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  1. Helenio Herrera Gavilán (n. 17 aprilie 1916, Buenos Aires, Argentina – d. 9 noiembrie 1997, Veneția, Italia) a fost un fotbalist și antrenor francezo-argentinian. Deși s-a născut în Argentina ambii lui părinți erau spanioli, tatăl său fiind un cunoscut anarhist aflat în exil. El a emigrat la vârsta de patru ani cu părinții săi ...

  2. Nov 9, 2017 · Club. 09 de nov. 17. Nascut a Buenos Aires el 10 d’abril del 1910, Helenio Herrera (per a tothom, HH) era fill d’emigrants andalusos. Amb nou anys es va traslladar amb els seus pares al Marroc, on va començar a jugar a futbol amb equips infantils, per bé que més endavant va desenvolupar la seva carrera esportiva a França.

  3. Aug 7, 2019 · Helenio Herrera changed that. The trailblazing Argentine revolutionised the art of coaching, implementing psychological techniques and professionalising his squads in an era that cared little for ...

  4. Dec 17, 2015 · The incomparable legacy of Helenio Herrera. 17/12/2015 by Thore Haugstad. Artwork by Sammy Moody. Helenio Herrera was one of the most original managers football has seen, in most ways imaginable. He ruled his teams with a combination of dictatorial discipline, gruesome training regimes, bizarre psychological habits, military-style training ...

  5. Sep 11, 1997 · Helenio Herrera Gavilán (Buenos Aires, Argentina, 10/04/1910 - 09/11/1997). Valladolid, Atlético de Madrid, CD Málaga, Deportivo de la Coruña, Deportivo de La Coruña, Sevilla, Barcelona, Inter, Roma

  6. Mar 18, 2024 · 01.08.1962 Photo: imago/Buzzi – Trainer Helenio Herrera (re.) with Sandro Mazzola ( Inter); Serie A 1962/1963, “On the way back from Murano we stopped off for a look around the beautiful cemetery on the island of San Michele in Venice. It is the final resting place of several famous people, such as Stravinsky but I was drawn to a quiet ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CatenaccioCatenaccio - Wikipedia

    In Helenio Herrera's version of catenaccio in the 1960s, he used a 5–3–2 formation, in which four man-marking defenders were tightly assigned to the opposing attackers while an extra player, the sweeper, would pick up any loose ball that escaped the coverage of the defenders. The emphasis of this system in Italian football spawned the rise of many top Italian defenders who became known for their hard-tackling and ruthless defending.