Between July and September 1927, Spanish football club Real Madrid embarked on an exhibition tour of the Americas, with the aim of promoting Spanish football across both continents. It was one of the first football exhibition tours to be played across two continents.
During the tour, Real Madrid played 16 matches, including five in Argentina, one in Uruguay, two in Peru, one in Cuba, six in Mexico, and one in the United States. Additionally, it is reported that the team travelled to Chile as well.
Since 1904, several British football clubs had done tours of South America, primarily in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay. In September 1914, Italian club Torino became the first non-British team to do a tour of South America, playing matches in São Paulo and Buenos Aires. Meanwhile, the first Spanish team to tour South America was in 1922, with a team made up of players from clubs in Gipuzkoa, including Athletic Bilbao, Real Sociedad, Arenas Club, and Real Unión.
By 1927, Real Madrid had done two exhibition tours of their own, including in Italy during December 1920 and January 1921, and across Europe (specifically England, France, and Denmark) in August and September 1925.
The tour was organized by club director José GarcÃÂa Echaniz, under the presidency of Luis de Urquijo, with the goal of promoting Spanish football across the Americas. This was considered unusual for the time and created a lot of expectation around the tour.
Real Madrid arrived in Barcelona on 15 June, and were supposed to leave the following day, but a delay gave them the opportunity to watch FC Barcelona face a team from Brussels at Les Corts. Eventually, the team would depart Barcelona on the SS Giulio Cesare, and spent 18 days at sea before arriving in Argentina. While on their journey, the team encountered a storm off the coast of Uruguay.
Real Madrid arrived in Buenos Aires in early July, without any of their friendlies being finalized. Additionally, it was reported in Spain that the promoter for the American part of the tour had fled the country after being accused of fraud. Around the time they arrived in Argentina, the Royal Spanish Football Federation fined Madrid 1,000 pesetas because of the tour, and warned them that they were solely responsible for anything that happened while in the Americas.
Real Madrid played their first match of the tour on 9 July 1927, where they drew 0âÂÂ0 against a team made up of players from Buenos Aires at the Estadio Sportivo Barracas, which included 1934 FIFA World Cup winner Raimundo Orsi. On 10 July, the match was repeated with the Argentinians winning 3âÂÂ2, with both teams observing a minute of silence prior to halftime for the victims of a railway accident in Alpatacal on 7 July. It would take until Real Madrid's third match of the tour to get a win, when they beat Boca Juniors 2âÂÂ1 on 16 July, before they lost 4âÂÂ0 to Newell's Old Boys in Rosario the next day.
The team then travelled to Uruguay, to face Peñarol, who had recently returned from their own tour of Europe. On 24 July, in front of a crowd of 12,000 people at the Estadio Pocitos in Montevideo, Real Madrid drew 0âÂÂ0 with the Uruguayan team. Following the match, a journalist for Uruguayan newspaper El PaÃÂs called it the worst match they had seen in 20 years, and claimed that Real Madrid were a bad first-division team. Afterwards, they returned to Buenos Aires to face Racing Club, where they lost 2âÂÂ0.
Following the loss to Racing Club, the team left for Peru, where they arrived on 10 August through the Port of Callao aboard the steamship Santa Ana. The team were welcomed to Peru by a large crowd of fans, alongside Peruvian Football Federation president Alejandro Garland and directors Pedro Ureta and J. Fitzgerald. While in Peru, the team stayed at the Gran Hotel BolÃÂvar. Real Madrid played two matches in Peru, against teams of players from both Callao and Lima at the Estadio Nacional, with the Peruvian Football Federation deciding the order of the matches. On 14 August, prior to Madrid's match against the team from Callao, an exhibition match between Atlético Chalaco and Alianza Lima was played, with Alianza Lima winning 2âÂÂ0. Shortly after, Real Madrid beat the Callao team 4âÂÂ1, with Madrid dominating most of the match. Following the match, the Spanish ambassador to Peru presented the team with the Municipal Cup trophy.
The second match on 15 August saw the attendance of several notable figures, including the mayor of Lima Andrés Fernando Dasso Hoke, Peruvian Olympic Committee president Leónidas Gonzales, and miliary commander , as well as the added stakes of a trophy that had been donated by Spanish king King Alfonso XIII. Midway through the first half, the referee paused the match as Peruvian president Augusto B. LeguÃÂa arrived. In the end, Madrid drew 1âÂÂ1 with team from Lima, with the Spanish team getting the trophy and Santiago Bernabéu receiving a silver shield from Andrés Dasso. Afterwards, the idea of a third match in Lima was given, against either Circolo Sportivo Italiano or Association FBC, but the plan never went through.
After beating 2âÂÂ1 in Cuba on 28 August, Real Madrid arrived in Mexico in early September. Initially, they arrived and docked at the Port of Progreso in Yucatán. Due to the boat being anchored far from the port, José MarÃÂa Peña and Juan Urquizu both decided to get into a small boat and row through the port's shark-infested waters. However, when trying to return to the ship, Peña slipped off the rope he was using to climb back on and fell into the water near the sharks. José MarÃÂa Muñagorri almost jumped in to help him, and had to be held back by his teammates, but in the end, nearby sailors managed to get Peña to safety.
Real Madrid played six matches in Mexico, with all of them being at the Parque España in Mexico City. The first match in Mexico saw them win 4âÂÂ2 against Club América on 4 September, with both Luis Cerrilla and Madrid captain Félix Quesada being ejected from the match. Afterwards, they would face Club Asturias, Real Club España, Atlante, and Club Necaxa, winning all four matches. Prior to their match against Necaxa, the players heard gunshots and assumed a revolution was going on, although it later turned out to be people celebrating Mexican Independence Day.
Real Madrid's final match in Mexico saw them face Club América again, this time with Atlante forward Juan Carreño featuring as a guest player for América. Real Madrid would win 5âÂÂ3, but the match would not be without controversy, as José MarÃÂa Muñagorri was ejected for getting into a fight with a spectator. Additionally, the Madrid players would not accept the trophy offered to them after the match, citing the 'excessive roughness' of the Club América players.
In the United States, Madrid were originally scheduled to face two teams: Brooklyn Wanderers and Galicia SC. They also tried to schedule other matches prior to leaving Mexico, including against Chicago Sparta and Indiana Flooring, but by the time the team left, they were only set to play Brooklyn Wanderers. During this part of the tour, Real Madrid were sponsored by Nat Agar, who owned the Brooklyn Wanderers and had scheduled other foreign team's visits to the United States. However, Agar would instead give Real Madrid's American match to Galicia, while the team were en route to New York. The day prior to the match, the players were invited to an honorary dinner at the Hotel Pennsylvania in Manhattan. In total, only 5000 people attended the match on 24 September, as Real Madrid drew 1âÂÂ1 with Galicia, with former Spanish diplomat Rafael Casares y Gil, who was the ambassador of Spain to Romania between 1907 and 1908, in attendance. Following the match, the New York Times called Real Madrid "A Spanish team" in their headline, and said that 'Galicia were the better team in the first half, but the Spaniards found their rhythm later'.
The team Real Madrid brought for the tour was missing several players, including Cándido MartÃÂnez, who stayed behind for his upcoming wedding, and Juan MonjardÃÂn, whose family refused to release him for the tour. To make up for this, they brought players from other clubs, including Travieso from Athletic Bilbao and José Maria Yermo from Arenas Club. Santiago Bernabéu, who had retired at the end of the 1926âÂÂ27 season, also travelled with the team.
During the tour, two changes were made to the team. Prior to the match against , they were joined by goalkeeper Oliván and forward Félix Pérez, who departed A Coruña on 20 July to join the team's North American leg of the tour. And following the match against Real Club España, Manuel Vidal and José Gurucharri left to rejoin their respective teams in Spain.
Manager: Pedro Llorente
When Real Madrid returned to Spain, they competed in the , a competition involving the six teams that had won the Copa del Rey by that point, which served as a rehearsal for the creation of La Liga in 1929. Additionally, they signed Pachuco Prats, who had been brought in from Real Murcia for the tour, on a permanent transfer for 20,000 pesetas.
The next time Real Madrid returned to the Americas was in 1952, as part of another exhibition tour which included the inaugural Small Club World Cup in Venezuela.
This tour would also mark the last time Real Madrid faced Club América until 83 years later in 2010, when Madrid beat them 3âÂÂ2 in San Francisco.