World Cup co-host Mexico traces its soccer roots to miners from Cornwall
PACHUCA, Mexico (AP) — Mexico hopes to showcase its soccer culture both on and off the pitch when it co-hosts the World Cup with the United States and Canada next month. While the sport is growing across North America, it has long been the undisputed No. 1 in Mexico , which will become the first country to host three men’s World Cups.
The roots of modern Mexican soccer can be traced far beyond the host cities of Guadalajara , Monterrey and Mexico City to a misty silver mining town where Britons and Mexicans forged a bond in the 19th century. British miners—chiefly from Cornwall — brought the sport to Mineral del Monte, formerly known as Real del Monte, a mountain town located near Pachuca, around 100 kilometers (60 miles) northeast of Mexico City , where they worked in the local silver mines. “When the miners arrived, they started playing among themselves during their breaks, and then they involved the Mexicans, who found it strange at first, but they started playing and interacting, and that’s how they began to spread the football fever in Real del Monte,” said Brasil Ordaz, who teaches soccer history at the Soccer Hall of Fame museum in Pachuca.
Matches between English and Mexican teams were played near the Dolores Mine in the late 1800s and early 1900s, on a site now used as a parking lot. A dusty metal plaque marks the location as the birthplace of soccer in Mexico. Nearby, some businesses display the flags of Britain and Mexico.
There is a small museum that proclaims “Football in Mexico was born in a place close to heaven" — a reference to Mineral del Monte's elevation of 2,700 meters (8,860 feet) above sea level. Other memorabilia from the early years, including an old mining helmet, is on display inside the Soccer Hall of Fame, a site established in 2011 in Pachuca, 18 kilometers (11 miles) from Mineral del Monte. The birth of organized soccer in Mexico Though rugby is a more popular sport in Cornwall, the miners in Mexico “decided early on to play soccer rather than rugby, hence its spread,” said Sharron Schwartz, a historian from Redruth in Cornwall, specializing in Cornish migration.
“The game appealed to the Mexicans, as it was deemed to be modern, encapsulated British cultural imperialism, and people wanted to emulate the British sense of fair play,” Schwartz said. “Football also helped to break down ethnic, racial and class barriers and promoted integration and social cohesion. ” In 1892, British technicians, engineers, and miners founded the Pachuca Football Club, earning Pachuca the enduring title of “Cuna del fútbol” (The Cradle of Soccer), although some other Mexican cities dispute that claim.
Continue to the original source for the full article.