Luís Vinhaes
Luís Vinhaes | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
Surname | Luís Augusto Vinhaes | |
birthday | December 10, 1896 | |
place of birth | Rio de Janeiro , Brazil | |
date of death | April 3, 1960 | |
Place of death | Rio de Janeiro , Brazil | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
São Cristóvão AC | ||
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1926 | São Cristóvão AC | |
1929-1933 | Fluminense Rio de Janeiro | |
1931-1934 | Brazil | |
1933-1934 | Bangu AC | |
1949 | Brazil U20 | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Luís Augusto Vinhaes (born December 10, 1896 in Rio de Janeiro , † April 3, 1960 ibid) was a Brazilian football player , coach and official. In Rio he won the championship as a coach with two outsiders, and he led the Brazilian national team at the 1934 World Cup.
Career
Luíz Vinhaes was one of the less important footballers from Rio de Janeiro, but still came to one or the other use at the championship of Rio, at least towards the end of the 1910s in the jersey of São Cristóvão AC , from the district of the same name just north of the city center. His work as a referee made a more lasting impression in the era when many players were at the service of the pipe at the same time. As a referee, he also founded the referee council, the Conselho de Árbitros de Futebol , which he also chaired.
Overall, Vinhaes had a broad interest in the sport and was involved in one form or another in many sports such as basketball and athletics.
He first appeared in the limelight as a soccer coach when he led the outsider São Cristóvão AC to his only championship in the federal district of Rio de Janeiro in 1926 . In 1933 he was able to repeat that with the Bangu AC , which was to come to a second title in 1966.
From April 1929 to October 1933 he coached the top club Fluminense FC , where he sat in 135 games on the bench, but without achieving a great success there. From October he moved from Fluminense to Bangu during the current championship in Rio.
Under Vinhaes, Bangu put in a convincing final spurt in the last three championship games and secured the title with a 4-0 against Fluminense on the penultimate matchday.
His successful work at club level also earned him the post of national coach in 1931, which he filled alongside his work at Fluminense and later Bangu. He was also responsible for the team, which at that time in the knockout system discharged 1934 FIFA World Cup in Italy in the first round, almost a second round, with 1: 3 was eliminated against Spain. After the World Cup, the team played numerous friendlies, first in Europe and then in Brazil. Vinhaes only looked after the team until they returned from Europe.
In 1943 and 1944, together with the CR Flamengo man and later national coach Flávio Costa, he led the selection team of the federal district, then the city of Rio de Janeiro, to victory in the then important and popular championship of the states - often usually in the absence of a national club championship only called o Campeonato Brasileiro , "the Brazilian championship" - to win over the selection of São Paulo.
At the end of the 1940s, and probably beyond, Luíz Vinhaes held an office at the municipal stadium administration of Rio de Janeiro and was directly involved in the construction of the Maracanã stadium in this context .
He leads the Brazilian to victory at the U-20 South American Championship in Chile in 1949. At the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki , Brazil's first participation in the Olympic football tournament, Vinhaes was team leader and Newton Cardoso was the coach. Brazil were eliminated in the quarter-finals in extra time with 2: 4 against Germany. Vavä and Zózimo , who were both to become world champions in 1958 and 1962, were the most prominent members of the team, although Humberto (Tozzi) was considered the discovery of Brazil at the tournament.
At the 1959 Pan-American Games in Chicago , where Brazil finished second behind Argentina with an amateur selection, Vinhaes and Cardoso led the team in the same form. Gérson , who was to become world champion with Brazil in 1970, was Brazil's most prominent player here.
In the meantime, Vinhaes served as an assistant to national coach Zezé Moreira at the 1954 World Cup .
Official internationals
- 6 September 1931 against Uruguay , result: 2-0 (Copa Río Branco)
- December 4, 1932 against Uruguay , result: 2-1 (Copa Río Branco)
- May 27, 1934 against Spain , result: 1: 3 (Football World Cup 1934)
- June 3, 1934 against Yugoslavia , result: 4: 8 (friendly match)
Unofficial games of Brazil
- July 2, 1931 against Ferencváros Budapest , result: 6: 1
- November 27, 1932 against Andarahy AC (RJ), result: 7: 2
- December 8, 1932 against CA Peñarol , result: 1-0
- December 11, 1932 against Nacional Montevideo , result: 2: 1
- June 8, 1934 against Dinamo Zagreb , result: 0-0
- June 17, 1934 against Catalan football team , result: 1: 2
- June 24, 1934 against Catalan football team , result: 2-2
- July 1, 1934 against FC Barcelona , result: 4: 4
- July 12, 1934 against a selection team of players from Belenenses Lisbon and Benfica Lisbon , result: 4: 2
- July 15, 1934 against Sporting Lisbon , result: 6: 1
- July 22, 1934 against FC Porto , result: 0-0
successes
São Cristóvão
National team
- Copa Rio Branco : 1931, 1932
Bangu
U-20 national team
- Copa America U-20 : 1949
Individual evidence
- Julio Bovi Diogo: Rio de Janeiro State - List of Champions (with references to season details), Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation and RSSSF Brazil, May 8, 2016.
- Marcelo Leme de Arruda: Arquivo da Seleção Brasileira Principal (Brazilian National "A" Team Archive) , Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation and RSSSF Brazil, 23 March 2018.
- André do Nascimento Pereira, Marcelo Leme de Arruda: Seleção Brasileira Sub-20 (U-20 Brazilian National Team) 1949–1987 , Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation and RSSSF Brazil, March 9, 2018.
- ↑ Fluzão.info (Fluminense database)
- ↑ The usually relatively reliable sites Fluzão and Bangu.Net listed Vinhaes on September 24, 1933 while sitting in different games on the respective bench of their clubs: with a 5-0 Bangus in the championship at Bonsucesso FC , or a home-4 : 2 in the championship of Fluminense against America FC. Fluzäo lists him for the last time on October 8, 1933 at the Rio São Paulo tournament as a Fluminense coach.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Vinhaes, Luís |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Vinhaes, Luís Augusto |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Brazilian soccer coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 10, 1896 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Rio de Janeiro , Brazil |
DATE OF DEATH | April 3, 1960 |
Place of death | Rio de Janeiro , Brazil |