Within the context of the emerging Association game in Scotland, the late historian and broadcaster
Bob Crampsey compared the role of the Queen's Park club with that of the MCC in Cricket and
The Royal and Ancient Golf Club in Golf. The Glasgow club's control of the early playing rules in Scotland, early management of the Scotland national team, and instigation of the
Scottish Football Association and
Scottish Challenge Cup provide evidence of their status as the 'Premier' or 'Senior' club of Scotland. Within this context, the club's development of a scientific form of combination, which would supersede existing playing styles, should be considered. The most obvious outcome from the successful implementation of a football culture is the creation of a 'legacy'. Due to the club's unceasing commitment to promote the game across Scotland, the Queen's Park playing style quickly became a 'Scottish style'. This playing style was imported into the north and midlands of England during the 1870s and 1880s, by the club itself, by other Scottish clubs, and by an increasing wave of Scottish footballers, who are often referred to by contemporary commentators as '
Scotch Professors', (because of the science of their game). The passing game, as a significant football culture, does not arrive in London until the creation of the London Corinthians in 1882 (in response to Scottish supremacy at international level). Between 1872 and 1887 Scotland would win 10 times and lose only twice against England in the annual internationals. The impact of the Scotch Professors in the midlands and north of England would lead to the legalisation of professionalism in 1885 and the development of league football in 1888.
The Rules of the Field, 1867 On 9 August 1867, one month after the club's formation, the 'Rules of the Field' were discussed and accepted by the Queen's Park committee. They were based on the Association rules of the period but the club made a number of changes, the most notable being the offside rule. In 1866 the FA had moved from a rugby style offside rule preventing the ball from being passed forward to a three-man ruling. Queen's Park would adopt an even more radical approach, which by its design, would open up the game even more to the forward pass. The rule was recorded as follows, Offside only came into being 15 yards from the goal and even then only two defenders were required to be goal side for a player to be onside. The openness of the rule allowed players to be deployed across the field and encouraged the forward pass. In some respects the rule has similarity to the
Sheffield Rules in that it enabled the long forward pass but, unlike the Sheffield code, it also prevented players from poaching or sneaking in front of goal. This carefully considered adaptation of the offside rule demonstrates the meticulous planning and organisation behind the club. It would win the club many admirers including
William McGregor, 'Father of the Football League', who pays the following tribute, Although the game of the late 1860s was rudimentary, the basis for the club's playing style, and the men who would make it happen, all date from this early period. From this era the passing game of Queen's Park would evolve from simplistic to systematic forms of combination which would be copied throughout Scotland and the UK.
Regular practice and instruction, 1868 – 1872 At a time when matches against other clubs were difficult to arrange, Queen's Park played internal matches dividing up its membership. As
Richard Robinson in his early history of the club explains regular practice and instruction, key elements of the combination game, were already being undertaken.
Robert Gardner (who captained and picked the Scotland team in the first official international match), as captain of the club, had a profound influence over tactics and team selections. In the match against Hamilton Gymnasium on 29 May 1869 he distributed cards to his team before the match showing each man where he must play. According to Robinson it was the regular practise games that enabled Queen's Park to develop their brand of combination football.
Queen's Park and 2-2-6 formation, 1872 Combination was very much in evidence in both the FA Cup tie against the Wanderers (5 March 1872) and in the international match against England (30 November 1872). In both games the club lined up in a 2-2-6 formation which would be their preferred line up for the remainder of the decade. In the international match Queen's Park organised the game and provided all of the Scotland players from within its own membership. The club would form the backbone of the Scotland national team throughout the 1870s and well into the 1880s. The tactic of combination was certainly successful in combating the superior weight and strength of the opposing players. In the game against Wanderers, the
Field magazine wrote of Queen's Park, The
Herald, in the same game noted that, In the first official international match, the first specific reference to a collective passing culture is recorded within the history of Association football. The earliest contemporary reference, dating from 14 December 1872, appears in
The Graphic, a weekly illustrated newspaper published in London, and gives clear detail as to the opposing playing styles of the two teams: Testament to the combination style of football adopted by Queen's Park in the game is given in an eyewitness account by
Walter Arnott, who would himself become a leading player for Queen's Park,
Corinthians and Scotland during the 1880s and early 1890s. Arnott gives a clear description of the historic event at which he was present as a spectator. Once again the difference in weight is mentioned, It would appear that the Queen's Park players, unable to match their opponents individually for strength, paired up to stop the dribbling runs of the England players when defending their own goal and played short passes on the run when attacking their opponent's goal. References alluding to the fact that the Scotland players 'worked from first to last well together, through knowing each other's play' can be found in the Scotsman. while the
Glasgow Herald comments that, "The strong point of the home club was that they played excellently well together."
Creating a Scottish style Queen's Park took their brand of football to other parts of Scotland, arranging exhibition matches in Dunbartonshire, Edinburgh and Dundee. The game that they promoted was quite different from the 'backing up' style of the Royal Engineers and the 'passing on' game of Sheffield. In a match against
Vale of Leven, played in February 1873, the Glasgow club's systematic form of passing is highlighted in the match report, Their passing game became a Scottish style which was distinctive from other parts of the UK. An early example of other Scottish clubs emulating the passing style and 2-2-6 formation of Queen's Park can be found in January 1874. The
Glasgow Herald's report on the match between the
3rd Lanark and
Western clubs states,
Dribbling and Passing The argument contained within the
Royal Engineers section which opposes the Scottish view of the first international match focuses on the contemporary
Scotsman newspaper article which gives reference to Scottish players dribbling the ball. The Scottish argument, however, contends that the playing style of the Queen's Park players, throughout the 1870s, accommodated both
dribbling and passing. The evidence is certainly plentiful. This can be seen in
The Graphic newspaper article which on the one hand refers to the Scottish team as being adept at passing the ball but on the other also presents evidence of Scottish players dribbling the ball, In short, the playing tactics of Queen's Park FC allowed for the ball to be passed when possession was about to be lost or when a greater advantage could be attained; the dribble forward was augmented with a short pass to a teammate. Writing in the
Football Annual in 1883,
Charles W. Alcock observed that, Tellingly C.W. Alcock, the FA's most influential administrator during the 1860s and 1870s, makes no reference in any of his numerous articles to the role of the Royal Engineers in developing a passing game. This confirms that the backing up system of the Engineers did not involve systematic passing. In contrast to this, the newspaper article which features Queen's Park's victory over Wanderers in October 1875 (a match in which C.W. Alcock and the Anglo Scot A.F. Kinnaird played in for Wanderers) gives a concise description of the style of combination adopted by the club, particularly in the section which describes the second and third goals,
The passing game and Scottish supremacy In the south east of England as the coordinated system of 'backing up' began to decline, the systematic passing game of Queen's Park would eventually win through. It was England's 5–1 defeat in 1882 to a Scotland team featuring seven Queen's Park players which led to
Nicholas Lane Jackson, a prominent member of the FA, creating the famous
Corinthians team. This direct reaction to the success of Queen's Park and the Scotland national team is quoted in the book
Corinthians and Cricketers, The rudimentary 'passing on' game of Sheffield could not compete with the scientific short passing style championed by Queen's Park and at representative level the
Glasgow FA would experience 14 wins and only one defeat against the
Sheffield FA in the 17 fixtures played between 1874 and 1890. A good example of the difference in playing styles is cited in the Scottish Football Annual of 1877/78 which gives the following comments on the Glasgow v Sheffield match of 1877,
Legacy of the Scottish combination game Queen's Park's combination game, which had emerged as a general 'Scottish style' due to the club's high standing and her energetic promotion of the game, would spread south of the border, to the north and midlands of England, through the efforts of the club and with the arrival of the
Scotch Professors.
William McGregor, the Father of the Football League and president of
Aston Villa FC, pays the following tribute, Teams throughout England, from
Sunderland (the team of all the talents),
Preston North End (
Invincibles),
Liverpool F.C. (the team of the Macs),
Bolton Wanderers,
Sheffield Wednesday and
Blackburn Rovers in the north, to Aston Villa and
Derby County in the Midlands, and
Arsenal,
Fulham and
Southampton in the South were greatly influenced by the Scottish style through the importation of
Scotch Professors, trained in the Queen's Park style. British administrators and coaches would take the Scottish short passing game overseas. These include
Jimmy Hogan,
John Cameron,
Jock Hamilton,
Fred Pentland,
Alexander Watson Hutton,
John Harley and
John Dick. The wealthy miner Samuel Tyzack, who alongside and shipbuilder Robert Turnbull funded the
Sunderland A.F.C. "team of all talents," often pretended to be a priest while scouting for players in Scotland, as Sunderland's recruitment policy in Scotland enraged many Scottish fans. In fact, the whole Sunderland lineup in the
1895 World Championship was made from entirely Scottish players. Sunderland striker, the Scot
John Campbell, became league top scorer three times, in all of which Sunderland won the league. Important to his success in attack were other "Team of All Talents" players from Scotland:
Jimmy Hannah and
Jimmy Millar. Their goalkeeper
Ned Doig set a 19th-century world record by not conceding any goals in 87 of his 290 top division appearances (30%).
Preston North End, the first English team to win the Championship and Cup "
double", did so with a majority of their team being made up of Scottish players. In the first season, they went undefeated both in the league and the
FA Cup, which led to them being known as "the invincibles." ==Cambridge University AFC: The first modern formation (early 1880s)==