Luis Carniglia

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Luis Carniglia
Luis Antonio Carniglia.jpg
Personnel
Surname Luis Antonio Carniglia
birthday October 4, 1917
place of birth OlivosArgentina
date of death June 22, 2001
Place of death Buenos AiresArgentina
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
Club de Olivos
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1933-1936 CA Tigre
1936-1941 Boca Juniors 54 (17)
1942-1944 Chacarita Juniors
Atlas Guadalajara
1951-1952 OGC Nice 10 0(1)
1952-1953 Sporting Toulon 26 0(4)
1953-1955 OGC Nice 8 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1955-1957 OGC Nice
1957-1959 real Madrid
1959-1960 AC Florence
1961 AS Bari
1961-1963 AS Roma
1963-1964 AC Milan
1964-1965 Deportivo La Coruña
1965-1968 Bologna FC
1969 Juventus Turin
1973 San Lorenzo
1978-1979 Girondins Bordeaux
1 Only league games are given.

Luis Antonio Carniglia (born October 4, 1917 in Olivos , Province of Buenos Aires , † June 22, 2001 in Buenos Aires ) was an Argentine football player and coach who has won numerous national and international titles in both functions.

Player career

The striker started out at CA Tigre as a youth . In 1936 he came to Boca Juniors , with whom he won the championship in the Primera División and the title in the cup competition for the Copa Dr. Carlos Ibarguren won. In 1941 he was seriously injured in a point game and it took him a long time to get anywhere near shape. In Argentina he still stepped for the Chacarita Juniors and in Guadalajara for Atlas Guadalajara against the ball and was Mexican champion in 1951 .

In the early 1950s he got into the top French league . With the OGC Nice he managed to win the doublé again , as the southern French were successful in both the championship and the national cup in 1952 . Subsequently, with the approval of coach Mario Zatelli loaned to the second division Sporting Toulon , returned after a season to Nice, where he again won the French Cup in 1954. In this team he stormed alongside some of the best offensive forces in French professional football at the time, such as Fontaine , Ujlaki , Nurenberg and Mahjoub . Luis Carniglia scored an early goal in both victorious finals: in 1952 the 2-1 after twelve minutes against Girondins Bordeaux (final score 5: 3), in 1954 the 2-0 after eleven minutes against Olympique Marseille (final score 2: 1). The fact that OGC Nice had even reached this second final was also due to his "old Argentine", who had already scored the decisive goal in the semi-final against AS Troyes-Savinienne . It was not until he was almost 38 that he ended his playing career in 1955.

Coaching career

In 1955 Luis Carniglia took over the coaching position at OGC Nice, his last club as a player; In 1956 he led the team to the championship title in Division 1 . With the OGC, Carniglia failed in the quarter-finals of the 1956/57 European Cup to Real Madrid  - and after the end of the season switched to the successor to José Villalonga at the same club in Europe, which was the most successful club at the time, which was peppered with top-class players such as Di Stéfano , Kopa , Gento , Santamaría and Puskás was. In 1958 he won the Spanish championship and the European Cup (3-2 final victory over AC Milan ); he won this European title again with Real the following year , this time after a 2-0 win against Stade Reims .

In the 1959/60 season he worked at Fiorentina , 1960/61 at AS Bari , 1961 to 1963 at AS Roma , 1963/64 at AC Milan, 1964/65 again in Spain at Deportivo La Coruña , from 1965 to 1968 at FC Bologna and 1969/70 at Juventus Turin . One of his last engagements took him to France again: in 1979/80 he was in charge of Girondins Bordeaux . In addition, Carniglia was interim trainer in 1981 and then general manager at Boca Juniors in Argentina.

Palmarès

As a player

As a trainer

literature

  • L'Équipe / Gérard Ejnès: Coupe de France. La folle épopée. L'Équipe, Issy-les-Moulineaux 2007 ISBN 978-2-915-53562-4

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Marc Barreaud: Dictionnaire des footballeurs étrangers du championnat professionnel français (1932–1997). L'Harmattan, Paris 1998 ISBN 2-7384-6608-7 , p. 93
  2. L'Équipe / Ejnès, p. 370
  3. L'Équipe / Ejnès, p. 368
  4. L'Équipe / Ejnès, p. 370
  5. ^ Hubert Beaudet: Le Championnat et ses champions. 70 ans de Football en France. Alan Sutton, Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire 2002 ISBN 2-84253-762-9 , pp. 57 and 194
  6. rsssf: Real Madrid managers
  7. His stations in Italy according to http://www.settoretecnico.figc.it/allegati/NOTIZIARIO%2006_2005_A03.pdf