Ethnicity and Soccer
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Ethnicity and Soccer: The effect of non-English speaking immigrants on the establishment of soccer in Canberra in the 1950s and 1960s.
Nick Guoth
Abstract: Soccer in Canberra as a sport had died prior to the war. The advent of Australias new immigration policy after 1945 saw a solid influx, over the next two decades, of non-English speaking Europeans to Australia and through their input they assisted in the re-emergence of soccer as a main sport in the region. From the Baltic states to the Southern Europeans of Greece and Italy, the change to the Canberra landscape was quite dramatic; soccer was one that benefited significantly.

In the days prior to the second world war ethnicity evolved around that of Scottish and non-Scottish when dealing with the sport of soccer in the region. In all the records of those who played soccer up until 1933, there was only one non-British player even though a number of Italians and others were working in the district.

When Australia opened its migration policy, after 1945, to include those from a larger number of non-English speaking backgrounds, many moved to Canberra to help build the Capital during the construction boom of the period. Yet this did not create the harmony that was hoped for.

Familiarity was essential to post-war immigrants. Australian culture was alien to new arrivals and Australians were at best indifferent to immigrants and sometimes antagonistic to the newcomers. A long-held Australian distaste for anything not British also helped drive immigrants into self-contained communities, their organisations serving as bulwarks against the British-Australian majority.

Soccer clubs in immigrant communities were an instrument through which all elements of life could be sustained. They enabled individuals to interact, establish patronage links, support networks and social contacts. They were institutions which could be used to create tightly-knit communities and they were valued as a way of retaining the support of the youth. There was a continuing fear among older immigrants that their children would abandon their heritage in favour of Australian ways. (1)

Following the second world war, soccer in the district did not return until 1948, when a team participated in the Goulburn competition. The sport moved back to Canberra in the following year although competitions were rare, and reporting of these even rarer.

In those few years following the recommencement of play, soccer teams comprised of mixed ethnic origins, yet team names were still mainly geographical. In 1951 four teams entered a competition Ð- Turner, Ainslie, Capitol Hill and Olympics. The origin of the latter is unknown, yet it is quite unlikely to bear any relation to the later Olympic teams of the Greeks. Matches were generally played at either Kingston or Turner Ovals.

Soccer from 1949 was administered by the ACT Soccer Association and in 1952 the local representative team dominated a visiting Sydney representative team 5-1. Yet it was the composition of the local team that made it multicultural. The team was: Blank, Reiser, Blak, McAlister, Gavranovic, Leitner, Bohrer, Czajor, Zuraszek, Van-Ven and Heiss.

1953 saw the emergence of team names with nationalistic identities. These included Balkans, Napad and Cracovia (the latter two being Polish in origins) and by August of that year the first incident involving an ethnic team occurred at Duntroon.

“A New Australian soccer team showed its first flash of temperament yesterday when it walked off the field in protest against a ruling by the referee at Duntroon. The team, Cracovia, disputed a decision about bringing on a reserve at half time.”(2)

The first of the three major powers of soccer came to being in 1954 when the Italians joined together to form Torino. Over the next few years they changed their team name to Roma in 1955, Naples from 1956-1958, Roma again in 1959 and finally to what we know as Juventus in late 1960.

The Dutch through Hollandia and the Ukrainians through DNIPRO also began play at this time yet it was Napad who carried the flag in close competitions. In 1956 the second major power in soccer, the newly formed Australian Grecian Soccer Club, Olympics, joined the second division. Wistula, representing the Polish community and most likely having taken over from Cracovia, joined Balkans, Hollandia, Naples, Napad and DNIPRO as the mainstay of the first division competition. If it wasnt for the Royal Military College team, the British backed Canberra United would have felt somewhat left out.

In Division two, Olympics were joined by BeQuick, another Dutch team, Melita from the Maltese community and Bohemians of Czech origins as the new ethnic teams.

Brawls on the field, mainly by spectators was unfortunately a common occurrence. In mid-1956, 200 of a 1,200-strong crowd invaded the field in a match between Wistula and Balkans when one of the players was punched. The game was eventually abandoned and the then Secretary of the ACT Soccer Association, Mr D. Hayes, said “that most of the teams in Canberra were formed by national groups. Although now without their former countries, they found national expression through soccer. New Australian spectators often became excited and tempers frequently became frayed.” (3)

By 1957 a new power emerged in Canberra soccer, the Hungarians. On the back of the visiting Hungarian team to Australia and the number of refugees who fled their country at the end of 1956, a team was formed in September of that year. It proved to be very successful, not only winning a cup final but also holding the current champions, Bohemians, to a 2-2 draw. They would become one of the dominant teams over the next five years, only to die out soon afterwards.

The third and final major power in soccer came to be in late 1958. On September 28th, a meeting was held and a decision was made to create the Croatian Soccer Club Canberra with the intention to enter a team in the ACT competition.

“With a love for soccer and a need to preserve their national identity, the Croatia Soccer Club was

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