Brief History about the great FC BARCELONA

In terms of FC Barcelona, the club’s history can be clearly be divided into three main stages.
In the early days, the club constantly switched between different
grounds. In the second stage, the club was consolidated by finding a
permanent home at Les Corts. And the third stage, and the construction
of the Camp Nou, reflects the expansion and grandeur of the club on a
global scale.
The old Les Corts ground, inaugurated in 1922,
was remodelled several times in order to find room for Barça’s
constantly growing fan base. After the Spanish Civil War, the club
started attracting more and more members every year, which also meant a
considerably larger number of spectators at matches. This increased
support was the inspiration for several expansion projects, of the south
goal (1946), the north goal (1950), and the grandstand’s capacity
(1944). But it was becoming patently evident that what the club really
needed to do was build a completely new stadium, and therefore the board
of directors combined these improvements to Les Corts with plans to
make the dream of a new stadium a reality.
The need for a new stadium
From 1948, people were more and more keen on the idea of building a
completely new ground, but this was not an easy thing to do, and it was
necessary to convince the local authorities that a new stadium would be
able to fit in with the plans at the time to develop the upper area of
the Diagonal.
It is often said that what finally convinced the
board that there was no other option than the construction of a new
ground was the arrival of the now legendary Ladislau Kubala, one of the
finest players ever to appear for FC Barcelona. And although there can
be no doubting that Kubala attracted more interest than ever in the team
and meant the club’s spirits hit a new high, the decision to build was
inspired just as much by the two League titles won in 1947-48 and
1948-49, which was before the great Hungarian had signed for the club.
In fact, the first solid step towards a new stadium came in September
1950, fifteen days before Kubala played his first friendly match wearing
his new Barça colours. It was then that the president of the time,
Agustí Montal y Galobart, signed an option to purchase a site in the
area known as La Maternidad, an option that was to be taken up just two
months later.
What followed was a turbulent period, as the Camp
Nou commission decided on February 9, 1951 to change the location of
the future stadium to the area at the top of the Diagonal, and this led
to a series of sterile negotiations with the Authorities that did not
seem to be getting anywhere. The matter seemed to have been shelved for
good when Francesc Miró-Sans won the FC Barcelona presidential elections
on November 14, 1953. The new president was a fervent supporter of the
idea of building a new stadium as soon as possible and one of the first
things he did after coming into office on February 18, 1954 was to
locate the future stadium on the site purchased in 1950, rather than at
the top end of the Diagonal. And so, on March 28, before a crowd of
60,000 Barça fans, the first stone of the future Camp Nou was laid in
place under the presidency of civil governor Felipe Acedo Colunga and
with the blessing of the Archbishop of Barcelona, Gregorio Modrego.
The construction (1954-1957)
The architects of the new stadium were Francesc Mitjans Miró, cousin of
Miró-Sans, and Josep Soteras Mauri, with the collaboration of Lorenzo
García Barbón. More than a year later, on July 11, 1955, the club
commissioned the construction work to the INGAR SA company, who
estimated the project at 66,620,000 pesetas, claiming it would take 18
months to complete. However, the stadium would eventually cost an awful
lot more than the original estimate, eventually totalling around 288
million pesetas, an amount that would need to be covered by successive
issues of mortgage obligations ((100 million pesetas) and short term
bonds (60 million pesetas). This measure meant the construction of the
stadium could be financed, but would leave the club in heavy debt for
many years after.
The inauguration
The date on which the
stadium was to be inaugurated was September 24, 1957. A special
commission was organised whose task was to organise the kind of opening
ceremony that the occasion warranted, with two people in charge of the
operation: Aleix Buxeres (public relations) and Nicolau Casaus
(organisation). In the Barcelona City Council’s Salón de las Crónicas,
on Saturday September 21, José María de Cossío, a member of the Real
Academia Española, solemnly declared the celebrations of the
inauguration of the new stadium open. That same September weekend, a
series of international matches were played at Les Corts and the Palacio
Municipal de Deportes involving the club’s different sports teams.
Those days will go down in club history, and were set to words by the
great poet Josep M. de Sagarra in his sonnet titled 'Azul Grana', while
an anthem was written in honour of the new FC Barcelona stadium, with
Josep Badia putting the words to Adolf Cabané’s music.
On the
day of the 1957 Mercè Festival, the city was decked out in the FC
Barcelona colours. The celebrations continued with the holding of a
solemn mass and the blessing of the stadium by the Archbishop of
Barcelona, Gregorio Modrego. The Orfeón Graciense choir then performed
Händel’s ‘Hallelujah’ while the image of the Virgin of Montserrat was
exalted. The president’s box was packed with the most important
personages of the sporting and political worlds of the period, including
club president Francesc Miró-Sans; José Solís Ruiz, general secretary
for Movement, which was the equivalent of the ministry of sport at the
time; José Antonio Elola Olaso, head of the National Delegation of
Sportspeople; Felipe Acedo, civil governor of Barcelona, and Josep M. de
Porcioles, Mayor of Barcelona.
Although work on the stadium
was not yet complete, more than 90,000 spectators were able to witness
the event, which continued with representatives of all the major
football clubs in Catalonia parading on the pitch, as well as members of
the club’s other sports teams and the supporters clubs. The new Stadium
Anthem was then performed and the first game to be played at the Camp
Nou kicked off at half past four in the afternoon. FC Barcelona played a
friendly against Polish side Warsaw. The first Barça line-up ever to
appear at the Camp Nou featured: Ramallets, Olivella, Brugué, Segarra,
Vergés, Gensana, Basora, Villaverde, Martínez, Kubala and Tejada. A
different eleven took to the field in the second half: Ramallets,
Segarra, Brugué, Gràcia, Flotados, Bosch, Hermes, Ribelles, Tejada,
Sampedro and Evaristo. Barça won the match 4-2 with goals from Eulogio
Martínez (whose 11th minute strike was the first goal ever at the Camp
Nou), Tejada, Sampedro and Evaristo. At half time, 1,500 members of the
Agrupación Cultural Folclórica de Barcelona danced a huge sardana and
freed 10,000 doves. And so it was that a brand new period in the history
of FC Barcelona had begun.
No comments:
Post a Comment