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Charles Alcock & The Little Tin Idol (signed) CLICK TO BUY -SWIPE RIGHT FOR MORE

Charles Alcock & The Little Tin Idol (signed) CLICK TO BUY -SWIPE RIGHT FOR MORE

From the violence of ‘mob’ football on the High Streets of Britain to the cloisters and fields of its public schools, football emerged as the winter sport of the nation. However, it took the formation of the Football Association in 1863 and the help of the city of Sheffield (home to the world’s oldest club), to give structure to a less violent sport that could be played by all.

Who invented offside, heading, passing, the overhead kick, goalkeeping and eleven-a-side formations ? Why was a small team in Scotland so important to the development of the game?

On the 16th October 1871 Charles William Alcock, the Honorary Secretary of the FA, put a proposal to the meeting:

 

‘That a Challenge Cup be given for annual competition, open to all clubs belonging to the Football Association.’


Only fifteen teams entered the inaugural FA Cup competition but disallowed goals, late kick-offs, extra-time, replays, disputed decisions, cup-tied players and teams playing ‘ringers’ ensured it would become the most famous domestic Cup competition in the world.

150 years later this is the story of the birth of football and of:  ‘Charles Alcock & The Little Tin Idol’

Review from Historical Football Kits website: 

 

As HFK frequent flyers will know, from time to time I like to review books that cross my desk that are connected to the history of association football, especially if I have made some minor contribution. Today I should like to feature Charles Alcock & the Little Tin Idol, written and published by Ian Chester.

 

Charles William Alcock was one of the most influential figures in the early history of the game. After leaving Harrow School in 1859 he and his brother, John Forster Alcock, founded London's first football club Forest FC. Charles was the prime mover in the formation of Forest's famous successor, Wanderers FC. He captained the England team in all five matches against a Scotland XI between 1870 and 1872 although these are not recognised as full internationals. He also captained The Wanderers when they won the first ever FA Cup final in 1872. He served on the FA Committee 1866-1870 before being appointed as FA Secretary, a post he held until 1895. In April 1871 Alcock proposed to establish the FA Cup and he was instrumental in organising the first official international match against Scotland in 1872.

 

Ian Chester follows the early career of Charles and provides an overview of the development of the game including brief histories of the teams that entered the first FA Cup. The second half of the book is devoted to match-by-match reports from the competition itself.

 

The important thing to say about this book is that it is not a conventional history. As Chester writes in the Foreword, the book "is an attempt to use the historical information of the time to paint a picture of what it was like to play the game at its conception in Victorian society." The known facts form a structure around which the author weaves a more detailed narrative, complete with imagined dialogue.

 

While this book may not be for the purist historian it is nevertheless an informative and entertaining read.

 

About the Author:


Ian Chester is an author whose writing was developed in the world of football fanzines, local football programmes and magazines about living in France. Ian is also a keen historian and has had articles published in local history magazines. Having lived and worked in France for two years, his first book 'The Green Toothed Witch and the Yellow Canary' was a perfect platform for him to combine his love of sport, history, and France.

 

ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09HG55B8C
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published (3 Oct. 2021)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 330 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8479058967
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 12.7 x 2.11 x 20.32 cm

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