1936 Chatham Cup
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The 1936 Chatham Cup was the 14th annual nationwide
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football Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball to score a goal. Unqualified, the word ''football'' normally means the form of football that is the most popular where the word is used. Sports commonly c ...
competition in
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. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. The 26 entries that had been received by the NZFA by 1 June were Southland: Corinthians and Southern. Westland: Taylorville, Marist and Runanga. Buller: All Blacks. Otago: Maori Hill, Mosgiel and Roslyn Wakari. Canterbury: Western A, Western B, Thistle and Nomads. Wellington: Hospital, Marist, Waterside, Scottish Wanderers, Petone, Diamond. South Auckland: Hamilton Wanderers, Rotowaro and Starr Town. Auckland: Ponsonby, Thistle, Mount Albert Grammar Old Boys and Abel

Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included
Auckland Thistle Auckland Thistle is a soccer club in New Zealand. Competed * 1925 Chatham Cup * 1926 Chatham Cup * 1930 Chatham Cup * 1934 Chatham Cup (winner) * 1936 Chatham Cup (runner-up) Players * Dennis Smith * Les Wood * Cliff Banham * Murray Ka ...
,
Waterside (Wellington) Waterside Karori AFC is an association football club in Karori, a suburb of Wellington, New Zealand. They currently play in the Capital Football Central League. History Waterside Karori was formed in 1987 when Karori Swifts merged with Waters ...
, Western (Christchurch), and Maori Hill (Dunedin).


The 1936 final

The final was the first in which two separate players (Bill White and Fred Angus) both scored two goals. One of White's goals was the first penalty to be scored from in a final. White scored first from the spot after just 12 minutes, and doubled his tally quarter of an hour later. Angus reduced the deficit to one before the break, and it was only through having a second strike disallowed that the Aucklanders were still behind at the interval. Injury to L. Williamson reduced Thistle to ten men for the majority of the second half (this being in the days before substitutes were allowed). Angus managed to score an equaliser for the northerners, however, but the scores were only to remain level briefly, with Geoff Ellis adding a third for Western. Williamson limped back on for the last few minutes, and though Thistle applied the pressure, Western held on to the lead.


Results


Semi-finals ("Island finals")


Final


1937 Chatham Cup

There was no competition in 1937. Several factors were taken into consideration in the decision to suspend the competition, of which two were significant. A visit by the England amateur side and a major South African
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tour led to a conflict of possible competition dates, which would have made the organisation and scheduling of matches difficult. The NZFA had also decided that the final should be held in the South Island for the first time; this led to a substantial reduction in the number of contestants, with only twelve teams confirming their entries by the close-off date, none of which were from Auckland. In truth, the competition had been struggling for several years with the difficulty of arranging dates for matches. Given the entirely amateur nature of the competition, matches were played solely at weekends, and therefore any Chatham Cup matches ate into the available time for local league competitions. There is some indication that not everyone involved in the organization of regional football was entirely unhappy with the suspension of the competition, though many were, and the remit to suspend it was greeted, according to one contemporary report with "a mixture of apathy and hostility by clubs and followers of the game."Papers Past — Evening Post — 28 July 1937 — AS OTHER PEOPLE SEE US
/ref> Teams who had expressed their willingness to take part in the 1937 competition were:
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,
Wellington Marist Wellington Marist AFC is an association football club in Wellington, New Zealand. The team is based at Kilbirnie Park in Kilbirnie. History Marist A.F.C. is one of the oldest football clubs in Wellington, having won the Chatham Cup in 1932 and ...
,
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, Petone, Scottish Wanderers, Western,
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,
Christchurch Thistle Christchurch Thistle was a soccer club in New Zealand. The club lost 6 of the clubs first 11 during World War II, including Alan Charles Davies. Club President Mr. A McAnulty said that "while the club was proud of the way in which its members h ...
, Millerton All Blacks, Runanga,
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, and Invercargill Thistle. A provisional entry from
Hamilton Wanderers Hamilton Wanderers Association Football Club is a semi-professional Association football club from Hamilton, New Zealand, that currently competes in the Northern League. National League Hamilton Wanderers joined the New Zealand Football Champi ...
was also received, but this was later withdrawn.


References


Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation New Zealand 1936 page
{{Chatham Cup seasons Chatham Cup Chatham Cup Chatham Cup