Tag: Zagallo

  • Zagallo, Beckenbauer exit

    Zagallo, Beckenbauer exit

    • Two football greats that the world cannot forget so soon

    As football greats, they both achieved a rare feat that underscored their greatness. Brazil’s Mario Zagallo, who died on January 5, aged 92, and Germany’s Franz Beckenbauer, who died on January 7, aged 78, won the World Cup as players and as managers. Only one other person, France’s Didier Deschamps, has such a record.

    Zagallo won the prestigious title as a player in 1958 and 1962, and as a manager in 1970. He also won the 1994 FIFA World Cup as assistant manager, making him the only one who had won the championship as a player and as a manager more than once. 

    He joined Brazilian side Flamengo as a teenager in 1950,  joined Botafogo in 1958, and played for the club until his retirement in 1965.   As a forward, he was skillful and adaptable.

    He was a member of the Brazilian squad for the 1958 FIFA World Cup in Sweden, and scored a goal in Brazil’s 5-2 win against the host country in the final. In 1962, he was in the Brazil team that successfully defended their World Cup title in Chile, beating Czechoslovakia 3-1 in the final.  They became the second team to win the World Cup twice consecutively, after Italy in 1934 and 1938. No country has repeated the feat since Brazil did.

    He started his managerial career at Botafogo in 1966, after he retired as a player. Shortly before the 1970 FIFA World Cup in Mexico, he was appointed as manager of the Brazil national team, which was a testimony to his managerial distinction. He proved to be the best man for the job, and led Brazil to their third title, becoming the first person to win the World Cup as a player and as a manager. He was 38 at the time, and also became the second youngest coach to win the World Cup.

    Nicknamed ‘The Professor’ during his coaching career because of his expertise, he received the FIFA Order of Merit for his contributions to football, in 1992, the highest honour awarded by the international football governing body. He was named the 9th Greatest Manager of All Time by World Soccer Magazine in 2013.

    Beckenbauer was nicknamed der Kaiser, “The Emperor.”  He made his mark as a central defender, and was credited with the invention of the role of the modern sweeper, which requires versatility. He recreated the role, and became a model of the attacking sweeper.

    Read Also: German legend  Beckenbauer dies at 78

    He joined German club Bayern Munich in the mid-1960s. During his time there as a player, the club won the European Winners’ Cup in 1967, three league championships in a row, 1972 to 1974, and also the European Cup three times, 1974 to 1976. He was the first player to win three European Cups as captain of his club, and was twice named European Footballer of the Year. He later became manager, and then president of the club. He also played for US club New York Cosmos, and was inducted into the US National Soccer Hall of Fame.

    He played for West Germany in three FIFA World Cups and two European Championships. After lifting the World Cup as captain in 1974, when host West Germany defeated the Netherlands 2-1, he won the trophy again as a manager in 1990, when his country beat Argentina 1-0 in Italy.  He was the first man to win the title as team captain and as manager. He was also the first captain to win the European Championship at the international level, and the European Cup at the club level.

    Named in the World Team of the 20th Century in 1988, the FIFA World Cup Dream Team in 2002 and the Ballon d’Or Dream Team in 2020, Beckenbauer was listed in the FIFA 100 world’s greatest living players in 2004.

    They will be remembered for their pure passion for football, exemplary professionalism and uncommon successes.

  • Brazil World Cup winner Zagallo dies at 92

    Brazil World Cup winner Zagallo dies at 92

    Mario Zagallo, the first person to win the FIFA World Cup as a coach as well as a player is dead. 

    He died at the age of 92 on Friday, January 5.

    The late Zagallo played a crucial role in Brazil’s ascension to prominence in the world of football.

    He was the last living member of the Brazil squad that won the 1958 World Cup, which was both the nation’s first championship and a consolation prize after an agonizing loss to Uruguay at the Maracana eight years earlier.

    “I was at the Maracana for that fateful loss to Uruguay. I was a soldier and it was my job to keep people off the pitch,” said Zagallo of the result that prompted national mourning.

    Read Also: 2018 FIFA Best Award: Modric wins to end Ronaldo, Messi dominance

    “I’ll never forget the silence, the sadness and the disappointment of that defeat.”

    His legendary teammate, Pele, died in December 2022.

    While the memory of the uruguay loss remained vivid, Zagallo would do his best to relieve the anguish by leaving his fingerprints on four of Brazil’s five World Cup triumphs.

    The diminutive left winger Zagallo, who rose from the amateur levels in the 1950s, personified Brazil’s attempt to combine attacking flair with defensive resiliency by fusing his own superb talent with an impressive level of commitment.