The Gibraltar Football Association

 

  The Gibraltar Football Association, the GFA, is one

 of the Worlds oldest, dating back to 1895

 This article describes a little of its history and

 background and highlights the impasse in its attempts

 to obtain  affiliation with Uefa caused by the

intransigence of the Spanish football authorities                    

 

 

As a National Serviceman in the REME, I was posted to Gibraltar in February 1953 and quickly got caught up

in the football scene there

I played for my Unit in the Military league, then for the Combined Services in a series of games against the

 Gibraltar Football Association—the GFA

Then, in the spring of 1954, I was one of two Military personnel selected to play for the GFA against some of

the senior European teams that visited the Rock

So I played for and against the GFA and I became very impressed with the quality and natural ball skills of the

Gibraltarian and feel that they are being unfairly treated by Uefa

 

                                  An 1895 photograph of Gibraltar’s first civilian representative side

 

 


                           

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                    

 

 

                                                     First Military versus Civilian match in 1901

Gibraltarians inherited their love of football from kick about games with the British Garrison in the

 late 1800’s. With a genetic mix of Spanish, Italian (survivors from a shipwrecked Italian galleon

who settled at Catalan Bay, on the south side of the Rock) and the Brits (who have had a large

garrison there since 1704)they took to the beautiful game with passionate enthusiasm

On the isthmus, the flat area of land connecting Gib and Spain, they built a circular racetrack

enclosing a grassed football pitch and had their first competitive match against the military in 1901

 

                               A pre WW2 aerial photograph of the flat area of land connecting Gib to Spain 

                       The circular racetrack can be clearly seen, the football pitch is in the centre of the track

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                

                    The GFA flourished with senior and junior leagues being formed, cup competitions and

representative games were played against visiting teams and the Military, the first recorded match

with the Military was in 1901

All sport came to an abrupt end with the onset of WW2 when the civilian population was evacuated

to the UK

 

                        Football ends with the onset of WW2 and the football pitch

                            is sacrificed in the construction of a Military runway

In preparation for the invasion of North Africa, the race track and football pitch was dug up and a

military runway constructed, running out well into the bay.  A lot of the ballast came from rubble

from the caverns and tunnels that were excavated by the Tunnelling Company of the Royal

Canadian Engineers who, in 1941/42, dug out atotal of 150,000 tons of rock for an underground

hospital project at a place called Monkeys Cave

 

             The runway, stretching out into the bay, built on the site of the old racetrack and football pitch

                        with rock excavated by the tunnellers of  the Royal Canadian Engineers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


      

Wartime view down the runway showing the planes assembled, ready for the invasion of North Africa.      

                         They are parked on the grassy area, alongside the runway strip

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                   The war ends and football returns to Gibraltar

A new stadium—Victoria Stadium—was built not far from the Airport terminal buildings

and over the following years the GFA expanded into a well structured organisation with the

National Side—the GFA Select eleven— selected from a group of around 3000 registered

players

Its football style emulated that being played by Continental Europe and South America and

which was starting to cause problems for the English International side which until then had

dominated the football world and the GFAevolved into an effective and competitive team that

could punch well above its weight

 

              The GFA hosts visiting European teams and competes against the Military

From the late 1940’s the GFA attracted visiting teams from Europe, including Real Madrid FC,

Atletico Madrid FC, Real Valladolid FC, Hadjuk-Split, Jonkopings, Beogradski FC, Wacker FC,

The RAF also sent its UK team to play there in 1954; it had about five British international

including Ron Flowers from the Wolverhampton Wanderers and Ray Wood the Man United

goalkeeper

Against these senior professional teams they did well, including a notable 2;2 draw against

Real Madrid and a win against the RAF and Jonkopings

 

It also played an annual series of games against Gibraltar’s Military select eleven

—the Combined Services—and with compulsory National Service in place there were many

thousands of young men to choose from including a number of  UK professional players,

I was fortunate to be selected for the Combined Services in the series if five games in the

1953/54 season

 

                  This was me scoring against the GFA in the old Victoria stadium in the 1953/54 season

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


          

The Stadium held several thousand paying spectators and the competition between the Civil

and Military teams had built up over the years and the games were fiercely contested, as was

the riposte between the civil and military spectators

 

The Military lost the series by three games to two and I have to admit that they were the

 better side, although the speed and bounce of the clay playing surface at Victoria Stadium

 favoured the GFA and the referees, who were all Gibraltarian were very patriotic!

 

                                       The GFA eleven, pictured in 1953 at Victoria Stadium

              They won the series against the Combined Services by three games to two in the 1953/54 season

 

 

 

 


                                

                                  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                            

 

 

               Blazer badge awarded to Combined Services players after three representative games

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


        

 

               

 

             The new Victoria Stadium, built alongside the runway with a grassed pitch and running track

                         On the far side of the Stadium are junior soccer pitches and a hockey pitch

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                 

 

                               Gibraltar FA applies for membership of Uefa

About ten years ago the GFA formally applied for membership of Uefa, the controlling body for

European football

Membership would open up the possibility of entering some of Europe’s competitions with the

attraction of games against some of Europe’s best and the prestige and income that such games

would generate

Although minnows in the football arena, in the company of teams from Luxembourg and Andorra,

who have similar populations, they would not be out of place

Over time, they had their organisation, playing standards and facilities checked and approved by

Fifa so there appeared to be no reason why membership should not be granted

 

                                                        Spain objects

However, their application has been “stymied” at every juncture by the Spanish football authorities

using their not inconsiderable influence on the Uefa authorities, at one stage threatening to withdraw

from any competition that included Gibraltar

With Spain laying claim to Gib, the reasons are clearly politically motivated

 

                    Gibraltar successfully appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport

Disputes of a sporting nature in Europe are settled by the Court of Arbitration for Sport and they

duly found in Gibraltar’s favour and ordered Uefa to admit the GFA as a provisional member

This was done and it was taken for granted that at the next meeting of the Uefa committee, in

October2006, that the GFA’s provisional membership would be ratified

 

                                                  Spain delays ratification

On the basis of Spanish claims that Victoria Stadium and the Airport is built on the isthmus, which

Is not in British Gibraltar but on disputed land, ratification was postponed!

 

In response the GFA President—Joe Nunez  said:

 

It is a quite scandalous manner to behave for an International governing body and especially

one that advocates the need to comply with Court of Arbitration for Sport rulings”

 

So there the matter rests until the next Uefa ruling, it may be that with relations between Gib and

Spain improving a solution may be in the offing and we may yet see England going to Gibraltar in

some future European cup game—they may even manage a win!

 

Post script

I am sure that amongst the readers there are some who think that the inclusion of teams, from the smaller

Football Associations, such as Luxemburg, Andorra, San Marino and the Faroe Islands in European

Competitions are a waste of time.

I take the opposite view—these teams, when pitched against the top European teams always seem to play

well above themselves and add a little flavour to what is rapidly becoming an overly competitive and at

times a very fractious scene

 

Thanks to Ernest Falquero, Gibraltar News Online, for some of the photographs

 

               trevor_sidaway@hotmail.com                              Link to Home Page

                                                                                        Football in Gibraltar (part 1)

                                                                                        Football in Gibraltar (part 2)