The Calcutta Cricket & Football Club (CC&FC) (formally named as Calcutta Cricket Club)[1] is a multisports club based in Kolkata, West Bengal, India.[2] Founded in 1792 as a cricket institution,[3] the football and rugby sections were added when it merged with Calcutta FC (oldest association football club in Asia, founded in 1872) in 1965.[4][5]
Football club
Calcutta C&FC
Full name
Calcutta Cricket & Football Club
Short name
CCFC
Founded
1792;230years ago(1792) (as Calcutta Cricket Club Clippers)
1872;150years ago(1872) (as Calcutta Football Club)[note 1]
1965;57years ago(1965) (as Calcutta Cricket & Football Club)[note 2]
Ground
CC&FC Ground, Ballygunge Calcutta FC Ground, Maidan
Founded as one of the earliest European clubs in Calcutta,[6] British India, Calcutta FC introduced rugby in the country.[7] They later started playing association football and have enjoyed rivalry with fully indigenous clubs, primarily Mohun Bagan.[8][9] Sports currently practised at the CC&FC include: cricket, football, field hockey, rugby, cycle polo and tennis. The football team currently competes in the Premier Division B of the Calcutta Football League, conducted by the Indian Football Association (IFA).
The club's cricket and football teams participates in their respective divisions as "Calcutta Cricket Club" for cricket and "Calcutta Football Club" for football.[10][11] Their hockey and rugby teams participates under the combined name of "Calcutta Cricket and Football Club",[12][13] with the hockey team also known as CCFC Gremlins.[14]
History
Further information: History of cricket in India to 1918
Ground of the Calcutta Cricket Club, 15th Jan'y. 1861 H.M. 68th L.I. from Rangoon, versus the Calcutta Cricket Club, a lithograph after a watercolour by Percy Carpenter, depicting a visit by the 68th (Durham) Regiment of Foot (Light Infantry).
The Club was founded as the "Calcutta Cricket Club Clippers" by British expatriates who had come over with the British East India Company.[15][16][17] Have been in existence since 1792,[4][18] it is the second oldest cricket club in the world after Marylebone Cricket Club.[1][19] On 23 February 1792, Madras Courier reported the schedule of match between Calcutta Cricket Club and a team from Barrackpore, and the news was later highlighted by Irwin Rosenwater on The London Times.[20]
During its first years of existence, the Calcutta Cricket Club played its home games near river Hooghly but it was not until 1841 when the institution got land to establish its venue. In 1889–90, the club came into limelight when Marylebone Cricket Club came to play in Calcutta by responding to the club's invitation, which was the first visit of a foreign team to play cricket in India.[20] It was later merged with the Calcutta Football Club (incorporated in 1872,[21][22] where both footballs — rugby and association were practised)[23][24][25] and the Ballygunge Cricket Club over the years to become the "Calcutta Cricket and Football Club" in 1965.[4]
CCFC main building in Ballygunge
Run by the British, Calcutta Football Club was once one of the leading football teams[26] and had a great rivalry specially with Mohun Bagan.[27] The team for the first time was defeated by Mohun Bagan in 1923 in the return leg of CFL, but managed to clinch both the league and IFA Shield titles in that season.[28][29] Other rivals of the club were Mohammedan Sporting, Aryan and Dalhousie.[30]
Calcutta FC won the prestigious Calcutta Football League (CFL) eight times,[31] and the IFA Shield nine times[32] before merging to the Calcutta Cricket Club.
Home ground
There was absence of permanent venue for the club. They used grounds in Esplanade, parallel with the river Hooghly, between Fort William and Government House.[4] In 1825, 'Sketch of the Maidan' was done by the club, and in 1841, they were allowed to enclose the ground. The club later used Auckland Circus Gardens.[4][33]
The club later played its home games at the Calcutta FC ground in Kolkata Maidan, now known as Mohun Bagan Ground.[34] It was used as venue of the 1954 edition of Quadrangular Series.[35][36]
Notable members
Main entrance to the CCFC club tent of football section (in left), beside the club tent of Mohun Bagan Athletic Club in Kolkata Maidan area.
A large number of notable athletes are associated with the club, including:
The date refers to the foundation of the Calcutta Football Club in 1872
The date refers to the original Calcutta Cricket Club established in 1792, before merging to the Calcutta F.C. (1872–1965) in 1965 to form the current club.
Fourth oldest football tournament, organized by the IFA (W.B.), and played between the local clubs of West Bengal and other invited ones.
Dutta, P. L., Memoir of 'Father of Indian Football' Nagendraprasad Sarbadhikary (Calcutta: N. P. Sarbadhikary Memorial Committee, 1944) (hereafter Memoir)
Sharma, Nikhil Paramjit; Gupta, Shantanu (4 February 2019). India's Football Dream. SAGE Publications India. ISBN9789353283063. Archived from the original on 4 October 2022. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
Ghosh, Saurindra Kumar. Krira Samrat Nagendraprasad Sarbadhikary 1869–1940 (Calcutta: N. P. Sarbadhikary Memorial Committee, 1963) (hereafter Krira Samrat).
Roselli, John. Self Image of Effeteness: Physical Education and Nationalism in Nineteenth Century Bengal. Past & Present (journal). 86 (February 1980). p.121–48.
Sinha, Mrinalini. Colonial Masculinity, The Manly Englishman and the Effeminate Bengali in the Late Nineteenth Century (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995).
Chatterjee, Partha. The Nation and Its Fragments: Colonial and Post-colonial Histories (Calcutta: Oxford University Press, 1995).
Das, Communal Riots in Bengal, p.170; Amrita Bazar Patrika, 8 July 1946, 4; File‐5/27/46 Poll (I), the IB Daily Summary Information of 8 July 1946.
Mason, Football on the Maidan, p.144; Dimeo, Football and Politics in Bengal, p.62.
Sen, Dwaipayan (2013). "Wiping the Stain Off the Field of Plassey: Mohun Bagan in 1911". In Bandyopadhyay, Kausik; Mallick, Sabyasachi (eds.). Fringe Nations in World Soccer. Routledge. ISBN978-1-317-99810-5.
Sen, Dwaipayan (2013). "Wiping the Stain Off the Field of Plassey: Mohun Bagan in 1911". In Bandyopadhyay, Kausik; Mallick, Sabyasachi (eds.). Fringe Nations in World Soccer. Routledge. ISBN978-1-317-99810-5.
Sen, Ronojoy (2015). "The Empire Strikes Back: The 1911 IFA Shield and Football in Calcutta". Nation at Play: A History of Sport in India. Columbia University Press. ISBN978-0-231-16490-0.
"OUR SPORTSMEN". 123india.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 27 September 2007.
Hassan Niru, Mahabubul (7 July 2013). "আমাদের ফুটবলের বেলা অবেলা কালবেলা"[Days and moments of our football]. mahaneebas.wordpress.com (in Bengali). Dhaka, Bangladesh. Archived from the original on 6 April 2014. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
Wadwha, Arjun (19 May 2008). "History of Football in India". thesportscampus.com. TheSportsCampus. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
"FOOTBALL IN BENGAL". www.ifawb.com. The Indian Football Association (West Bengal). Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
Majumdar, Rounak (22 April 2019). "The Golden Years of Indian Football". www.chaseyoursport.com. Kolkata: Chase Your Sport. Archived from the original on 7 November 2020. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
Basu, Goutamranjan (29 July 2020). "মোহনবাগান এবং ভারতীয় ফুটবলের শুরুর কথা"[Mohun Bagan and the beginning of Indian football]. meghbangla.com (in Bengali). Kolkata: Megh Bangla Internet Magazine. Archived from the original on 5 April 2022. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
Mergulhao, Marcus (21 April 2020). "Kiyan ready to shoulder Nassiri burden". timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Panaji, Goa: The Times of India. Archived from the original on 14 August 2021. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
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