bazar Patrika
  7. ^ a b c d Bombay defeat Mysore 4-1, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 14 July 1941
  8. ^ a b c Bengal emerge triumphant, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 27 July 1941
  9. ^ Bombay team, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 11 July 1941