Herrera withInter Milan during the 1973–74 season | |||
| Personal information | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Helenio Herrera Gavilán | ||
| Date of birth | (1910-04-10)10 April 1910 | ||
| Place of birth | Buenos Aires, Argentina | ||
| Date of death | 9 November 1997(1997-11-09) (aged 87) | ||
| Place of death | Venice, Italy | ||
| Height | 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)[1] | ||
| Position | Central defender | ||
| Senior career* | |||
| Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
| Roches Noires | |||
| 1931–1932 | Racing de Casablanca | ||
| 1932–1933 | CASG Paris | ||
| 1933–1935 | Stade Français | ||
| 1935–1937 | Charleville | ||
| 1937–1939 | Excelsior Roubaix | ||
| 1940–1942 | Red Star Olympique | ||
| 1942–1943 | Stade Français | ||
| 1943–1944 | EF Paris-Capitale | ||
| 1944–1945 | Puteaux | ||
| Managerial career | |||
| 1944–1945 | Puteaux | ||
| 1945–1948 | Stade Français | ||
| 1948–1949 | Real Valladolid | ||
| 1949–1952 | Atlético Madrid | ||
| 1952 | Málaga | ||
| 1953 | Deportivo de La Coruña | ||
| 1953–1957 | Sevilla | ||
| 1957–1958 | Belenenses | ||
| 1958–1960 | Barcelona | ||
| 1959–1960 | Spain | ||
| 1960–1968 | Inter Milan | ||
| 1966–1967 | Italy | ||
| 1968–1970 | Roma | ||
| 1971–1972 | Roma | ||
| 1973–1974 | Inter Milan | ||
| 1978–1979 | Rimini | ||
| 1979–1981 | Barcelona | ||
| * Club domestic league appearances and goals | |||
Helenio Herrera Gavilán (Spanish pronunciation:[eˈlenjoeˈreɾaɣaβiˈlan]; 10 April 1910 – 9 November 1997) was anArgentine and naturalisedFrenchfootball player andmanager. He is best remembered for his success with theInter Milan team known asGrande Inter in the 1960s.
During his managerial career, Herrera won fourLa Liga titles in Spain (withAtlético Madrid andBarcelona) and threeSerie A titles in Italy with Inter. He also guided Inter to European glory, winning two consecutiveEuropean Cups, among several other honours. He is regarded as one of the greatest managers of all time.[2]
Herrera was arguably the first manager to collect credit for his teams' performances,[3][4] in the process becoming a superstar in the world of football. Up to that time, managers were more marginal figures in a team. All teams throughout Europe were known for their headline-grabbing individual players, e.g.Di Stéfano'sReal Madrid, whereas Inter during the 1960s is still referred to asHerrera's Inter.
Herrera was born in 1910 inBuenos Aires, Argentina, to immigrant parents from Spain. His father Francisco, who worked as a carpenter, was an exiledanarchist originally fromAndalusia. His mother, Maria Gavilán Martínez, was a cleaner.[5] In 1920, Herrera's family left Argentina forCasablanca, in what was thenFrench Morocco, in search of a better life. In Casablanca, Herrera started his career as a footballer.[5]
Playing as acentral defender, in 1932 the 22-year-old Herrera earned a transfer fromRC Casablanca to mainland France, to CASG in Paris.Before the onset ofWorld War II, Herrera (or "H.H." as he was known) had spells at several French clubs. From 1933 to 1935 he was atStade Français, from 1935 to 1937 atFCO Charleville (where he was called up for theFrance national team twice), and atExcelsior Roubaix from 1937 to 1939.
During the war, he played for five years atRed Star Paris, Stade Français, EF Paris-Capitale and Puteaux, where he started his managing career in 1944 as a player-manager, before retiring from playing in 1945, at 35 years of age. While he spent his career playing for established French clubs, Herrera did not win any notable silverware. His managing career, which coincided with the early beginnings ofUEFA competitions, had a marked effect on the game's tactical development.
After his first season in Puteaux, Herrera rejoined Stade Français for a third time, now as manager. After three seasons with no trophies collected, the club's president opted to sell the club. Herrera moved to Spain, where he spent the next six years withReal Valladolid,Atlético Madrid (where he wonLa Liga in1950 and1951),Málaga,Deportivo de La Coruña andSevilla, before moving toPortugal and a two-year tenure withLisbon sideBelenenses. Later, returning to Spain, he managed giantsBarcelona, where he won various titles (including La Liga, twice), but several problems, including disagreements between him and star playerLadislao Kubala, forced him to leave the club in 1960.[6]

He immediately emigrated to Italy and signed withInter Milan (where he was to remain until 1968), winning threeSerie A titles and twoEuropean Cups during his stay with the club, where he used a 5–3–2 formation, and modified a tactic known as theVerrou (door bolt) – used byKarl Rappan – to include larger flexibility for counter-attacks; thus, theCatenaccio system was born. The side was later nicknamedGrande Inter, due to the club's successes under Herrera's eight–year spell, which saw the team win back–to–backEuropean Cup titles in1964 and1965, as well as threeSerie A titles, and twoIntercontinental Cup titles.[6][7][8] During this time he was also coachingSpain (between 1959 and 1962) andItaly (1966–67).[6]
In 1968, Herrera moved toRoma, where he became the highest paid manager in the world, with a contract worth an estimated £150,000 per year. He won theCoppa Italia in his first season, but relations with club president Alvaro Marchini had already soured over the tragic death of his centre-forwardGiuliano Taccola in the team dressing room at an away game againstCagliari. The following season, 1969–70, erratic results in the league gave Marchini the excuse to sack him.
He returned to management for a one-year stint with Inter for the 1973–74 season. Herrera then suffered a heart attack, did not want to coach full-time any more and retired in Venice, where he lived the rest of his life. While inactive between 1974 and 1978, Herrera returned briefly during the end of the decade, managingRimini, and finally ending his career with a return to Barcelona for one-and-a-half seasons in 1980 and 1981.
This sectiondoes notcite anysources. Please helpimprove this section byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged andremoved.(January 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |

He pioneered the use of psychological motivating skills – his pep-talk phrases are still quoted today, e.g. "he who doesn't give it all, gives nothing", "with ten our team plays better than with eleven" (after his team had to face the second half of a game with only ten players on the field) and "Class + Preparation + Intelligence + Athleticism = Championships". These slogans were often plastered on billboards around the ground and chanted by players during training sessions.
He also enforced a strict discipline code, for the first time forbidding players to drink or smoke and controlling their diet – once at Inter, he suspended a player after telling the press "we came to play in Rome" instead of "we came towin in Rome". He also sent club personnel to players' homes during the week to perform '"bed-checks."[citation needed] He introduced theritiro, a pre-match remote country hotel retreat that started with the collection of players on Thursday to prepare for a Sunday game.
He was also one of the first managers to call on the support of the "twelfth player" – the spectators. While indirectly, this led to the appearance of the firstUltras movements in the late 60s. While defensive in nature, his understanding of theCatenaccio was slightly different from that practised by other Italian teams and the originalVerrou, as he often used thefull backs (particularlyGiacinto Facchetti) ashalf backs (defensively supported by thelibero) to launch faster counter-attacks, a staple of Italian tactics – yet, he never denied the heart of his team relied on defence.
In 2004, Herrera's widow Fiora Gandolfi (his third wife) released a book calledTacalabala. In it, were collected sayings, sketches and notes from Herrera's notebooks and journals.[9][10]
Herrera's standard formation at Inter was the5–3–2 system, which almost always included asweeper (usually the team'scaptain,Armando Picchi), as well as four man-marking defenders.[11] He was openly dismissive of teams that had an obsession for dominatingball possession, declaring that "the ball always moves further, and more quickly, when there isn't a player behind it".[5]
Although Herrera's Barcelona side was known for playing a fluid, attacking brand of football, his pragmaticCatenaccio tactics at Inter were often criticised for producing few goals, and for being dull, overly defensive, or even destructive;[6] Herrera and several of Inter's players at the time refuted these claims, however,[6] with Herrera later stating: "The problem is that most of the ones who copied me copied me wrongly. They forgot to include the attacking principles that myCatenaccio included. I had Picchi as a sweeper, yes, but I also had Facchetti, the first full-back to score as many goals as a forward".[12]
Aside from the team's defensive strength and organisation when defending behind the ball, some of the key elements of Herrera'sGrande Inter side of the 1960s were the use of vertical football and very quick, efficientcounter-attacks, which allowed the team to score with few touches.[13] This was made possible due to Herrera's use of very quick and energetic, attacking full-backs, such asGiacinto Facchetti, andTarcisio Burgnich, who would often detach themselves from the back-line, and catch their opponents by surprise with their overlapping runs.[13] Furthermore, the team's main creative force, Spanish deep-lying playmakerLuis Suárez, played a fundamental part in Inter's success during this period, due to his outstanding work-rate, technical skills, vision and passing range; these attributes enabled him to aid the team to win back possession, and subsequently launch quick attacks with accurate long balls out to the on-running full-backs, who would often go on either to score or assist the strikers.[13][14][15]
After successive European Cups in 1964 and 1965,[6] Helenio Herrera'sCatenaccio style of play suffered a massive blow in the1967 final in Lisbon, when they came up against Scottish championsCeltic ofGlasgow, – nicknamed theLisbon Lions – who consisted of a group of players who were all born within 30 miles of Celtic's home ground,Celtic Park. Celtic won the game 2–1 after coming back from a seventh-minuteMazzola penalty, with many pundits claiming this was a "victory for football" against the defensively-destructiveCatenaccio.[16][17][18][19]
This sectioncontains alist of miscellaneous information. Please helpimprove it byrelocating relevant information into other sections or articles.(June 2020) |
Helenio Herrera was nicknamedil Mago (the Wizard) andH.H. (from the initials of his name) by Italian sports journalists (who recognised him as one of the finest coaches in Italian football history), due to his success and tactical prowess, and because on occasion he would provocatively announce the results of Sunday's games, and often his prediction turned out to be correct.[11][20]
Herrera had 8 children, while also being married to 3 wives. His children are Francis (1937), Hélène (1938), Linda (1941), Daniéle (1942), Helenio Angel (1952), Rocío (1957), Helios (1972) and Luna (1974), with the latter one being adopted. Herrera had 3 sons and 5 daughters. 5 were born inFrance, 2 inSpain and one of them inItaly.
| Team | Nat | From | To | Record | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G | W | D | L | Win % | |||||||
| Stade Français | 5 August 1945 | 30 June 1948 | 122 | 70 | 22 | 30 | 057.38 | ||||
| Real Valladolid | 4 July 1948 | 22 June 1949 | 26 | 10 | 2 | 14 | 038.46 | ||||
| Atlético Madrid | 23 June 1949 | 28 December 1952 | 115 | 55 | 19 | 41 | 047.83 | ||||
| Deportivo de La Coruña | 19 January 1953 | 19 July 1953 | 21 | 9 | 3 | 9 | 042.86 | ||||
| Sevilla | 1 August 1953 | 28 July 1957 | 138 | 72 | 16 | 50 | 052.17 | ||||
| Belenenses | 13 August 1957 | 25 April 1958 | 19 | 9 | 4 | 6 | 047.37 | ||||
| Barcelona | 25 April 1958 | 30 May 1960 | 94 | 71 | 10 | 13 | 075.53 | ||||
| Inter Milan | 9 July 1960 | 30 June 1968 | 343 | 194 | 86 | 63 | 056.56 | ||||
| Spain | 13 March 1959 | 21 April 1960 | 6 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 083.33 | ||||
| Spain | 26 May 1962 | 7 June 1962 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 033.33 | ||||
| Italy (Technical Commission) | 1 November 1966 | 2 March 1967 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 075.00 | ||||
| Roma | 9 July 1968 | 5 April 1971 | 114 | 37 | 47 | 30 | 032.46 | ||||
| Roma | 29 August 1971 | 10 April 1973 | 62 | 23 | 20 | 19 | 037.10 | ||||
| Inter Milan | 19 July 1973 | 5 February 1974 | 24 | 12 | 7 | 5 | 050.00 | ||||
| Rimini | 5 March 1979 | 30 April 1979 | 8 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 012.50 | ||||
| Barcelona | 6 March 1980 | 18 June 1980 | 13 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 046.15 | ||||
| Barcelona | 6 November 1980 | 12 June 1981 | 36 | 24 | 6 | 6 | 066.67 | ||||
| Total | 1,148 | 602 | 250 | 296 | 052.44 | ||||||
Atlético Madrid
Sevilla
Barcelona
Inter Milan
Roma
Individual