T he First International
In 1870, Charles Alcock, the Secretary of the Football Association, wrote to the Glasgow Herald to announce that a team of English players was to meet a team of Scottish players at Kennington Oval (Cricket Ground) in London
The Scots, however, were not happy about the fact that Alcock - an Englishman - selected the Scotish team from Scotish players who were playing for English teams.
The teams met on 19 November 1870 and England won 1-0. The match must have been a success because two similar matches followed in 1871.
Strictly speaking these games could not be classed as internationals because the Scottish teams were not truly representative of Scotland.
The First OFFICIAL International
The first official match between England and a genuine Scottish team took place in Glasgow on 30 November 1872.
There were 2,000 spectators. They paid a total of £102 to see the game. There was £38 profit. This paid the travel expenses of the team to the return leg at the Oval in 1873 - England won 4-2
Scenes from the first official International match ever played to association rules. Scotland v England 1872 .
These sketches, from a hand coloured woodcut print from drawings by W. Ralston, appeared in The Graphic,
14 December 1872.
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