[1] It did not last long, however, as the Comamalas began dedicated themselves to tennis, Quirante to cycling, while the Wallace and Bru joined RCD Espanyol.
At a time when footballers were amateurs, some of the club's players, led by José Quirante, wanted to share the profits from the tickets, but the then Barcelona president Joan Gamper, a fervent defender of amateurism, who had always strongly opposed professionalism in Barça, refused.
This caused a split within the club, and although Gamper's side was able to weather the storm with Quirante's opposition sector, they could not prevent indiscipline from being fostered among the elements of this group, whose members, seduced by false flatterers, openly stood against the board.
[8] In March 1913, Casual SC participated in its most important tournament, the fourth edition of the Pyrenees Cup, an international competition contested by Spanish and French clubs based in the territories of Pyrénées, with Casual being one of the four representatives from Catalonia alongside FC Barcelona, RCD Espanyol, and FC Espanya, with the latter withdrawing before the tournament while Casual faced Barça in the quarterfinals, which ended in a humiliating 0–7 loss, with goals from Alexander Steel (3), Frank Allack (2), and Apolinario Rodríguez (2).
[9][10][11] Despite some encouraging first steps in the white club, it was possibly the fact of losing the 1903 Cup final that caused a convulsive situation within the entity that led to its end.