Sabino Barinaga

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sabino Barinaga
Personnel
Surname Sabino Barinaga Alberdi
birthday August 15, 1922
place of birth DurangoSpain
date of death March 19, 1988
Place of death MadridSpain
size 180 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
Southampton FC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1938-1939 Southampton FC 0 0(0)
1939-1950 real Madrid 149 (68)
1941-1943 →  Real Valladolid  (loan)
1950-1953 Real Sociedad 56 (22)
1953-1954 Betis Seville
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1954-1955 Betis Seville
1957-1959 CA Osasuna
1959-1960 Betis Seville
1960-1961 Real Oviedo
1961-1963 CD Málaga
1963-1964 Atlético Madrid
1965-1966 Valencia CF
1966-1967 Sevilla FC
1968 Betis Seville
1968 Club America
1968-1969 Nigeria
1969-1970 RCD Mallorca
1971-1972 Morocco
1973-1974 Real Oviedo
1974-1975 Cádiz FC
1978 Real Oviedo
1 Only league games are given.

Sabino Barinaga Alberdi (born August 15, 1922 in Durango , † March 19, 1988 in Madrid ) was a Spanish football player and coach .

Player career

Sabino Barinaga was born in Durango but moved with his family to England during the Spanish Civil War . When he played football for the local school team, he was discovered by Southampton FC , whereupon he accumulated a season for their reserve selection and scored 62 goals.

After the end of the civil war, he returned to Spain in 1939 and turned down an offer from Athletic Bilbao to play for Real Madrid instead. On April 28, 1940 he made his debut on the last day of the 1939/40 season in the Primera División . In the following season he scored eight goals in 16 league games. However, after he had only made two appearances in the first half of the 1941/42 season , Barinaga moved to the second division Real Valladolid on loan for a year and a half .

For the 1943/44 season Barinaga returned to the Spanish capital and celebrated his breakthrough as a reliable regular player in the following two years with 38 goals in 48 league matches. On June 13, 1943, he scored four goals in the semi-final second leg of the Copa del Generalísimo in an 11-1 win against FC Barcelona . The cup final against Atlético Bilbao was then lost 1-0. It was not until June 1946 that Barinaga finally won their first major title with Real Madrid: This time the final of the Spanish Cup was won 3-1 against Valencia CF. Barinaga himself had scored to lead his team after just two minutes. The following year, this title was successfully defended by another final victory against RCD Español . In the same year Barinaga also won the Copa Eva Duarte with Real Madrid . On December 14, 1947, he scored the first goal in the newly opened Nuevo Estadio Chamartín , which was renamed Estadio Santiago Bernabéu in 1955 .

After the 1949/50 season , in which he was mainly used as a central defender , Barinaga moved back to his home region for first division rivals Real Sociedad , with whom he was again in the 1951 cup final. In October 1953, the contract with the club from the Basque Country was terminated at his request, after which he ended his career a year later at Betis Sevilla .

Coaching career

After the end of his career as a player, Barinaga immediately took over the coaching position at Betis Sevilla. For the 1957/58 season he moved to the coaching bench of the first division club CA Osasuna , with whom he reached fifth and eighth place in the table in the following two years. On the eleventh day of the 1959/60 season he returned to Betis Sevilla until the end of the season and was sixth in the table with the club from Andalusia . The 1960/61 season began Barinaga as a trainer for the Real Oviedo club , but he was released early after 24 matchdays. In 1960/61 he was in charge of the second division CD Málaga , with whom he rose to the Primera División at the end of the season. In the 1962/63 season , however, he was again given early leave after 21 matchdays and the club rose again from the Segunda División . In 1963/64 he was signed 15 matchdays before the end of the season by the capital club Atlético Madrid , with whom he reached the cup final and qualified for the trade fair cup 1964/65 at the end of the season. Nevertheless, he left the Madrilenians at the end of the season.

After a year break, Barinaga hired for the 1965/66 season at Valencia CF , with whom he took part in the trade fair cup and qualified again for this. At Sevilla FC , Barinaga was released on the penultimate match day in 1966/67 when the club was in acute danger of relegation. On the 17th matchday of the 1967/68 season he was once again obliged by Betis Sevilla, but could no longer save the club from relegation to the second division. After nine game days of the following second division season and only three wins, he had to vacate his post again.

After spending some months in Mexico to Club America had trained, Barinaga was 1968 coach of the national team of Nigeria and after a five-month engagement at RCD Mallorca , with whom he at the end of 1969/70 again relegated to the Segunda División, coach of Morocco . As such, he took part in the Olympic soccer tournament in 1972 , in which Morocco reached the second round as second behind Germany and was eliminated in this after three defeats. In the 1972/73 season he was committed to Real Oviedo on Matchday 17, with whom he initially held the class, but was relegated the following year . For the season 1974/75 Barinaga took over the second division club FC Cádiz , which he had to leave again after only one win in the first five games at the beginning of the 1975/76 season. In March 1978 Barinaga finally took up his last coaching position: he was supposed to save the second division Real Oviedo ten game days before the end of the season from relegation to the third division. After three wins, four draws and three defeats, however, this plan ultimately failed due to the poorer goal difference.

successes

As a player

As a trainer

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Sabino Barinaga, author del primer gol en el Bernabéu (elpais.com), May 21, 1988