Columbia Challenge Cup 1915
For this year’s edition, the Columbia Challenge Cup traveled west to Seattle as the local Black Diamonds, champion of the Western Regional Division served as host. Joined by Southern Regional champion Charlotte Coronets, Ultimate Division champion Cleveland Forest, and Penultimate champion Baltimore Chimney Swifts, the crowds came out to Dugdale to see some exciting football.
The draw pitted Cleveland against Charlotte in the opening game, with the Black Diamonds featured against Baltimore in the second. The Forest contingent apparently did not put much stock in the tournament, since several starters, including Golden Ball winter Cameron Hayes did not make the trip. While Forest had beaten Charlotte in the semi-finals of the AFA Cup, the squad that Cleveland put out in this match was a shadow of that contingent. The Coronets were eager for revenge and pulled out a 3-2 victory with a hat trick by Jude Skinner.
The second game was an intense battle between the Chimney Swifts and the Black Diamonds. The locals dominated possession but couldn’t put together any scoring chances. Baltimore came out on a number of counter-attacks, but they couldn’t find the net either. In the 85th minute, Gil Roberson won the ball deep in the Chimney Swifts’ end, and his cross found the head of Cooper Howard, who nodded it in. The elation of the local fans was tremendous albeit short-lived, as a mass scrum in front of the Black Diamonds’ goal eventually found its way into the goal in the 90th minute. While the fans braced for extra time after the final whistle, the teams did not return to the field. Tournament rules said that draws were to be decided by the number of corner kicks, and Baltimore led 4-2 in that category. Much trash was strewn on the field when the decision was announced.
The final was not well-attended because the locals’ ire with the semi-final. Still, Charlotte and Baltimore put on a spirited match that featured end-to-end action. Only stellar play by Clinton Redmond and Will Taylor, in the Chimney Swifts’ and Coronets’ nets, respectively, keep the scoresheet from being riddled with goals. The fans who boycotted missed a very enjoyable game. In the end, it was Wade Bauer who outran the Charlotte defense to put in the game winner and claim the Columbia Challenge Cup for Baltimore, bringing the cup to the Monument City for the third time (the Bannerets won it in 1908 and 1911)