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Gijón Sport Club

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Gijón Sport Club
Short nameGijón SC
Founded1902
Dissolved1916
GroundGijón
ChairmanJosé Suárez Sánchez

The Gijón Sport Club was a football team based in Gijón that existed between 1902 and 1916. It was the first official football club in Gijón.[1]

History

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Gijón was introduced to football by two distinct groups: sailors from foreign ships docking at the port of El Musel, who were the first to practice football in the city on the San Lorenzo beach [es],[1][2] and Gijón students returning from schools abroad, who brought their newly founded passion for football to Gijón during the summer holidays, such as José Moré, Antonio de la Riva, the Alvargonzález brothers (Romualdo and José Luis), Demetrio Castrillón, and Luis Adaro Porcel.[1][3][4] The latter, who had completed his studies as a mechanical engineer in Switzerland and Germany at the turn of the century, was the one who obtained the goals and equipment necessary for those first games in Gijón.[1][5] In July 1901, his father, Luis Adaro Magro, a very important businessman in the mining and metallurgical history of Asturias, established two coal loaders in El Musel, so Adaro Porcel took advantage of that to organize football matches between his fellow students and the crews of the foreign ships.[1] In the following year, in 1902, Adaro Porcel founded Gijón Sport Club, who thus became the first football club in Gijón, official or otherwise.[1] It was only in December 1903 that Gijón Sport Club was officially registered, with José Suárez Sánchez as its first president. The club's main driving force was Adaro Porcel, who had the financial and human support of José Suárez Sánchez, Paco Marrodán, and Pedro Sánchez.[6]

Gijón Sport Club began organizing daily football matches at the Prau Redondo (Redondo meadow), next to the Obispo road, and on 17 August 1903, Gijón played its first official match at the Redondo meadow, beating a certain Oviedo Foot-Ball Club.[5] From 1904 onwards, however, Prau Redondo began to be divided into plots and sold in lots, resulting in the blocks and streets that still stand today.[5] Football began taking root in the city, and soon gained followers among the young students of Colegio de la Inmaculada, a Jesuit school on the Cuesta de Ceares, and likewise, the school's courtyard became a frequent setting for encounters between schoolchildren and local teams, including Gijón SC.[4] Around 1910, a piece of land next to a flour mill owned by the Alvargonzález brother, today a national tourist inn, began to be used regularly as a playing field by Sport Gijón Club, and this playing field eventually became known as El Molinón.[4] Initially, the only existing elements of this field were the goals, but in the most important matches, the club provided chairs to accommodate the growing number of fans.[4]

Legacy

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Gijón Sport Club introduced the sport of football in the region, which eventually became a mass phenomenon among the youth of Gijón, with both its rules of play and its clothing serving as a reference for other teams of the time, including Sporting Gijonés, which was founded by Anselmo López and his young friends in 1905, and which would later become Sporting Gijón.[1]

Honours

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g "El Sporting, 110 años de una historia cargada de sentimientos" [Sporting, 110 years of a history full of feelings]. www.realsporting.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 7 December 2024.
  2. ^ "El Sporting de Gijón cumple 116 años" [Sporting Gijón celebrates its 116th anniversary]. offsidersports.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 7 December 2024.
  3. ^ "El prau Redondo y el origen del fútbol en Gijón" [Prau Redondo and the origin of football in Gijón]. www.lne.es (in Spanish). 17 March 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d "El Molinón: un siglo de fútbol y obras" [El Molinón: a century of football and construction]. www.lne.es (in Spanish). 31 August 2008. Retrieved 7 December 2024.
  5. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference Lne was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ "Rennes bat Lyon" [Rennes defeats Lyon]. gallica.bnf.fr (in French). L'Auto. 5 June 1916. p. 1. Retrieved 7 December 2024.