Latin Cup
The trophy awarded to champions
Organising bodyFrance FFF
Italy FIGC
Portugal FPF
Spain FEF
Founded1949
Abolished1957 (1957)
RegionSouthwest Europe
Number of teams4
Related competitionsMitropa Cup
Balkans Cup
Last championsSpain Real Madrid
(2nd title) (1957)
Most successful club(s)Spain Barcelona
Italy Milan
Spain Real Madrid
(2 titles each)

The Latin Cup[1] was an international football tournament for club sides from the Southwest European nations of France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. In 1949 the football federations came together and requested FIFA to launch the competition. European clubs could not afford hefty travel costs so competition was staged at the end of every season in a single host country. The competition featured two semi-finals, a third place play-off and a final.[2]

This competition is considered a predecessor of club tournaments in Europe, namely the European Cup,[3] the first edition of which was held in 1955.

History

The tournament began in 1949 and was usually played between the league champions of each of the participating countries. Every four years, a ranking would be determined for the countries based on their sides' performances in the Latin Cup. The competition was last played for in 1957, two years after the introduction of the UEFA-sanctioned European Cup. Real Madrid played in and won both the European Cup and the Latin Cup in 1957.

Prior to the introduction of the European Cup, the Latin Cup was considered the most important cup for clubs in Europe, the longer-established Mitropa Cup having gone into decline after World War II. The Latin Cup has been described one of the forerunners "of the European Cup" by UEFA.[3]

According to Jules Rimet, 3rd President of FIFA, the Latin Cup was a competition created by FIFA at request of the four nations that contested it, but its regulation was made by a committee composed of members from the competing federations, and FIFA did not participate actively in its organisation.[4]

The Latin Cup was based on cycles of 4 years, being held in one country each year. The champion of each edition achieved the most points (4) to its Federation while teams placed 2nd, 3rd and 4th received 3, 2 and 1 points respectively. Moreover, the Federation which totalised the most points every four years received the trophy, while the champion club was given a smaller replica of it.[2]

The first edition was opened on 20 June 1949, with the Sporting CP vs Torino at Chamartín Stadium of Madrid. One month before 18 of Torino players had died at Superga air disaster. Barcelona would be the first champion of the tournament after beating Sporting 2–1 at the final.[2]

The second edition clashed with 1950 FIFA World Cup of Brazil so most of the players of league champions were called up by their respective national teams. Therefore, Lazio, the fourth of Serie A, participated in the Latin Cup that year. In 1951, French runners-up Lille OSC replaced French champions Nice, who relinquished the 1951 Latin Cup in order to play the Copa Rio. Due to a fixture clash with the 1954 FIFA World Cup in Switzerland, no Latin Cup was held that year (the participants would have been Real Madrid, Sporting CP, Lille OSC and Internazionale—the latter did not get another chance to enter).

After the first four editions played, the Royal Spanish Football Federation won the first cycle with a total of twelve points, eight of them contributed by Barcelona and four by Atlético Madrid.[2]

Results

All teams were champions of the preceding domestic season in each nation, except where it indicates, detailing their finishing position in respective leagues.

Year Final Third Place Match Venue City
Winner Score Runner-up Third place Score Fourth place
1949Spain Barcelona2–1Portugal Sporting CPItaly Torino5–3France ReimsEstadio ChamartínMadrid
1950Portugal Benfica
3–3 (a.e.t.)
France BordeauxSpain Atlético Madrid2–1Italy Lazio (4)Estádio NacionalOeiras
2–1 (a.e.t.)
1951Italy Milan5–0France Lille (2)Spain Atlético Madrid3–1Portugal Sporting CPSan SiroMilan
1952Spain Barcelona1–0France NiceItaly Juventus3–2Portugal Sporting CPParc des PrincesParis
1953France Reims3–0Italy Milan (3)Portugal Sporting CP4–1Spain Valencia (2)Estádio NacionalOeiras
1954Not held
1955Spain Real Madrid2–0France ReimsItaly Milan3–1Portugal Belenenses (2)Parc des PrincesParis
1956Italy Milan (2)3–1Spain Athletic BilbaoPortugal Benfica (2)2–1France NiceArena CivicaMilan
1957Spain Real Madrid1–0Portugal BenficaItaly Milan4–3France Saint-ÉtienneSantiago BernabéuMadrid

Titles by club

Club Titles Winning years
Italy Milan21951, 1956
Spain Barcelona21949, 1952
Spain Real Madrid21955, 1957
Portugal Benfica11950
France Reims11953

Titles by country

Country Titles Winning years
Spain Spain41949, 1952, 1955, 1957
Italy Italy21951, 1956
France France11953
Portugal Portugal11950

Top scorers by year

Year Player Goals
1949Portugal Fernando Peyroteo3
1950Portugal Arsénio Duarte
France Édouard Kargu
France André Doye
3
1951France André Strappe5
1952Italy Giampiero Boniperti3
1953Portugal João Martins4
1954Not held
1955Spain Héctor Rial
France Léon Glowacki
Italy Nils Liedholm
2
1956Italy Juan Alberto Schiaffino3
1957Spain Francisco Gento3

See also

References

  1. (French: Coupe Latine; Italian: Coppa Latina; Portuguese: Taça Latina or Copa Latina; Spanish: Copa Latina)
  2. 1 2 3 4 La curiosa aventura de la Copa Latina by Alfredo Relaño on El País, 25 September 2016
  3. 1 2 Goals, not coal, for Kopa on UEFA website, 4 February 2011
  4. Rimet, Pierre (4 January 1951). Rodrigues Filho, Mário (ed.). "Cartas de Paris – Das pirâmides do Egito ao colosso do Maracanã, com o Sr. Jules Rimet" [Letters from Paris – From the pyramids of Egypt to the colossus of Maracanã, with Mr. Jules Rimet]. Jornal dos Sports (in Portuguese). No. 6554. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. p. 5. Retrieved 2 June 2017. A Taça Latina é uma competição criada pela F. I. F. A. a pedido dos quatro países que a disputam atualmente. Mas o Regulamento é feito por uma Comissão composta por membros das Federações concorrentes e de fato a F. I. F. A. não participa ativamente na organização

Further reading

  • Todeschini, Maurício (2008). Taças Internacionais - Clubes 1927-2007. LuísAmorimEditions. ISBN 978-989-95672-2-1.


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