Soccer in Costa Rica: The game of soccer was apparently introduced to Costa Rica in 1899, judging from this news item on July 4 of that year in the newspaper La Opinión:
“On Sunday, we were witnessing
Alajuelense welcomes Botafogo of Brazil in a 1957 match at the National Stadium.[/caption]
The press went on to emphasize the dangerous threat to public order posed by this new-fangled game of kickball:

Mario Murillo playing goalie against the Wacker’s in 1954
“ we refer to the police the groups of children that form in public streets to play ball, with the imminent danger to the noses of passersby; at the corner of La Granja it was impossible to pass; it is apparent that the children from those parts have left school to attend the game; what big matches are played there.”
By August 1899 the press was noting the increased sophistication of these newbies to this sport:
“ of that took place Sunday at la Sabana demonstrates that the sportsmen have become bigger fans of this entertainment and have more skill at this sport. Oy yes, very well, all right. – God save the queen.”
One of the great differences between soccer and other sports of the time was that it leveled the playing field between the rich and the working class — unlike, say, polo.
It was a game that students from all over the country who attended the Liceo de Costa Rica, the country’s primary education center, could take back to their hometowns. This gradually turned futból into a national sport.
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On Christmas Day 1899, football got a boost when President Rafael Iglesias Castro attended a game between a Costa Rican and an English team, giving the game a new sense of legitimacy. (In case you’re wondering, the English won.)
Soccer, one correspondent argued at the time, was a more educated, civilized form of public entertainment than bullfighting or spectacles with barbaric masks accompanied by heavy consumption of alcohol.
The sport took off, and Costa Rica soccer never looked back.
To learn more about Costa Rica Soccer, Wikipedia is a good place to visit.

A game played in Barrio Mexico in the early 1920s, with President Julio Acosto García in attendance.

Costa Rica Soccer, The old Costa Rica National Stadium, 1960.

Costa Rica’s new National Stadium in La Sabana Park, San José.






