Competition that started in the 1920s amid on-pitch tensions also ushered in era of the long-distance travelling fan in Europe
Contemporary football fans may be surprised to learn that the Mitropa Cup, an ante litteram version of the Champions League, was reserved for clubs from nations, with the exception of Italy, which have disappeared from the map of football that counts. Countries such as Austria, Hungary and Czechoslovakia evoke, in the most scattered exploits, outstanding performances that can be traced back to a few editions of World Cups or European Championships that took place over the decades.
In the same way, modern fans might be surprised that European football was dominated almost 100 years ago by teams that have fallen into oblivion. A quick glance at the list of Mitropa winners, for example, reveals the absence of the German, Spanish, Dutch and English teams that would dominate the scene after the second world war. In addition, when fans think of the Mitropa their minds tend to go to the most recent editions, those played between 1979 and 1992 which were reserved for the winners of the nations’ respective second divisions.
More Stories
Uefa president Ceferin makes outspoken intervention on European politics
Raiders’ Hudson Young and Morgan Smithies apologise for Las Vegas altercation ahead of NRL opener
Tanaka sends Leeds five points clear in dramatic late win over Sheffield United