Showing posts with label Capocannoniere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Capocannoniere. Show all posts

25.8.16

Giuseppe Meazza



Meazza's career as a player spanned 20 years (1927-47) and he won 53 international caps between 1930-39.
For Internazionale (Ambrosiana) Meazza scored 242 goals in 365 games. He was Capocannoniere on 3 occasions and scored 33 international goals in his 53 appearances, winning 2 World Cups.
Let's look at the early phase of Meazza's career:  

Season 1927-28:  2 goals on his first team debut age 17. 12 goals in 33 games. 
Season  1928-29:  Top scorer in the national championships with 38 goals in 29 matches.  This included 2 5 goal matches and 6 goals in 1 match (against Venezia). 
Season 1929-30:The first season of Serie A- Capocannoniere with 31 goals.

Not bad considering that Milan rejected him as a 14 year old for being undersized,
 and his first coach at Internazionale's youth side played him as a defender! 




23.9.15

Il Quinquennio D'Oro

Rosetta, Combi, Caligaris

In the 1930-31 season Juventus secured their 3rd national championship (they won the 
Prima Categoria in 1905 and Prima Divisione in 1925-26). They went on to win 5 league titles in succession.


P
W
D
L
F
A
1930-31
34
25
5
4
79
37
1931-32
34
24
6
4
89
38
1932-33
34
25
4
5
83
23
1933-34
34
23
7
4
88
31
1934-35
30
18
8
4
45
22




Line ups:

1930-31
1931-32
1932-33
1933-34
1934-35
Combi*
Valinasso
Rosetta*
Caligaris*
Ferrero
Caligaris
Foni*
Barale
Monti**
M Varglien*
Rier
Bertolini*
Munerati*
Sernagiotto"
Cesarini
Cesarini**
G Varglien*
Vecchina*
Borel*
Ferrari*
Orsi**





* Italian internationals.
**Italian/Argentinian internationals.
" Brazil international.

Leading Scorers:
1930-31
Orsi- 20, Vecchina, Ferrari -16
1931-32
Orsi- 19, Ferrari- 17
1932-33
Borel-29 (capocannoniere)
1933-34
Borel- 31 (capocannoniere), Ferrari- 16
1934-35
Borel - 13

Monti

Renato Cesarini

Mario Varglien

Orsi, Vecchina, Munerati 

Giovanni Ferrari


Felice Borel



3.2.15

Lo Sport Fascista - February 1933


Mussolini, although not a great football fan, realised the propaganda potential of sport and exploited the success of Italian sportsmen during the Fascist Era for these purposes.
The player featured on this magazine from  February 1933 is Bologna centre forward Angelo Schiavio.
Schiavio spent 16 seasons at Bologna (1922-1938), scoring  109 goals in 179 Serie A appearances and 242 senior goals in a total of 348 appearances. In the 1931–1932 season he was Capocannoniere  with 25 goals. He featured in 4 scudetto winning squads and won the Mitropa Cup twice.
His international record with Italy (1925-1934) was 15 goals in 21 matches, He won Olympic Bronze (1928) and was a World Cup Winner (1934), scoring the winning goal in the final. Schiavo also featured in 2 successful  Coupe Internationale européenne campaigns. 


3.3.13

Artillero




The career of Pedro Petrone Schiavone, known as Pedro Petrone (or by his nicknames Perucho or Artillero) was a catalogue of successes. 
He started out as a 15 year old with the Montevideo club Charley. In 1924 he moved to Nacional. Petrone spent 2 seasons in Italy with Fiorentina from 1931-33 before returning to Nacional. 


Here is a summary of his achievements by year:
  • 1923 Copa America - winner.
  • 1923 Copa America - Top Goalscorer (3 goals in 3 games).
  • 1924 Primera División Uruguaya - winner.
  • 1924 Olympics - Gold Medal.
  • 1924 Olympic Football Tournament Top Goalscorer (7 goals in 5 games).
  • 1924 Copa America - winner
  • 1924 Copa America Tournament Top Goalscorer (4 goals in 3 games).
  • Toured Europe with Nacional.
  • 1927 Copa America Tournament Top Goalscorer (3 goals in 2 games).
  • 1928 Olympics - Gold Medal.
  • 1930 FIFA World Cup - winner.
  • 1931-32: Serie A Capocannoniere with 25 goals in 27 games.
  • 1933 Primera División Uruguaya – winner.


Club career:
Nacional (1924 -30) 146 goals in 128 appearances.
Fiorentina (1931-33) 37 goals in 44 appearances.  
Nacional (1933-34)  30 goals in 20 appearances.

International:

Uruguay (1924-30)  24 goals in 29 appearances.


27.2.13

Capocannonieri

The Capocannoniere is the top scorer in Italy's Serie A. As we have seen, before the introduction of the single national league in the 1929-30 season, the national Championships were a complicated affair. However, records relating to the highest scorer are reliable from the 1923-24 season onwards. 
1923-24:
 Heinrich Schönfeld (Austria)- Torino- 22 goals in 20 games scored 51.1 % of his team's goals).
Schönfeld made his debut in professional football at the age of 16 playing as a goalkeeper. After spending 3 seasons in Italy (2 at Torino and 1 at Inter Milan)  Schönfeld returned to Austria to play for Hakoah Vienna. He later spent 3 years in the USA ( Brooklyn WanderersBrooklyn Hakoah and New York Hakoah) before returning to Italy.

1924-24:
Mario Magnozzi - Livorno - 19 goals in 24 appearances. (Livorno finished mid-table in Northern Group B, scoring 45 goals. Magnozzi contributed 42.2% of his team's total goals).
Magnozzi was capped 29 times by Italy and appeared in the 1924 and 1928 Olympics (winning a bronze medal in the latter).

1925–26: 
Ferenc Hirzer (Ferenc Híres- Hungary)- Juventus - 35 goals in 26 games (41.6 %).
Hirzer was capped 32 times by Hungary in a 10 year international career, including 2 appearances at the 1924  Olympics . He played top level football in Hungary, Germany and Italy  He had two productive years at Juventus, scoring 50 goals in 43 games. He was Capocannoniere in his first season with Juventus, in which they were National Champions.


1926-27:

Antonio Powolny (Anton Powolny -Austria Internazionale- 22 goals in 27 games (35.4 %).
1926-1927  was Austrian born Powolny's only season at Internazionale. Inter finished in 5th place in the final group of 6. Powolny moved on to continue his career in Hungary.

1927-28:
Julio Libonatti (Argentina/Italy) Torino35 goals in 32 games (31.5%).
 Libonatti joined Torino in 1926, the first transatlantic move into Italian football.
 Torino  were National Champions in 1927-28.

Libonatti & Rosetti
1928-1929:
Gino Rosetti -Torino36 goals in 30 games (31.3%).
Rosetti had a 20 year club career. In 2 spells at Torino he made 238 appearances and scored 145 goals. He was capped 13 times by Italy and appeared in the 1928 Olympics, winning a bronze medal. Torino lost to Bologna in the 1928-29 National Finals.



1929-1930:

Giuseppi Meazza -Ambrosiana- 31 goals in 33 games (36.4%)
Ambrosiana were scudetto winners.
Meazza spent 13 years at Internazionale/ Ambrosiana. AC Milan rejected him because he was too small and Inter misguidedly played him as a defender in the reserves. They soon rectified this error and Meazza rewarded them with a return of  242 goals in 365 games, beginning with 2 goals on his first team debut. He was Capocannoniere on 3 occasions and scored 33 international goals in his 53 appearances, winning 2 World Cups.

1930-31:
 
Rodolfo Volk (Rodolfo Folchi- Austria-Hungary/ Croatia) - AS Roma 29 goals in 33 games (33.3%).
AS Roma were a creation of the Italian Fascist government. Rodolfo Volk was from Rijeka (Fiume) which is now in Croatia but was part of Austria -Hungary at the time of his birth. 
Roma finished the season as runners-up in Serie A.

1931-32:

Pedro Petrone (Uruguay)-Fiorentina 25 goals in 27 games (46.2%).


Angelo Schiavio - Bologna 25 goals in 30 games (29.4%).
Their respective percentages are telling. Second placed Bologna scored 85 goals whilst Fiorentina, in 4th, managed 54. 

1932-33:
Felice Borel - Juventus-29 goals in 28 games (34.9%).

1933-34:
Felice Borel - Juventus-31 goals in 34 games (35.2%).

In both of the seasons in which Borel was Capocannoniere Juve were scudetto winners. A big scoring side they notched up 80+ goals in both seasons. He celebrated his 20th birthday towards the end of the second season. 

1934-35:
Enrique Guaita  (Enrico Guaita- Argentina/Italy)- Roma-28 goals in 29 games (44.4%)
Guaita arrived in Italy in 1933.
The free scoring Roma ended the season in 4th spot.

1935-36:
Giuseppi Meazza -Ambrosiana- 25 goals in 29 games (40.9%).
Ambrosiana finished 4th despite scoring 22 goals more than champions Bologna.

1936-37:
Silvio Piola-  Lazio-21 goals  in 28 games (37.5%)
Piola was the most prolific goalscorer in the history of Serie A. He started out at Pro Vercelli and moved to Lazio in 1934. He played 619 games in the Italian league, scoring 333 goals. He won 34 international caps, scoring 34 goals, including 2 in the 1938 World Cup final.
In the 1936-37 season Lazio finished second in Serie A.

11.1.13

Italian Championships 1920-29


1919-20  Internazionale
Italian football resumed after the war with a very protracted battle to find the National Champions.
 In northern Italy, following some preliminary elimination rounds, there were  8 regional leagues, each of six teams.  The top two sides in these groups progressed to the 'semifinals', which were in fact, three leagues of six. This produced a round robin final between Internazionale, Juventus and Genoa. Internazionale won the northern final group.
Southern Italy had 3 regional leagues ( made up of 6, 7 and 5 teams), again with the two top sides in each league progressing to a semi final (2 groups of 3). This produced a final in which Livorno beat Fortitudo Roma. 
Internazionale and Livorno met for the national final at Bologna on 20th June, Inter winning by 3-2.


1920-21  Pro Vercelli
The 1920-21 season saw an even bigger field of entrants.
 In Liguria region there was a preliminary round and then an 8 team regional league. 
In Piedmont there were two 6 team leagues. The top 2 sides in each league progressed and the 2 third placed teams played off.
In Lombardy there were 6 leagues of 4 teams, the group winners progressing to a 6 team final round from which 4 teams progressed.
Veneto had two groups of 5 teams with the top 2 teams in each group making a regional final round of which the top 2 progressed.
In 

Emilia-Romagna 2 leagues of 5 teams produced a regional final between the 2 group winners and a play off between the two second placed teams. The craziest result of all came in the match between the group winners, Bologna beat Modena 10-1 in the first leg but lost the return 1-0. Despite the aggregate score of 10-2 the two sides had to play a tie break, as aggregate was not taken into account, only 'games won'! Bologna won the replay 1-0.

The position after all this was that there were still 4 groups of 4- the winners of each group to go on to a semi final. Further complications arose here, as two of the 4 groups required tie break matches (there being no means, such as goal difference, of separating the teams being employed).  Legnano and Torino drew their tie break and both promptly withdrew from the tournament.
The next stage saw Pro Vercelli beat Alessandria to claim a place in the Northern Final against Bologna (who had a bye following the withdrawal of both their prospective opponents). Pro Vercelli won this final 2-1 after extra time.
The south was much simpler: 

Tuscany- a league of 8, top 2 go through.

Lazio- a league of 8, top 2 go through.


Campania- 2 groups of 4, the top 2 of each going through to a qualification group, again with the top 2 progressing.


This produced a semi final - 2 groups of 3, with the winners of each group ( Livorno and Pisa) meeting in the southern final.

Pisa won 1-0.

Pro Vercelli and Pisa met in the national final in Turin on July 24th, with Pro Vercelli winning  2 – 1.





The Split
If you find the account of the 1920-21 season confusing and absurd, you are in exalted company. Vittorio Pozzo had been campaigning for a rationalization of the national championship. He could never get his resolutions enacted, however, simply because the large number of small clubs who benefited from the complex system of leagues and groups and playoffs would veto ant changes. The bigger clubs though were also getting disillusioned with the season that ran from October until the last week of July. They supported Pozzo's plan. 

1921–22 Prima Divisione (CCI) Pro Vercelli
As a result a breakaway league was formed under the auspices of the 
Confederazione Calcistica Italiana- 2 leagues of 12 teams in the north and 4 groups of various sizes in the south producing a 2 legged final in which Pro Vercelli beat Fortitudo (Rome) 3-0 and 5-2. 
This transpired to be Pro Vercelli's last major trophy to date.

1921–22 Prima Categoria (FIGC) USD Novese
In the meantime the  Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio  persisted with their national Championship (which is considered the valid championship in the continuum of the history of the scudetto) despite the defection of the most powerful cubs, including Pro Vercelli, Juventus , Milan ,Torino, Genoa and Internazionale.
Based on the familiar abundance of regional groups, the title was won by USD Novese, 2-1 winners in the final over Sampierdarenese (who would later merge with Andrea Doria to form Sampdoria).


1922-23 Genoa CFC
Reconciliation between the two governing bodies. After qualification rounds there were 36 teams in the northern section and 19 in the south. Delightfully simple- 3 leagues of 12 and the top team in each league goes into a final round, which was won by Genoa.
In the south there were 4 regional qualifying groups of varying sizes, the top placed teams and runners up progressing to form 2 groups of four, the winners of which contested the two-legged southern final in which Lazio beat A.C. Savoia 1908.
Genoa beat Lazio 4-1 at home on July 15th and a week later traveled to Rome where they won the second leg 2-0. This was Genoa's 2nd Scudetto under the management of former Woolwich Arsenal and Blackburn Rovers player William Garbutt, who had been at the club since 1912.




1923-24 Genoa CFC 
In this season the northern section was even more straightforward. There were two leagues of 12 and the winners (Bologna and Genoa ) played each other in a two-legged final that Genoa won 2-1.
The southern section had three proper smaller groups, a two team play off for Sicilian clubs and one region where the only entrant received a walkover into the next round. Two groups of four then played and the two group winners (Savoia 1908 and Alba Roma ) met in the final.
As winners Savoia met Genoa in a two-legged national final, Genoa winning 4-2.



1924-25 Bologna
Alba Roma made it one step further this season, beating Anconitana in the southern final. The northern final between Bologna and Genoa was a marathon- in the scheduled two legged final Genoa won the first leg in  Bologna 2-1 and Bologna won in Genoa by the same score.
The first replay was drawn 2-2 and a second 1-1. Bologna then won a third replay (the 5th match of the series ) 2-0. The first leg of the final took place on the 24th may and the decisive replay on the 9th August!
Bologna were too strong for Alba, winning the two legged final 4-0 at home and 2-0 away. 


1925-26 Juventus
Alba Roma made it to the national final again, beating Internazionale-Naples 6-1 and 1-1 in the southern final. In the national final they met Juventus, who had won their qualifying group by eight points with a goal difference of +54 before beating reigning champions Bologna 2-1 in a replay after their two legged final was drawn 2-2 and 0-0. Juve's Hungarian manager Jenő Károly died of a heart attack a few days before the first meeting with Bologna. He was replaced by his countryman József Violak as player manager.
In the first leg of the final in Torino Juventus beat Alba 7-1. They followed this up with a 5-0 win in Rome to seal their second scudetto in style. Hungary's Ferenc Hirzer  was Capocannoniere with 35 goals in 26 games for Juventus.



Luigi Allemandi
1926-27 void 
A landmark year saw the introduction of the Divisione Nazionale- out went the regions - there were two national leagues of just ten teams each and the top 3 teams in each made up a final group. Torino emerged as the champions, however, they were stripped of the title following the exposure of the first major match fixing scandal in Italian football, the Allemandi Case.
Juventus full back Luigi Allemandi  was offered 50,000 lira by an official of Torino to throw the Turin derby game on June 5th, 25,000 lira up front and the rest after the match. Torino won the match 2–1, but when Allemandi went to collect he was refused, and the ensuing  confrontation was overheard by a journalist. Torino were stripped of the title and Allemandi was banned for life. He was later pardoned by the Prince of Piedmont (later king  Umberto II) in 1928 . He won the World Cup with Italy in 1934.



1927-28 Torino 
Torino bounced back from the scandal in marvellous style to win their first scudetto.
There were two 11 club national leagues , the top four clubs in each then going on to form a 
'Final Round' league. Torino won group A with an impressive 78 goals in 20 matches. They won the 'Final Round' by 2 points from Genoa.



1928-29 Bologna
There were two National leagues of 16 teams each. Winners Bologna and Torino met in a two-legged final. Bologna won their home leg 3-1 and Torino theirs by 1-0. As aggregate scores were not taken into account a play off was held in Rome that Bologna won 1-0 through an 82nd minute goal by Giuseppe Muzzioli. 

For the 1929-30 season Serie A was introduced, a national league consisting of 18 clubs.