[1][2] The pre-favourites to win were the Catalan team because at that time they had great international figures such as the Spanish goalkeeper Ricardo Zamora or the Barcelona players Josep Samitier, the Filipino Paulino Alcántara and the Argentine Emili Sagi-Barba, but instead, they were knocked out in the semi-finals by the eventual champions Asturias, who defeated Galicia in the final 3–1, courtesy of a second-half brace from José Luis Zabala.
[3] The competition began on 12 November 1922, with the representative teams of Asturias and Biscay facing off at the Molinón ground in a quarter-final match that ended in a one-goal tie, which forced them to play it again two days later at the same venue and with the same final result of 1–1, with a goal from each team's star man, Asturias' Zabala and Biscay's Travieso, the difference is that Zabala went on to seal a brace with a goal in extra-time, but the Biscayan team managed to find an equalizer in the 111st minute thanks to Domingo Acedo, which forced another period of extra-time where again both teams scored, Barril netted for Asturias just for Biscay to equalize for the third time via a penalty converted by Careaga, but just when it seemed that another replay would be necessary to decide the winner, Barril scored again with 6 minutes to go, and thus, after two extra-times of 30 minutes each, the two sides were finally separated as Asturians ended up winning by a score of 4 to 3.
On the Amute, Catalonia eliminated Gipuzkoa, beating them 3–0, with goals from Samitier, Gràcia and Martí, but the highlight of the match was the refusal of goalkeeper Agustín Eizaguirre (a member of the Spanish team that won the silver medal at the 1920 Summer Olympics) to defend the goal of the Basques, thus earning a sanction of three months of inactivity imposed on him by his team, Real Sociedad.
On the Galician side they played: Isidro; Otero, Pasarín; Queralt, Torres, Hermida; Reigosa, Balbino, Chiarroni, Polo and Pinilla.
So much so that at the end of the season they welcomed with tremendous enthusiasm the idea proposed by Manuel de Castro, the critic who popularized the pseudonym of Handicap, to merge the two rival entities, Vigo and Fortuna, to achieve a powerful team that could successfully compete against the powerful Spanish teams such as Catalonia and Asturias, and hence, on 23 August 1923, Celta de Vigo was born.