1872 in sports

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1872 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.

American football

College championship

Events

Association football

International

  • 30 November — Scotland v. England in Glasgow is the first–ever official football international in that both teams are selected by their home associations, although strictly speaking the Scottish FA is not formally established until a few months later. The match is a goalless draw.

England

  • 16 March — inaugural FA Cup final. The Wanderers 1–0 Royal Engineers at Kennington Oval in London. The goal is scored by Morton Betts. In its way, this first final marks the beginning of major competitive football.
  • The FA rules that the ball must have a circumference of between 68 cm and 71 cm. It must be spherical and must consist of an India rubber bladder enclosed within a casing made of leather or another approved material. Also, the ball must weigh at least 396 grams but no more than 453 grams. The prescribed weight is interesting because leather balls will become notorious for gaining weight when wet: the weight can almost double if the ball gets really soaked.[1]

Scotland

  • Rangers Football Club, sometimes referred to as Glasgow Rangers, is formed in west Glasgow by four friends and originally called Argyle FC. The team's first pitch is on common land at Flesher's Haugh, Glasgow Green. The name is changed to Rangers later in the year.

Baseball

National championship

Events

Boxing

Events

  • No fights of note take place in 1872. American Champion Mike McCoole and his challengers are inactive.[2]

Cricket

Events

  • An experiment takes place at Lord's to study the effects of covering the pitch before the start of a match, the first time this is known to have been tried.[3]

England

Golf

Major tournaments

Horse racing

England

Australia

Canada

Ireland

USA

Rowing

The Boat Race

Rugby football

Events

References

  1. Among the many stories told about Bill Shankly is one concerning the introduction of plastic balls in the 1960s. Someone remarked to Shankly that so–and–so was a master of the "banana shot" and could bend the ball through the air. Shankly replied: "Huh! I'd like to see him try bending one of those soggy wet leather things we used to play with. It'd break his bloody ankle!"
  2. Cyber Boxing Zone – Mike McCoole. Retrieved on 8 November 2009.
  3. Bowen, p.284.

Bibliography

  • Rowland Bowen, Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1970