Scotland - International Matches 1872-1880


Overview
Details 1881-1890


(Match 1)  30th November 1872  (Friendly match)
SCOTLAND - ENGLAND  0-0  (The teams changed ends after 45 minutes)
Referee:   William Keay (Scotland)
Crowd:     3.000, Hamilton Crescent (West of Scotland Cricket Club's ground), Partick 
           (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1912)
SCOTLAND:
Robert Gardner [c]                   (1/Queen's Park) -
Joseph Taylor			     (1/Queen's Park)
William Ker			     (1/Queen's Park) -
James John Thomson		     (1/Queen's Park)
James Smith			     (1/Queen's Park) -
William Muir Mackinnon               (1/Queen's Park)
James Biggar Weir                    (1/Queen's Park)
Robert Leckie			     (1/Queen's Park)
David Wotherspoon		     (1/Queen's Park)
Robert Smith			     (1/Queen's Park)
Alexander Rhind			     (1/Queen's Park)

ENGLAND:
Robert Barker - Ernest Harwood Greenhalgh, Reginald Courtenay Welch - Frederick Chappell, 
William John Maynard - John Brockbank, John Charles Clegg, Arnold Kirke-Smith, Cuthbert John Ottaway [c], 
Charles John Chenery, Charles John Morice.

Notes:  This was the first-ever official international association football match to be played. 
        Between 1870 and 1872, the Football Association (FA) had organised five representative matches 
        between teams from England and Scotland, all held in London. The details of these matches are 
        listed separately under "Scotland Unofficial Matches". Following these games there was some 
        resentment in Scotland that their team did not contain more home grown players. Many of the 
        players in Scotland did not play to the FA's rules at the time, inhibiting the possibility 
        of a truly representative match between the two countries.
        Eventually, the FA decided to change this and the minutes of a meeting on 3rd October 1872 
        recorded that:
 
        "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." 

        The Scottish Football Association had yet to be established, thus the challenge was eventually 
        taken up by Queen's Park FC, the leading Scottish club, and this match in 1872 is the earliest 
        international football match recognised by FIFA as an official international, though at the time 
        it was considered as a continuation of the previous internationals. The match was arranged for 
        St.Andrew's Day (30th November 1872) and the West of Scotland Cricket Club's ground at Hamilton 
        Crescent in Partick was chosen as the venue. The ground was enclosed and enabled admission to be 
        controlled and charged. It is still in regular use today. In fact, it has been in use as a sports 
        venue since 1862, making it one of the oldest in the world. 
        The Scottish side was chosen by goalkeeper and captain Robert Gardner. All eleven players were 
        selected from Queen's Park FC. It had been decided not to call on Arthur Kinnaird of Wanderers 
        and Henry Renny-Tailyour of the Royal Engineers to make the journey north. It was also decided 
        that the team would wear the Queen's Park kit of the day, blue jerseys (with the addition of 
        a lion rampant badge), white knickerbockers and blue and white striped stockings.
        At that time, players did not "belong" exclusively to a single club but often played for other 
        clubs on a regular basis (e.g. Gardner, Ker and Thomson also played with Granville and James 
        and Robert Smith also played with South Norwood) but the general practice has been to say they 
        were Queen's Park players.
        The FA decided its team at a meeting on 14th November 1872. The side was drawn from nine different 
        clubs and was selected by Charles Alcock, the Football Association Secretary and captain of the 
        FA Cup winning Wanderers, who himself was unable to play due to injury although he took on the 
        role of one of the two umpires. In the team was Frederick Chappell who had played for Scotland 
        against England, despite having no Scottish connections, in the unofficial international between 
        the countries on 25th February 1871. He was sometimes listed as Frederick M Chappell. In football 
        teams he was also often registered as F McLean. In February 1873 he formally changed his name 
        to Frederick Brunning Maddison. The FA also decided the players would wear dark blue caps, white 
        jerseys (with the Royal arms of England of three lions passant embroidered on the left breast) 
        and white flannel trousers or knickerbockers.
        The match, initially scheduled for a 2pm kick-off, was delayed for twenty minutes due to fog. 
        The crowd who gathered to watch the match paid an entry fee of a shilling (£0.05), the same 
        price charged by the English Football Association for the first FA Cup final. They endured 
        the twenty-minute delay to the scheduled kick-off but then settled to watch the contest in 
        a relaxed and enjoyable atmosphere. The game itself was conducted in a friendly manner and 
        there were few contentious decisions for the Scottish referee to make. 
        The Scottish goalkeeper Robert Gardner and his team-mate Robert Smith switched positions 
        after 45 minutes as did their English counterparts, Robert Barker and William John Maynard. 
        Until 1875 there was no half-time as we know it today. The teams would change ends after 
        each goal was scored. If no goals were scored after 45 minutes the teams would change ends 
        but with no interval. 
        On a pitch that was heavy due to a constant downpour of rain over the previous three days, 
        the smaller and lighter Scottish side pushed their English opponents hard. The advantage 
        that the Scots had with their team being solely drawn from Queen's Park was negated by the 
        way that the English team came together, dispelling fears that their unfamiliarity of playing 
        alongside each other would be an issue. The crowd, whilst witnessing the first official meeting 
        between the countries, were denied the pleasure of the first goal as the match ended in a 0-0 
        draw (something which not recur in a game between the two countries until 1970). That first 
        goal would come the following year at The Oval when England enjoyed a 4-2 victory over the 
        travelling Scots.
      

(Match 2) 8th March 1873 (Friendly match) ENGLAND - SCOTLAND 4-2 (The teams changed ends after each goal) Referee: Theodore Lloyd (England) Crowd: 2.934, The Oval (Surrey County Cricket Club's ground), Kennington, London Goals: 1-0 Kenyon-Slaney (2), 2-0 Bonsor (10), 2-1 Renny-Tailyour (15), 2-2 Gibb (20), 3-2 Kenyon-Slaney (60), 4-2 Chenery (75) ENGLAND: Alexander Morten [c] - Ernest Harwood Greenhalgh, Leonard Sidgwick Howell - Alfred George Goodwyn, Pelham George von Donop - Alexander George Bonsor, William Edwin Clegg, Robert Walpole Sealy Vidal, George Hubert Hugh Heron, Charles John Chenery, William Slaney Kenyon-Slaney. SCOTLAND: Robert Gardner [c] (2/Queen's Park) - Joseph Taylor (2/Queen's Park) William Ker (2/Queen's Park) - James John Thomson (2/Queen's Park) Robert Smith (2/South Norwood) - William Muir Mackinnon (2/Queen's Park) Lt.Henry Waugh Renny-Tailyour (1/Royal Engineers) Arthur Fitzgerald Kinnaird (1/Wanderers) John Edward Blackburn (1/Royal Engineers) William Gibb (1/Clydesdale) David Wotherspoon (2/Queen's Park) Notes: Scotland's match against England in London on 8th March 1873 was the second official international, following the outstanding success of the inaugural game in Glasgow the previous November. As the Scottish Football Association had not yet been formed, the Scotland side was again selected by Queen's Park FC. Robert Gardner retained the captaincy, and he was joined on the train south by team-mates James John Thomson, William Ker, William Mackinnon, David Wotherspoon, Joseph Taylor, as well as Clydesdale's William Gibb and Archibald Rae as umpire. However, although Queen's Park had made a healthy profit of £33 8s 0d (£33.40) out of the first international, they only had sufficient money to send seven players and an umpire to London. They needed four locally-based recruits to make up the team. An obvious choice was Robert Smith, a Queen's Park founding member who had moved to London and was now playing for South Norwood; he had played in the November game. Two more, John Edward Blackburn and Henry Renny-Tailyour, were with the Royal Engineers at Chatham. The last was Arthur Kinnaird who featured regularly for Wanderers. Although he was born in London, Arthur Kinnaird played for Scotland as son of an old Perthshire family. Henry Renny-Tailyour was born in India, while his Scottish father was serving in the army there. He also represented Scotland in the international rugby union match against England on 5th February 1872, remaining the only player to have represented the country in both sports. As the score was 2-2 after 20 minutes the teams just carried on playing for the full 90 minutes and changing ends after each goal. The approximate times of the goals have been confirmed from contemporaneous newspaper reports although the timing of the third goal (Renny-Tailyour) and the fifth goal (Kenyon-Slaney) are thought not be as accurate as the others. Although the Scottish player Renny-Tailyour is often listed as Colonel in records, he attained that rank much later in his Army career and was a Lieutenant at the time of this match.
(Match 3) 7th March 1874 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - ENGLAND 2-1 (The teams changed ends after each goal) Referee: Archibald Rae (Scotland) Crowd: 7.000, Hamilton Crescent (West of Scotland Cricket Club's ground), Partick (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1912) Goals: 0-1 Kingsford (28), 1-1 Anderson (42), 2-1 McKinnon (47) SCOTLAND: Robert Gardner (3/Clydesdale) - John Hunter (1/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) Joseph Taylor (3/Queen's Park) - Charles Campbell (1/Queen's Park) James John Thomson [c] (3/Queen's Park) - James Biggar Weir (2/Queen's Park) John Ferguson (1/Vale of Leven) Henry McNeil (1/Queen's Park) William Muir Mackinnon (3/Queen's Park) Angus McKinnon (1/Queen's Park) Frederick Anderson (1/Clydesdale) ENGLAND: Reginald Courtenay Welch - Robert Andrew Muter Macindoe Ogilvie, Alfred Hugh Stratford - Francis Hornby Birley, Cuthbert John Ottaway [c] - John Robert Blayney Owen, Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston, George Hubert Hugh Heron, John Hawley Edwards, Robert Kennett Kingsford, Charles John Chenery.
(Match 4) 6th March 1875 (Friendly match) ENGLAND - SCOTLAND 2-2 (The teams changed ends after each goal) Referee: Alfred Stair (England) Crowd: 2.000, The Oval (Surrey County Cricket Club's ground), Kennington, London Goals: 1-0 Wollaston (24), 1-1 McNeil (34), 2-1 Alcock (65), 2-2 Andrews (74) ENGLAND: William Henry Carr - Edward Brownlow Haygarth, William Stepney Rawson - Francis Hornby Birley, Pelham George von Donop - Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston, Charles William Alcock [c], Herbert Edward Rawson, Alexander George Bonsor, George Hubert Hugh Heron, Richard Lyon Geaves. SCOTLAND: Robert Gardner (4/Clydesdale) - John Hunter (2/Glasgow Eastern) Joseph Taylor [c] (4/Queen's Park) - Alexander Kennedy (1/Glasgow Eastern) Alexander McLintock (1/Vale of Leven) - James Biggar Weir (3/Queen's Park) William Muir Mackinnon (4/Queen's Park) Henry McNeil (2/Queen's Park) Thomas Cochrane Highet (1/Queen's Park) Peter Andrews (1/Glasgow Eastern) John Douglas Macpherson (1/Clydesdale)
(Match 5) 4th March 1876 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - ENGLAND 3-0 (3-0) Referee: William Campbell Mitchell (Scotland) Crowd: 16.000, Hamilton Crescent (West of Scotland Cricket Club's ground), Partick (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1912) Goals: 1-0 Mackinnon (8), 2-0 McNeil (12), 3-0 Highet (35) SCOTLAND: Alexander McGeoch (1/Dumbreck) - Joseph Taylor [c] (5/Queen's Park) John Hunter (3/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) - Alexander McLintock (2/Vale of Leven) Alexander Kennedy (2/Glasgow Eastern) - Henry McNeil (3/Queen's Park) William Muir Mackinnon (5/Queen's Park) Thomas Cochrane Highet (2/Queen's Park) William Miller (1/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) John Ferguson (2/Vale of Leven) John Campbell Baird (1/Vale of Leven) ENGLAND: Arthur Henry Patrick Savage - Edgar Field, Frederick Thomas Green - Beaumont Griffith Jarrett, Ernest Henry Bambridge - Walter Scott Buchanan, George Hubert Hugh Heron [c], Charles Eastlake Smith, William John Maynard, Charles Francis William Heron, Arthur William Cursham. Notes: This match had many "firsts". There was a half-time change over with an interval and wooden bars replaced a tape between the goalposts. It was the first full international match where some of the spectators in the crowd, that set a World record attendance, had a grandstand to watch the game.
(Match 6) 25th March 1876 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - WALES 4-0 (1-0) Referee: Robert Gardner (Scotland) Crowd: 17.000, Hamilton Crescent (West of Scotland Cricket Club's ground), Partick (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1912) Goals: 1-0 Ferguson (40), 2-0 Lang (48), 3-0 Mackinnon (53), 4-0 H.McNeil (70) SCOTLAND: Alexander McGeoch (2/Dumbreck) - Joseph Taylor (6/Queen's Park) Robert Walker Neill (1/Queen's Park) - Alexander Kennedy (3/Glasgow Eastern) Charles Campbell [c] (2/Queen's Park) - Thomas Cochrane Highet (3/Queen's Park) John Ferguson (3/Vale of Leven) James Joseph Lang (1/Clydesdale) William Muir Mackinnon (6/Queen's Park) Moses McLay McNeil (1/Rangers) Henry McNeil (4/Queen's Park) WALES: David Thomson - William Addams Williams Evans, Samuel Llewelyn Kenrick [c] - Edwin Alfred Cross, William Williams - Dr.Daniel Gray, William Henry Davies, George Frederick Thomson, John Hawley Edwards, John Jones, Alfred Davies. Notes: Henry and Moses McNeil were the first brothers to play for Scotland. Solicitor Samuel Llewelyn Kenrick, who captained Wales, was the first Chairman and Honorary Secretary of the Football Association of Wales. In his playing career he gained five caps. Kenrick was also the referee of the match between Wales and Scotland on 14th March 1881, which the Scots won 5-1. New World Record attendance for a full international match.
(Match 7) 3rd March 1877 (Friendly match) ENGLAND - SCOTLAND 1-3 (0-1) Referee: Robert Andrew Muter Macindoe Ogilvie (England) Crowd: 2.000, The Oval (Surrey County Cricket Club's ground), Kennington, London Goals: 0-1 Ferguson (22), 0-2 Richmond (48), 1-2 Lyttelton (55), 1-3 Ferguson (69) ENGLAND: Morton Peto Betts - William Lindsay, Lindsay Bury - Beaumont Griffith Jarrett, William Stepney Rawson [c] - Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston, Alfred Lyttelton, William Mosforth, Arthur William Cursham, John Bain, Cecil Vernon Wingfield-Stratford. SCOTLAND: Alexander McGeoch (3/Dumbreck) - Robert Walker Neill (2/Queen's Park) Thomas Vallance (1/Rangers) - Charles Campbell [c] (3/Queen's Park) James Phillips (1/Queen's Park) - James Tassie Richmond (1/Clydesdale) William Muir Mackinnon (7/Queen's Park) John Cunningham McGregor (1/Vale of Leven) John Smith McDougall (1/Vale of Leven) John Smith (1/Mauchline) John Ferguson (4/Vale of Leven) Notes: The Scottish international players John Smith (seven caps between 1877-1881) and Dr.John Smith (three caps between 1883-1884) are the same player. He was awarded MB CM (Batchelor of Medicine: Master of Surgery) at the end of the 1880/81 Academic Year at Edinburgh University and was then entitled to use the prefix "Doctor".
(Match 8) 5th March 1877 (Friendly match) WALES - SCOTLAND 0-2 (0-0) Referee: William Dick (Scotland) Crowd: 4.000, The Racecourse Ground, Wrexham Goals: 0-1 Campbell (55), 0-2 Evans (75) own goal WALES: Thomas Blundell Burnett - William Addams Williams Evans, Samuel Llewelyn Kenrick [c] - John Richard Morgan, Edwin Alfred Cross - William Henry Davies, Alfred Davies, John Henry Price, Alexander Fletcher Jones, John Hughes, George Frederick Thomson. SCOTLAND: Alexander McGeoch (4/Dumbreck) - Robert Walker Neill (3/Queen's Park) Thomas Vallance (2/Rangers) - James Phillips (2/Queen's Park) Charles Campbell [c] (4/Queen's Park) - John Smith (2/Mauchline) John Cunningham McGregor (2/Vale of Leven) John Ferguson (5/Vale of Leven) John Smith McDougall (2/Vale of Leven) Henry McNeil (5/Queen's Park) John Hunter (4/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) Notes: The referee William Dick was the Secretary of the Scottish Football Association.
(Match 9) 2nd March 1878 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - ENGLAND 7-2 (4-0) Referee: William Dick (Scotland) Crowd: 10.000, 1st Hampden Park, Crosshill (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1891) Goals: 1-0 McDougall (7), 2-0 McGregor (32), 3-0 McNeil (39), 4-0 McDougall (41), 5-0 McDougall (46), 6-0 Mackinnon (62), 6-1 Wylie (65), 7-1 McNeil (70), 7-2 Cursham (75) SCOTLAND: Robert Gardner (5/Clydesdale) - Andrew McIntyre (1/Vale of Leven) Thomas Vallance (3/Rangers) - Charles Campbell [c] (5/Queen's Park) Alexander Kennedy (4/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) - James Tassie Richmond (2/Queen's Park) John Cunningham McGregor (3/Vale of Leven) John Smith McDougall (3/Vale of Leven) Thomas Cochrane Highet (4/Queen's Park) William Muir Mackinnon (8/Queen's Park) Henry McNeil (6/Queen's Park) ENGLAND: Conrad Wagner - John Hunter, Edward Lyttelton - Beaumont Griffith Jarrett, Norman Coles Bailey - Arthur William Cursham [c], Percy Fairclough, John George Wylie, Henry Wace, George Hubert Hugh Heron, William Mosforth. Notes: John McDougall became the first player to score a hat-trick for Scotland.
(Match 10) 23rd March 1878 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - WALES 9-0 (6-0) Referee: Robert Gardner (Scotland) Crowd: 6.000, 1st Hampden Park, Crosshill (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1891) Goals: 1-0 Campbell (4), 2-0 Weir (15), 3-0 Campbell (18), 4-0 Baird (37), 5-0 Ferguson (38), 6-0 Weir (42), 7-0 Ferguson (50), 8-0 Watson (60), 9-0 Lang (70) SCOTLAND: Robert Parlane (1/Vale of Leven) - James Sibbald Robertson Duncan (1/Alexandra Athletic) Robert Walker Neill [c] (4/Queen's Park) - James Phillips (3/Queen's Park) David Davidson (1/Queen's Park) - John Ferguson (6/Vale of Leven) John Campbell Baird (2/Vale of Leven) James Joseph Lang (2/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) James Biggar Weir (4/Queen's Park) James Andrew Kennedy Watson (1/Rangers) Peter McGregor Campbell (1/Rangers) WALES: Edward Phennah - George Garnet Higham [c], John Powell - Henry Valentine Edwards, William Williams - George Foulkes Savin, James Davies, Dr.Daniel Gray, Thomas Johnson Britten, John Henry Price, Charles Edwards.
(Match 11) 5th April 1879 (Friendly match) ENGLAND - SCOTLAND 5-4 (1-4) Referee: Charles Wollaston (England) Crowd: 4.500, The Oval (Surrey County Cricket Club's ground), Kennington, London Goals: 1-0 Mosforth (5), 1-1 Mackinnon (15), 1-2 McDougall (23), 1-3 Smith (26), 1-4 Mackinnon (41), 2-4 Bambridge (48), 3-4 Goodyer (60), 4-4 Bailey (75), 5-4 Bambridge (83) ENGLAND: Reginald Halsey Birkett - Edward Christian, Harold Morse - James Frederick McLeod Prinsep, Norman Coles Bailey - Arnold Frank Hills, Arthur Copeland Goodyer, Henry Wace [c], Francis John Sparks, William Mosforth, Edward Charles Bambridge. SCOTLAND: Robert Parlane (2/Vale of Leven) - William Scott Somers (1/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) Thomas Vallance (4/Rangers) - Charles Campbell [c] (6/Queen's Park) John Campbell McLeod McPherson (1/Vale of Leven) William Wightman Beveridge (1/Ayr Academy) - John Smith (3/Edinburgh University) John Smith McDougall (4/Vale of Leven) Robert Paton (1/Vale of Leven) William Muir Mackinnon (9/Queen's Park) Henry McNeil (7/Queen's Park)
(Match 12) 7th April 1879 (Friendly match) WALES - SCOTLAND 0-3 (0-1) Referee: James William Archibald Cooper (Wales) Crowd: 2.000, The Racecourse Ground, Wrexham Goals: 0-1 Campbell (34), 0-2 Smith (60), 0-3 Smith (70) WALES: John Davies - Samuel Llewelyn Kenrick [c], John Richard Morgan - Knyvett Crosse, William Williams, James William Lloyd - George Woosnam, John Hughes, John Roberts, William Roberts, John Vaughan. SCOTLAND: Robert Parlane (3/Vale of Leven) - Thomas Vallance (5/Rangers) William Scott Somers (2/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) - John Campbell McLeod McPherson (2/Vale of Leven) David Davidson (2/Queen's Park) Henry McNeil (8/Queen's Park) - John Smith McDougall [c] (5/Vale of Leven) Peter McGregor Campbell (2/Rangers) Robert Paton (2/Vale of Leven) William Wightman Beveridge (2/Ayr Academy) John Smith (4/Edinburgh University)
(Match 13) 13th March 1880 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - ENGLAND 5-4 (3-2) Referee: Donald Hamilton (Scotland) Crowd: 12.000, 1st Hampden Park, Crosshill (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1891) Goals: 1-0 Ker (5), 1-1 Mosforth (8), 2-1 Baird (39), 2-2 Bambridge (42), 3-2 Ker (44), 4-2 Ker (48), 5-2 Kay (70), 5-3 Bambridge (87), 5-4 Sparks (89) SCOTLAND: Archibald Rowan (1/Caledonian (Glasgow)) - Alexander McLintock (3/Vale of Leven) Robert Walker Neill [c] (5/Queen's Park) - Charles Campbell (7/Queen's Park) John Campbell McLeod McPherson (3/Vale of Leven) John Smith (5/Edinburgh University) - Moses McLay McNeil (2/Rangers) George Ker (1/Queen's Park) John Cunningham McGregor (4/Vale of Leven) John Campbell Baird (3/Vale of Leven) John Leck Kay (1/Queen's Park) ENGLAND: Harry Albemarle Swepstone - Edwin Luntley, Thomas Brindle - Norman Coles Bailey, John Hunter, Segar Richard Bastard - Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston [c], Samuel Weaver Widdowson, Francis John Sparks, William Mosforth, Edward Charles Bambridge.
(Match 14) 27th March 1880 (Friendly match) SCOTLAND - WALES 5-1 (2-0) Referee: Thomas Lawrie (Scotland) Crowd: 2.000, 1st Hampden Park, Crosshill (the autonomous burgh became part of the city of Glasgow in 1891) Goals: 1-0 Davidson (40), 2-0 Beveridge (42), 3-0 Lindsay (50), 4-0 McAdam (55), 5-0 Campbell (60), 5-1 W.Roberts (85) SCOTLAND: George Gillespie (1/Rangers) - William Scott Somers (3/Queen's Park) Archibald Lang (1/Dumbarton) - David Davidson [c] (3/Queen's Park) Hugh McIntyre (1/Rangers) James Douglas (1/Renfrew) - James McAdam (1/3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers) Malcolm John [Eadie] Fraser (1/Queen's Park) Joseph Lindsay (1/Dumbarton) John Campbell (1) (1/South Western (Glasgow)) William Wightman Beveridge (3/Edinburgh University) WALES: Harry Hibbott - John Richard Morgan [c], John Powell - Edward Bowen, Henry Valentine Edwards, William Pierce Owen - William Roberts, John Roberts, John Henry Price, Thomas Johnson Britten, John Vaughan. Notes: John Campbell (1) - (South Western (Glasgow), one cap: 27th March 1880).


Overview
Details 1881-1890


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Prepared and maintained by Alan Brown and Gabriele Tossani for the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation

Authors: Alan Brown and Gabriele Tossani
Last updated: 4 May 2023

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