Miguel Andreolo

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Michele Andreolo
Personnel
Surname Miguel Angel Andriolo Frodella
birthday September 6, 1912
place of birth CarmeloUruguay
date of death May 14 or 15, 1981
Place of death PotenzaItaly
size 169 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
Nacional Montevideo
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
0000-1931 Libertad Fútbol Club de Dolores
1931-1935 Nacional Montevideo 35 0(0)
1935-1943 AGC Bologna 175 (24)
1944 Lazio Rome (War) 14 0(1)
1945-1948 SSC Naples 93 (11)
1948-1949 Catania Calcio
1949-1950 AS Forlì
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1935 Uruguay
1936-1942 Italy 26 0(1)
1 Only league games are given.

Michele Andreolo , actually Miguel Angel Andriolo Frodella or Miguel Angél Andreolo (born September 6, 1912 in Carmelo , Uruguay , † May 14 or May 15, 1981 in Potenza , Italy ) was a Uruguayan-Italian football player .

Career

In the club

Miguel Andreolo, who had five brothers in total, was the brother of the football player Raymundo Andriolo . He played for the Libertad Fútbol Club de Dolores until 1931 and also played a few games for Petit-Dolores at that time . El Chivo began his career in 1932 with Nacional in Uruguay . In his membership to the club until 1935, he played 35 games. With the Bolsos he won the Uruguayan championship in 1933 and 1934 and was part of the Maquina Blanca called Team Nacionals in 1933 , in which he formed midfield alongside Marcelino Pérez and Arsenio Fernández . For the season 1935/36 he switched to AGC Bologna in the Italian Serie A . In his first season he won the Scudetto with the Rossoblu . His strong performances in the Bologna jersey also moved him into the focus of national team coach Vittorio Pozzo , who appointed him to the Squadra Azzurra for the first time in 1936 . Until the championship was stopped due to the war, Andreolo was able to win three more Scudetti with AGC Bologna and had an important part in the most successful years of the club. In 1944 Andreolo denied the war championship in the jersey of Lazio Rome , at the end of the season he moved to SSC Napoli where he stayed three seasons before moving to Catania Calcio for the 1948/49 season. Andreolo stayed in Catania for only one season before ending his career at AS Forlì after the 1949/50 season. After the end of his professional career, he coached AC Forlì for two seasons, relatively unsuccessfully.

In the national team

Andreolo represented the colors of Uruguay with the Celeste at the Campeonato Sudamericano as early as 1935 and won the South American title with her there. The Italian national coach Vittorio Pozzo brought the Uruguayan into the Italian national team in 1936 , where he became one of the most important players in the Pozzo system as a link between defensive and offensive. He played his first game on May 17, 1936 against Spain (1-1). With Italy he won the world title in France in 1938 . Andreolo played his last of a total of 26 international matches in 1942.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Page no longer available , search in web archives: Profile on playerhistory.com , accessed on January 8, 2012@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / soccerdatabase.eu
  2. Hermanos enfrentados en Selecciones diferentes (II) (Spanish) on futbolypasionespoliticas.com, accessed May 17, 2015
  3. Ídolos - Miguel Angél Andreolo (Spanish) on nacionaldigital.com, accessed December 12, 2012