Marcelo Bielsa, The kind of man people name stadiums after!

13 Jul 2020 08:50 am, by YorkshireSquare


The name Isaac Newell may not mean a lot to many people but he was a pioneer, in the very literal sense, of football in Argentina. Newell had an adventurous spirit and in 1869 at the age of just 16 he boarded a ship headed for a recently reunified Argentina. In 1884 he founded a school, the Colegio Comercial Anglicano Argentino, in Rosario, Santa Fe. In the same year the first football and set rules arrived in the country and football would go on to play a big part in life at the school.

Football began to rise in popularity in Argentina thanks to participation at schools like Colegio Comercial Anglicano Argentino and clubs and societies set up by British ex-pats. In 1891 the first football league outside of the British Isles was formed, the Association Argentine Football League. The first Primera Division matches were played on 12 April 1891 featuring Buenos Aires FC vs St Andrew's and Old Caledonians vs Belgrano FC. The league only lasted one season but two years later a new league was formed with the same name, this would eventually become the Argentine Football Association.

In 1900 Newell made his son Claudio and his daughter-in-law Katie directors of the school. It was Claudio, who in 1903 founded Club Atletico Newell's Old Boys. From 1905 Newell’s played in the local Liga Rosarina alongside Rosario Athletic, Rosario Central and Atletico Argentino. In 1939 they were admitted to the Primera Division of the Argentine Football Association. Newell’s have won the Primera Division championship six times, on two of those occasions (1991 and 1992) they were managed by one of their own old boys, Marcelo Alberto Bielsa Caldera.




Marcelo Bielsa had a brief and not particularly successful playing career, starting at Newell's Old Boys in 1977. He only played 25 times for Newell's but when he retired from playing in 1980 he began a coaching career at the club. Starting coaching the youth teams he became first team manager in 1990. As well as the two Primera Division titles Bielsa also took Newell’s to the Copa Libertadores final, losing to Sao Paulo on penalties. Bielsa is regarded as somewhat of a revolutionary at Newell’s. The Rosario clubs version of Don Revie or Howard Wilkinson. He is held in such admiration that their stadium was named after him in 2009. How many working managers can say they have a stadium named after them?

Newell's Old Boys made Marcelo Bielsa and he rejuvenated them. The passion Bielsa still shows for Newell’s is clear, he donated almost his entire wage from his first season at Leeds to build a new training facility for them. The fans still see him as a god, a crazy one but nevertheless a god. So much so that Leeds United have found themselves with a new, passionate fan base in South America these past couple of seasons. His style of football and philosophy were developed whilst coaching at the club and this is a philosophy that has gone on to influence managers such as Pep Guardiola and Mauricio Pochettino.

Now, nearly thirty years on from his success at Newell’s, Marcelo Bielsa is on the verge of being just as much of a hero in Leeds, West Yorkshire as he is in Rosario, Santa Fe. The football Marcelo Bielsa has brought to Leeds has been a joy to watch. With the passion and commitment he has ensiled in this team it’s easy to see why he is a man people name stadiums after. Should he deliver promotion to Leeds over the next week surely he will be held in the same regard as the likes of Don Revie and Howard Wilkinson? It’s a bold claim but restoring Leeds United to their former glory could go down as his greatest achievement.

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Iant wrote on 15 Jul 2020 11:40 am

With Leeds if is a very very big word....

Irish Ian wrote on 14 Jul 2020 10:00 pm

mothbanquet wrote: Mon Jul 13, 2020 10:15 am Wow, never knew Argentina's football league was the first one outside the British Isles, that's amazing. Let's keep this man as long as we possibly can. Who knows, perhaps our great club is where he will finally be given the time and resources to complete his perfect footballing formula? With our youth system now fully committed to this formula, who knows what it could lead to in the future?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01bf4 ... /downloads

If you have time check out this brilliant series MB.

The Episode "Exporting football" describes how British Civil servants brought Footy to the South America.

lufc1304 wrote on 13 Jul 2020 04:00 pm

rrfierce wrote: Mon Jul 13, 2020 9:04 am i'm 100% getting a bielsa tattoo if he gets us up
I'm adding his name and the date to my existing badge!

weasel wrote on 13 Jul 2020 02:57 pm

mothbanquet wrote: Mon Jul 13, 2020 2:33 pm This is why I tend to bite my tongue when just because we haven't scored for 20, 30, even 90 mins in yesterday's case, some folk say we didn't play well. Yes, there are definitely certain periods where things aren't quite clicking but these aren't actually that often in the space of a match. To say that we weren't playing well the whole game, which I've heard quite a bit, really discredits Swansea - and by extension ourselves. Why are we judged only to be playing well when other teams are playing badly when two teams can play well and victory comes by a narrow margin? The first 44 mins against Stoke is another example.
Indeed. It's like people simply expect the opposition to turn up, be amazed at our players and fold. If the goal against Swansea had happened in the 20th minute then the match changes completely and likely we would have more space to play in and the game becomes a better spectacle. Without the goal late in the first half against Stoke who knows what the second half performance would have been like, with or without Pablo. There is little to separate most teams in this league. Brentford for example on a great run but along the way they got to play Wigan the game after the club went into administration - what was training like that week for the Wigan players, what was their intensity levels like in the match etc when they had all that going on. Brentford got gifted a penalty through a needless challenge against Charlton when behind, had a keeper error go their way when level v Derby etc. People can look at their form and go wow but they haven't been simply tuning up and strolling to wins. Similarly we got gifted the penalty against Stoke, a definite penalty but a needless one to give away. Without that goal a nervy second half would have been in store for us. Against Blackburn at 1-0 up we were very sloppy and Blackburn should have scored. Very rare at any level that you dominate the match for 90 minutes.

1964white wrote on 13 Jul 2020 02:46 pm

Gurj wrote: Mon Jul 13, 2020 9:32 am I am not embarrassed to state that I will shed tears galore when this man decides to walk away from great club, it will hurt like hell, but until that fateful moment, Ladies and Gentlemen cherish each and every day that he remains with us, for we truly blessed to have him reside at the helm !
Me too Gurj :verysad: amazing we don't know these people personally however they are part of our everyday lives. I'm a emotional fella, the sad loss of Norm & Big Jack has already had me in buckets of tears over the last three months.

We are just one huge Leeds United family