Montevideo Cricket Club

The Montevideo Cricket Club (abbreviated "MVCC") is an Uruguayan sports club based in Montevideo, established in 1861 by English immigrants. Its predecessor had been the now defunct "Victoria Cricket Club", founded in 1842.[1]

Montevideo Cricket Club
Full nameMontevideo Cricket Club
UnionUnión de Rugby del Uruguay
Founded18 July 1861 (1861-07-18)
LocationMontevideo, Uruguay
Ground(s)Solymar
PresidentAlejandro Fynn Howard
League(s)Campeonato Uruguayo
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
www.mvcc.com.uy

Montevideo has been ranked 8th as the oldest rugby union club (and the first outside Europe) by the World Rugby Museum of Twickenham.[2][3] Apart from football and rugby, the other sports currently practised at the club are field hockey, speed badminton and tennis.

History

The MVCC proper was founded on 18 July 1861.[1] The club is recognised as the oldest sports club of Uruguay, having been the pioneer in the practise of cricket, field hockey, association football, rugby union and tennis.[3]

In 1868, the MVCC played its first international cricket game against Argentine Buenos Aires Cricket Club. It is the oldest international match registered in South America and was played on MVCC's ground in La Blanqueda.[1][4]

The MVCC played its first association football match in 1878, between MVCC and a visiting ship. This was the first organised match in Uruguay. In 1881, the MVCC played its first club match against the Montevideo Rowing Club. MVCC also took part of the first international match involving an Uruguayan football squad, when faced the "Buenos Aires Team" at Montevideo in 1889.[5]

In 1983, the MVCC first played the Club Universitario de Buenos Aires (C.U.B.A.), and has played them annually ever since.

In 1974 and 1975, the MVCC swimming teams won the summer championships in swimming and diving.

The ladies' field hockey team won the local championships in 1987, 1989, 1993 and 1997, and men's team won its first championship in 2000. The club also competes in athletics, cycling and tennis.

Ground

Its original ground was known as "La Blanqueada" or the "English ground",[1] but in 1889, it moved from its original location to make way for a military hospital to a new site nearby. This was also known as "La Blanqueada" or the "New Ground" to distinguish it from the original site. The new site was purchased by debentures that members bought.

The MVCC moved a third time in 1945 to near the town of Sayago. It moved for a fourth time to Carrasco, in 1955, where fields were shared by The British Schools of Montevideo.

In 1996, the MVCC moved yet again to Solymar on the outskirts of Montevideo.[6]

Rugby

English cricket clubs were the incubators of rugby in South America, although rugby has survived much better in these countries than cricket has.[7] It has been claimed that MVCC played rugby football as early as 1865,[7] but the first certain match was between Uruguayans and British members of the MVCC in 1880.[7] One observer, apparently disdainful of the Britons mixing with the "natives", found it:

"...at the same time sublime and ridiculous... [that the] young sons of distinguished families practising the games of the Anglo-Saxon in their youth and young Englishmen of blond Albion, face to face ... and on all sides [were] people strangely dressed who ran and shouted, pushed, fell, rose and finished by joining to form now a circle, now a pyramid, now a compact mass in which one could only distinguish heads without shoulders, legs without bodies and hands without arms."[7]

Carlos E. Cat, also known as "Charlie", was a member of the MVCC, and was also president of the club in 1946.

In 1950, the Campeonato Uruguayo de Rugby was inaugurated and continues today. The first game was between the MVCC, and Carrasco Polo Club.[1]

MVCC had some success in the 1950s, winning the national title 3 times. In recent years however, the club has had to live in the shadows of Montevideo's two powerhouses: Carrasco Polo Club and Old Christians Club.

Honours

Rugby union

1951, 1953, 1956

References

  1. Historia del club at official website Archived 9 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 1 February 2013
  2. "World Rugby 1820-1870 at RFU.com". Archived from the original on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  3. "Decano entre decanos" by Claudio Barragán & Gustavo Castro at El Area website
  4. El Origen Británico del Deporte Argentino by Víctor Raffo, Gráfica MPS (2004) - ISBN 978-987-43-8107-1
  5. "Museo del MVCC" on MVCC website
  6. Montevideo Cricket Club in history Archived 16 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, p4, retrieved 31 August 2009
  7. Richards, p54, Chapter 2 Practising the Games of the Anglo-Saxon...

Bibliography

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