India Calcutta Football League | 08/21 11:30 | - | Mohun Bagan v Patha Chakra | W | 5-2 | |
India Calcutta Football League | 08/18 11:30 | - | Mohun Bagan v Railway FC | W | 3-0 | |
India Calcutta Football League | 08/14 11:30 | - | Mohun Bagan v Southern Samity | W | 3-0 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 05/31 13:45 | 6 | [4] Abahani Limited v Mohun Bagan [3] | D | 1-1 | |
India Federation Cup | 05/21 13:30 | 1 | [2] Bengaluru v Mohun Bagan [1] | L | 2-0 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 05/17 13:30 | 5 | [3] Mohun Bagan v Bengaluru FC [1] | W | 3-1 | |
India Federation Cup | 05/14 13:30 | 2 | [1] Mohun Bagan v East Bengal Club [2] | W | 2-0 | |
India Federation Cup | 05/12 13:30 | 3 | [1] Mohun Bagan v Bengaluru [3] | D | 1-1 | |
India Federation Cup | 05/10 13:30 | 2 | [4] Shillong Lajong FC v Mohun Bagan [1] | W | 2-3 | |
India Federation Cup | 05/08 13:30 | 1 | [2] Mohun Bagan v DSK Shivajians [2] | W | 4-0 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 05/03 11:00 | 4 | [2] Maziya SRC v Mohun Bagan [3] | L | 5-2 | |
India I-League | 04/30 13:35 | 18 | [2] Mohun Bagan v Chennai City FC [8] | W | 2-1 | |
India I-League | 04/22 08:35 | 17 | [2] Aizawl FC v Mohun Bagan [1] | L | 1-0 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 04/19 13:30 | 3 | [2] Mohun Bagan v Maziya SRC [3] | L | 0-1 | |
India I-League | 04/15 13:35 | 16 | [9] Minerva v Mohun Bagan [2] | W | 0-1 | |
India I-League | 04/12 11:00 | 11 | [4] Shillong Lajong FC v Mohun Bagan [2] | D | 1-1 | |
India I-League | 04/09 13:35 | 15 | [3] Mohun Bagan v East Bengal Club [2] | W | 2-1 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 04/04 13:30 | 2 | [3] Mohun Bagan v Abahani Limited [4] | W | 3-1 | |
India I-League | 04/01 13:35 | 6 | [3] Mohun Bagan v Bengaluru [5] | W | 3-0 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 03/14 13:30 | 1 | Bengaluru FC v Mohun Bagan | L | 2-1 | |
India I-League | 03/11 13:30 | 14 | [5] Bengaluru FC v Mohun Bagan [3] | D | 0-0 | |
India I-League | 03/08 11:00 | 13 | [3] Mohun Bagan v Mumbai FC [10] | D | 2-2 | |
India I-League | 03/04 13:30 | 12 | [9] Churchill Brothers SC v Mohun Bagan [3] | L | 2-1 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 02/28 10:30 | 15 | Mohun Bagan v Club Valencia | W | 4-1 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 02/21 11:00 | 15 | Club Valencia v Mohun Bagan | D | 1-1 | |
India I-League | 02/18 11:05 | 10 | Mohun Bagan v DSK Shivajians | W | 3-1 | |
India I-League | 02/15 13:35 | 9 | Mumbai FC v Mohun Bagan | D | 0-0 | |
India I-League | 02/12 11:00 | 8 | East Bengal Club v Mohun Bagan | D | 0-0 | |
AFC Champions League Two | 02/07 13:30 | 14 | Mohun Bagan v Colombo FC | W | 2-1 | |
India I-League | 02/04 13:35 | 7 | Mohun Bagan v Aizawl FC | W | 3-2 |
Mohun Bagan Athletic Club is an Indian professional multi-sports club based in Kolkata, West Bengal. Founded in 1889, it is one of the oldest multi-sports clubs in Asia. The club has various sports departments like football, cricket, hockey, tennis, athletics, eSports etc.
The foundation of Mohun Bagan stretches back into the 1880s when the neighborhood youth of presently known Fariapukur Lane in Shyambazar had set out in search for an ideal place to establish a football club, and came across a marble palace, Mohun Bagan Villa, owned by the family of a leading jute trader, Kirti Chandra Mitra.
On 15 August 1889, after a meeting of three prominent aristocratic Bengali families of North Kolkata – the Mitra family, the Basu family, and the Sen family – presided over by Bhupendra Nath Basu himself, Mohun Bagan Sporting Club was formed. Bhupendra Nath Basu became the first president of the newly founded club and Jyotindra Nath Basu was the first secretary of it.
During the initial years, the meager ground inside the palace was used by the club for hosting matches, including their first match that was played against the team of Eden Hindu Hostel students, and lost 1–0. The club management hugely emphasized providing memberships to the youth and maintained a strict code of conduct with an avowed objective of producing excellent sportsmen and imbuing them with impeccable moral and social values.
At the first-anniversary assembly, the Presidency College students and members of the club invited their professor, F. J. Rowe, to attend. Rowe pointed out the inappropriate naming of the club and suggested replacing "Sporting" with "Athletic" since the club didn't indulge in sporting activities, like angling or rifle shooting. Thus, the members agreed and renamed the club as Mohun Bagan Athletic Club.
The second-anniversary assembly was presided by Sir Thomas Holland, who later became a member of the Executive Council of Governor-General of India. In 1891, with the help of the Maharaja Durga Charan Laha of Shyampukur, the club ground was relocated within his residential estate, now known as Laha Colony. The club ground was later relocated to Shyam Square in Bagbazar, with the help of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation chairman, Henry Lee. In 1900, Mohun Bagan became the partner of Presidency College and shared their ground at Maidan, where they would continue to play for 15 years.