Browse Items (63 total)

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/AFA/ClubMyB/Platense1966-7_01.JPG
Number of members, various sports, and activities all provide some look at this club's activities in 1966 and 1967

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/MundoDeportivo/19530521_p01.JPG
Titles of articles include: "En todo terreno se evidenció el alma de nuestros muchachos," "Valentía y típico estilo criollo triunfaron en el primer cotejo." The matches in Buenos Aires were highly publicized. Perón attended the first match and…

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/MundoDeportivo/19530514_p01.JPG
A historical account of the "mighty" English and their success against Argentine teams

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/MundoDeportivo/19510517_p04-05.JPG
Various excuses are given for why Argentina lost to England in the first match between both national teams (locality, weather, historic quality of English football), but overall the sense is that trip showed Europeans the quality of Argentine fútbol.…

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/MundoDeportivo/19510510_p20-21.JPG
Peronist literature often viewed the past through an ultra-nationalist lens. Here, this article labels the Argentine players leaving for England as the "spiritual children" of Watson.

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/BibliotecaNacional/Racing/19500224_01.JPG
Perhaps scheduled to facilitate the signing of Boyé, Rácing plays in Italty against Genoa.

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/BibliotecaNacional/Racing/19500113_01.JPG
When clubs played in overseas "friendlies," they were widely seen as representing all of Argentina. Racing played several matches during the summer of 1950 against Barcelona, Athletic Bilbao, and Portugal's Benfica. Mention is made of the Spanish…

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/Campeon/19640527_p02.JPG
This is one of the few times that Argentine journalists witnessed violence and death at a foreign stadium. They were there to witness a match between Argentina and Perú, but also reported on the over 200 deaths that took place.

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/Campeon/19510516_p01.JPG
Campeón provides a more sensationalized, yellow press, account of Argentina's European tour

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/Campeon/19510509_p08.JPG
Very helpful to see the history between British football and Argentine fútbol. Even though the matches involved clubs teams from both countries, these matches were nonetheless "national" in tone.

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/Campeon/19510509_p02-03.JPG
These articles are written to educate readers ahead of the match, but they also demonstrate overt nationalism ("fútbol criollo"), warns readers about referees (hint, hint, they will be impartial), the strength of the English squad (veterans), and…

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/Campeon/19510509_p01.JPG
More hype for what is essentially an exhibition match

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/CirculoPeriodistas/Campeon/19501108_p10.JPG
Worth noting is that the USA team was the Denver Chevrolets, not an actual national team.

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/AFA/Books/Escobar_p143.JPG
In matches between ARG and URU, surnames changed quicky in a condensed timeframe of 1911 and 1916. 1912 is when the shift occurs after Alumni dissolves.

http://animales.rwanysibaja.com/thesis_photos/AFA/Books/Escobar_p20.JPG
In three matches between 1904 (the first visit to ARG by a British team) and 1923, we can see how the surnames became more Latin and less English.
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