- Peter Peel
Peter J. Peel (born 1866 in
Dublin, Ireland ; diedMay 3 ,1960 inChicago, Illinois ) was a three time president of theUnited States Football Association . He also managed the U.S. Olympic team at the1924 Summer Olympics and founded thePeel Cup .Biography
Peel grew up in Ireland, but in 1893 travelled to the United States to visit the Chicago World’s Fair. He remained in Chicago, becoming an integral part of the city’s athletic scene. In 1909, he established the
Peel Cup , an annual cup competition to crown theIllinois state champion. Peel intended this cup to have two purposes, one was to promote a high level of competition and also to raise money for a player benefit fund. The Peel Cup the longest running U.S. soccer cup until superseded in 1970 by the Illinois Governor’s Cup. [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/peelcup.html Peel Cup] ] Three years later, he established the Peel Shield which was awarded to theCook County, Illinois high school championship. [ [http://www.ihsa.org/initiatives/hstoric/soccer_early.htm Peel Shield history] ] In 1916, the Illinois State Soccer Football Association was formed, and Peter Peel was elected its first president. A year later, he was elected as the president of theUnited States Football Association . [ [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9805E0D7123AE433A2575AC2A9639C946696D6CF May 29, 1917 New York Times] ] At the time, the term of office was limited to one year. Peel was re-elected in 1918 for a second term. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20D17FF3C5A11738DDDAE0994DE405B888DF1D3 July 18, 1917 New York Times] ] Peel was elected for a third time in 1923, narrowly defeating Thomas Cahill. In one of the more odd incidents in U.S. soccer administrative history, Peel terminated Cahill, who was the association’s first vice president, accusing Cahill of attacking him with a knife. According to Cahill, he was using a knife to peel a plug of tobacco when Peel became aggressive towards him. During this term in office, Peel oversaw the entry of the first official U.S. team to enter the Olympics. In 1924, Peel chose not to stand for re-election and declared bankruptcy soon after. However, he remained active in soccer affairs, primarily in Chicago, but also to a limited extent on the national level until his death. [cite book | last = Wangerin | first = David | title = Soccer in a Football World: The Story of America’s Forgotten Game | format = Paperback | publisher = Temple University Press | year = 2008 | id = (ISBN 1-5921-3885-3) ]He was elected as a builder to the
National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1951.External links
* [http://www.soccerhall.org/builders/peter_peel.htm National Soccer Hall of Fame]
References
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