Browse Items (18 total)

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"El Inter de Boedo": Lorenzo's San Lorenzo team of 1965

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Tactics, Helenio Herrera, Giudice, and what happened in Europe What is interesting about this article are Herrera's own words, where he acknowledges using catenaccio and "anti-football" tactics to win

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The visit of Inter Milan must have left an impression on Atlanta's coaching staff according to El Grafico

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Mogilevsky (seemingly the head coach of Atlanta) applies catenaccio tactics to defeat River Plate

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Independiente is the first Argentine team to represent the Americas against the European champion The victory is characterized as a product of strength, aggression, tight marking, and a "espiritu aguerrido"

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Very interesting article Helenio Herrera, today known as the "godfather" of the ultra-defensive catenaccio system, receives effusive praise by Panzeri for being un-catenaccio, for implementing an open and attacking style of play Did Herrera change,…

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The coach who most influenced the modern style, the catenaccio, is dismissed from Inter Milan after eight years. The end of Herrera's stint in Italy was one of the first signs that his ultra-defensive style had run its course. In Argentina, the apex…

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The 1965 Copa Intercontinental proved to be another moment in international soccer (particularly against European teams) when Argentina could not break through and win a major title.

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A view of Independiente's matches in Argentina and Italy for the world title.

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The referee situation has improved in Argentina, with little analysis provided as to why. Coaches in Italy, including Helenio Herrera and Juan Carlos Lorenzo, have become larger celebrities (and figures) than their players. (Note: Primera Plana…

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Overview of the 1964 Intercontinental Cup, which pitted Independiente against Inter Milan and its famous catenaccio tactics under Helenio Herrera: perhaps the most famous manager in the world and who has Argentine roots (and coached in Spain as well)

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Useful article to contrast playing styles and how Argentines saw themselves as different to Europeans (even if violent play was escalating)

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Helenio Herrera, master of the catenaccion and the most famous manager in the world, gains a lot of coverage in these publications.

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Pizutti showed that another playing style, and model for a coach, exists to counter Herrera's bombastic persona and coaching style.

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Although Helenio Herrera is credited with efficiently using a sweeper, or sometimes stopper, in his catenaccio system, the position has a longer history and also shows that Argentine teams cannot apply such a system

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This little article is really helpful. It is full of Argentine colloquialisms for soccer ("el anile"). The purpose here is to assess whether the old way of playing, the gambeta, can win at the 1966 World Cup. The answer is no.
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