Tag Archives: Football’s Early Years

Gabriel Maletta PCQ 3

The Business of Soccer

Swain’s article reflects on the progression of football from a private school boy’s game into a professional sport in the later half of the 19th century in the region of Lacashire, England. Towards the middle of the 19th century rules were set in place to cement what is today known throughout in soccer. One of our early class discussions and readings focused on the various factors that led to the development of football in Brazil, specifically into a very technical and free-flowing style. A question posed by a member of the class asked why only in Brazil was this style invented. Swain seeks to answer the same question as to why in Lancashire, England was soccer able to take hold and fully evolve into a professional sport. Swain brings up many reasons, varying from the regions private schools to the Lancashire team’s easy attitudes toward player recruitment. Continue reading

About the “TIFO” (Things I Found Online) Articles

TIFOs (“Things I Found Online”) are brief pieces in which students post the link to an article, a video, photo or other types of documents they found online that address a theme each student chose to follow during the course.

Sheffield (England) Football Club, 1890s (Source: Wikipedia Commons)

Sheffield (England) Football Club, 1890s [Source: Wikipedia Commons]

During the January 2014 J-Term, students and the instructor will post TIFOs dealing with the history and contemporary realities of football as part of the course Hist. 203, “Soccer, Race and Nationalism,” taught by Prof. Luis Figueroa-Martínez, Associate Professor of History, at Trinity College, in Hartford, Connecticut.

Student TIFOs are usually related to the themes each student will explore in his or her final paper.

For example, in the case of the photo that appears above, while obtained from the Wikipedia Commons as public domain, the original image appears to have come from an article on Sheffield F.C. (football club) and the origins of “association football” in England in the mid-nineteenth century that was published in the BBC News website published in 2007.

The Sheffield F.C. is considered the oldest football club in the world. The article by the BBC provides more details about its origin and the role it played in the origins of modern “association” football in the mid-nineteenth century.