The Delhi Cloth Mills Trophy, known simply as D.C.M. Trophy, was an invitational football tournament in India. It was held annually in New Delhi and was organised by the Delhi Cloth Mills tournament committee.[2] It was India's first football tournament to provide the national clubs with international exposure due to participation of international clubs from Asia and Europe.

DCM Trophy
Organising bodyDelhi Cloth Mills Group
Founded1945; 79 years ago (1945)
Abolished1997; 27 years ago (1997)
RegionIndia
Number of teamsvarious
Last championsMohun Bagan (1st title)[1]
Most successful team(s)East Bengal (7 titles)

History

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The tournament was established in 1945 by Bharat Ram and Charat Ram of the Delhi Cloth & General Mills textile conglomerate.[3]

Delhi's local teams won the first two editions; since then, clubs from Calcutta have dominated the 1950s and early 1960s, and foreign clubs since the late 1960s. The tournament has not been organised since 1997 due to fixture congestion and various restructuring policies in Indian club football. Mohun Bagan was the last winner of the tournament.[3][4]

Results

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YearWinnersScoreRunners-upNotes
1945New Delhi Heroes3–2 King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry
1946–48The tournament was not held
1949Raisina Sporting Union (Delhi)1–1, 3–1City Club (Lucknow)
1950East Bengal2–08th Gorkha Rifles (Dehradun)
1951Rajasthan Club (Calcutta)3–08th Gorkha Rifles (Dehradun)
1952East Bengal4–08th Gorkha Rifles (Dehradun)
1953Aryan Gymkhana (Bangalore)3–2East Indian Railway Accounts (Calcutta)
1954Geological Survey (Calcutta)1–0Hyderabad FA
1955Indian Air Force Station (Delhi)2–0District Sports Association (Allahabad)
1956Indian Air Force0–0, 0–0, 1–0East Bengal
1957East Bengal0–0, 2–0Eastern Railway
1958Mohammedan Sporting1–0East Bengal[5]
1959Hyderabad Central Police1–0Madras Engineer Group
1960East Bengal3–1Mohammedan Sporting
1961Mohammedan Sporting2–1Madras Regimental Centre
1962Madras Regimental Centre1–0Mafatlal Group (Bombay)
1963E.M.E. Centre1–1, 3–1Punjab Police
1964Mohammedan Sporting1–1, 1–0Andhra Pradesh Police
1965Andhra Pradesh Police2–0Central Police Lines (Hyderabad)
1966Punjab Police0–0, 2–0Leader FC (Jalandhar)
1967Mafatlal Group (Bombay)5–0Leader FC (Jalandhar)
1968Mafatlal Group (Bombay)2–1Leader FC (Jalandhar)
1969 Taj Tehran4–0South Central Railway (Secunderabad)
1970 Taj Tehran3–1Andhra Pradesh Police
1971 Taj Tehran1–0Leader FC (Jalandhar)
1972 April 251–1 Bayerischer F.V.1
1973East Bengal0–0, 0–0 Dok Ro Gang2
1974East Bengal1–0Punjab Police
1975 Hanyang University2–0East Bengal
1976 Hanyang University and Border Security Force (joint winners) – 0–0, 0–03
1977 Spartak United3–0JCT
1978 Volga Kalinin1–0 Bayerischer F.V.
1979Border Security Force and Citizens' National Bank (joint winners) – 1–1, 1–14
1980Mohammedan Sporting1–0 Bank of Seoul & Trust Company
1981 Myongji University3–1 East Fremantle Tricolore
1982–83 Incheon University0–0, 3–0Mohammedan Sporting
1983East Bengal1–0Mohammedan Sporting5
1984 Liaoning1–0 Western Australia Soccer Federation
1985 Football Fed. of South Australia0–0 (5–4 p)East Bengal
1986 Metalist Kharkiv4–0East Bengal
1987 S.M. Industry Bank1–0JCT
1988 POSCO Atoms1–0East Bengal
1989 Esteghlal3–1 POSCO Atoms
1990 Kyung Hee University0–0 (5–4 p)Kerala Police
1991 PAS Tehran1–0Mohun Bagan
1992–93 Incheon University1–1 (4–1 p)East Bengal
1993 NK Varteks3–0JCT
1994–95 Bahman2–0Mohun Bagan
1995–96 Tractor Sazi3–0Punjab State Electricity Board
1996The tournament was not held
1997Mohun Bagan2–0Tata Football Academy

Notes:

1. ^ Bayerischer withdrew from the replay, so April 25 were declared winners
2. ^ East Bengal were declared winners as Dok Ro Gang refused to play extra time
3. ^ Joint winners after replay
4. ^ Joint winners after replay
5. ^ Abandoned in the 83rd minute due to a riot

References

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  1. ^ "Mohun Bagan Trophy room". themohunbaganac.com. Mohun Bagan Athletic Club. Archived from the original on 26 January 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  2. ^ "Delhi Cloth And General Mills Co. ... vs Commissioner Of Income Tax on 20 April, 1992". Indian Kanoon. Archived from the original on 10 March 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  3. ^ a b Raunak, Majumdar (31 May 2019). "The DCM Trophy – Oldest Indian Tournament with International Exposure". chaseyoursport.com. Chase Your Sport. Archived from the original on 7 November 2020. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  4. ^ "India – D.C.M. Trophy". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 13 October 2018. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  5. ^ Hoque, Elis (19 July 2019). "হারিয়ে যাওয়া মোহামেডানীদের সালতামামি…" [Diary of the lost stars of Mohammedan]. onnodristy.com (in Bengali). Dhaka: Onno Dristi Bangla. Archived from the original on 3 November 2022. Retrieved 3 November 2022.