STMIK AMIKOM YOGYAKARTA

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Peta Turisme

Liburan di Jogja bingung dengan mana aja tempat-tempatnya? Yuk.. kami sudah buat Peta Turisme khusus untuk Anda para travellers, uda bukan jamannya lagi nyasar atau bingung mau ke mana ya…

Sunset terbaik di jogja

Alam yang merupakan ciptaan Tuhan Yang maha Kuasa sangat banyak memberikan keindahan yang luar biasa yang menjadikan kita kagum akan kebesaranNya. Dibeberapa lokasi kita dapat menikmati keindahan matahari terbenam atau…

Rumah Ledok Kalasan

Ingin makan sambil merasakan nuansa Jawa? Datang saja ke Lemah Ledok Garden

Fc Barcelona

scuad Fc Barcelona back in full training

Senin, 25 Februari 2013

1961-1969 New Social Dimension


1961-1969 New Social Dimension

Bigger as a Club but Further from Sporting Success


During the 1960s, FC Barcelona saw a relentless increase in membership numbers. Paradoxically, this did not go hand in hand with sporting success. At the same time, Catalonia received a large number of migrants and it was in this context that Barça became an important mechanism for integration in Catalan society.

Irregular sporting success and economic austerity, partly due to the construction of the Camp Nou, meant that the Club was unable to sign big players; this was reflected in Barça’s results.

1950. The Arrival of Kubala, the Star of the Decade



1950. The Arrival of Kubala, the Star of the Decade


Samitier, the Club’s technical secretary, brought László Kubala to Barcelona


Kubala was a player that would change the history of Barça and who became legendary amongst the Club’s fans.
The Hungarian genius introduced new football techniques that had not been seen before, such as curling the ball.

The Les Corts grounds had become too small for the outstanding play of a team that dominated Spanish football and performed well at European level. Nobody doubted that the Club needed a bigger stadium.

1940-1949 Years of Perseverance


1940-1949 Years of Perseverance

Loyal to its Identity despite Adverse Circumstances
The toughest moments experienced by FC Barcelona football club were the initial post-war years. The Club would not disappear without a fight. Subject to relentless repression and purges by the army and authorities, the identity of the organisation was changed completely.

The purges also affected the players; anyone who had gone on the tour to Mexico and the United States was suspended for two years.
Many of the players were exiled abroad. The Club’s coat of arms and name were changed because they were not deemed to be sufficiently Spanish, and the Club’s presidents were scrupulously selected by the sports authorities.

The team formation in subsequent years, however, led to more promising title victories in the 1950s.
For many people, Barça’s matches at Les Corts represented an oasis of freedom during years of fear, misery and repression.

1930-1939 Struggling against History


1930-1939 Struggling against History

Commitment to Justice and Democracy



FC Barcelona was committed to social, political and cultural reform, initiated by the Republican Catalan government. The official Club newsletter in October 1932 made the Club’s position clear: “Our club’s popularity undeniably includes elements that are not related to sport.” Participation in political and cultural acts formed part of this commitment.

At the beginning of the Civil War, the Club’s employees were faced with the threat of having FC Barcelona taken from them, prompting them to make an important committee decision that ultimately saved the organisation. The committee demonstrated its firm resolve not to break away from its pre-war leadership.

The 1930s were marked by political instability and general crisis, which inevitably took its toll on FC Barcelona. During this decade, the Club endured many cataclysmic events, which included its founder’s death, the Second Spanish Republic, the Spanish Civil War and the assassination of its president, Josep Suñol. In summary, it was a period characterised by uncertainty, which saw a reduction in membership and the cancellation of some players’ contracts.




1909-1919 Consolidation at the Carrer de la Indústria Football Grounds



1909-1919 Consolidation at the Carrer de la Indústria Football Grounds

The Club’s Growth
In November 1908, the Club was struggling, with 38 of its members about to abandon it. Gamper was determined to keep the Club afloat and for the first time he became president of the organisation.
This marked a new stage in the Club's history, which consolidated it within the football panorama and social milieu of the city and country. A number of different circumstances played a part in this process, including its strengthening as an organisation via the steady growth of its members; the re-writing of the Club statutes, and the acquisition of the Club's own football grounds for the first time. At the same time, a range of sporting successes and growing recognition accorded to players saw football develop into a mass phenomenon, turning it into a professional sport.
The Club grew rapidly. The number of members increased from 201 in 1909 to 2,973 in less than ten years.
During these years, Barça laid down solid foundations in order to define the type of football club it wanted to be. This took it beyond the original dream of the group of friends that had founded it in 1899; the Club was here to stay.


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