Gerardo Martino

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Gerardo Martino
Gerardo Martino (marzo de 2014).jpg
Martino managing Barcelona in 2014
Personal information
Full name Gerardo Daniel Martino
Date of birth (1962-11-20) 20 November 1962 (age 61)
Place of birth Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina
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Position(s) Attacking midfielder
Team information
Current team
Argentina (manager)
Youth career
1972–1980 Newell's Old Boys
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1980–1990 Newell's Old Boys 392 (35)
1991 Tenerife 15 (1)
1991–1994 Newell's Old Boys 81 (2)
1994–1995 Lanús 30 (3)
1995 Newell's Old Boys 15 (0)
1996 O'Higgins 11 (1)
1996 Barcelona SC 5 (0)
Total 538 (41)
International career
1981 Argentina U20 2 (0)
1991 Argentina 1 (0)
Managerial career
1998 Brown de Arrecifes
1999 Platense
2000 Instituto
2002–2003 Libertad
2003–2004 Cerro Porteño
2005 Colón
2005–2006 Libertad
2006–2011 Paraguay
2012–2013 Newell's Old Boys
2013–2014 Barcelona
2014– Argentina
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Gerardo Daniel "Tata" Martino (born 20 November 1962) is a former Argentine footballer who is currently the manager of the Argentine national team.

Martino played mostly for Newell's Old Boys in his native Rosario. He holds the record of appearances with the team playing a total of 505 matches in all official competitions. He was also selected in a fan's poll as Newell's best player throughout the club's history.[1]

Martino was chosen to replace Tito Vilanova as manager of FC Barcelona at the start of the 2013–14 season, but announced his resignation on 17 May 2014, though his side finished runner-up in both the Copa del Rey and La Liga that season. In 2015, he led Argentina to the Copa América Final, only to be defeated by hosts Chile on penalties.

Coaching career

Paraguay national team

Martino was assigned as head coach of the Paraguayan national football team in February 2007, replacing Uruguayan Anibal "Maño" Ruiz. His knowledge and success while coaching Paraguayan clubs were the parameters that positioned him as the best option for the job (other candidates were Nery Pumpido and Miguel Ángel Russo). Previously, Martino had won the Paraguayan league four times from 2002 till 2006.

In 2008, Martino was linked for vacant managerial position of Iran Pro League side Steel Azin but the deal was cancelled due to personal reasons.[2] On 5 July 2010, Martino announced that he would be stepping down as Paraguay coach on their return from the 2010 FIFA World Cup in which he led Paraguay to quarter-finals. Martino confirmed that with his four-year contract expiring, he would not be extending his spell in charge of the national side.[3] However, on 10 July 2010, Martino agreed to stay on as Paraguay coach until after the 2011 Copa America, in which Paraguay were runners-up after losing to Uruguay in the final.[4]

Newell's Old Boys

After Hernán Darío Gómez's departure from the Colombian national team, Martino received a proposition to coach the team but turned it down, opting instead to coach Newell's Old Boys, one of his former clubs as a player and a club which at the time was dangerously close to relegation to the Primera B Nacional, the second tier of Argentine football. However, a series of impressive results under Martino secured top-flight status for Newell's and Martino's reputation as a coach increased quite significantly.

Following his excellent first season at Newell's, Martino won the 2013 Torneo Final, the second and final stage of the Argentine Primera División season and reached the semi-finals of the 2013 Copa Libertadores. As a result, Martino won further plaudits as a coach, having transformed Newell's from a team facing relegation on his arrival to a title-winning side, in addition to the arguably more impressive feat of reaching the 2013 Copa Libertadores semi-final, the pinnacle club competition organized by CONMEBOL. It was this startling turnaround that further increased Martino's stock as a coach, and his achievements at Newell's soon caught the attention of various clubs in Europe, including FC Barcelona.

Barcelona

On 22 July 2013, Martino was confirmed as manager of Spanish club Barcelona to replace Tito Vilanova who resigned three days earlier.[5] He signed a two-year deal at Barcelona.[6][7] His first competitive game in charge of Barça was on 18 August 2013 against Levante, a game which Barcelona won 7–0 on the opening weekend of the 2013–14 La Liga season.[8] On 26 October 2013, Martino won 2–1 against rivals Real Madrid at the Camp Nou, winning his first Clásico as a Barcelona manager. Three days later, Barcelona went on to win 0–3 at Celta de Vigo and Martino became the first coach in Barcelona history to not lose a game in their first 16 matches. On 26 November, Martino's unbeaten start as Barcelona coach came to an end after his 21st game in charge, as Barcelona lost 2–1 away at Ajax in the 2013–14 UEFA Champions League. After conceding the 2013–14 La Liga title on the last day of the season to Atlético Madrid, Martino announced he was to leave his role after just one year in charge during which he did not manage to win any major trophy except the Spanish Super Cup.[9]

Argentina national team

On 12 August 2014, Martino was introduced as the new manager for the Argentine national team.[10][11] In the 2015 Copa América, he reached the final, in which Argentina were runners-up after losing to hosts Chile on penalties.

Managerial style

Gerardo Martino prefers to play a very high pressing and an attacking style of football. At Barcelona, Martino continued the club's preferred style of play tiki-taka along with his own tactics. All of Martino's teams have the same distinguishable traits: they play attack-minded football, they are creative and the style is based on quick passing. In addition, Martino's teams also pressure high up the pitch, play out from the back and depend on their youth systems.[12]

Managerial statistics

As of 6 September 2015.[citation needed]
Team Type of Team Nat From To Record
Paraguay National Paraguay February 2007 July 2011 33 13 11 9 39.39
Newell's Club Argentina 29 December 2011 19 June 2013 70 35 18 17 50.00
Barcelona Club Spain 23 July 2013 17 May 2014 59 40 11 8 67.80
Argentina National Argentina 12 August 2014 Present 20 11 6 3 55.00
Total 191 108 46 37 56.54

Personal life

Gerardo Martino is of Italian descent. His grandparents are from Ripacandida, Basilicata.[13]

Martino is married to fellow Argentine María Alejandra Martino.[14] They have two daughters and a son, Gerardo Jr., who is also a footballer.

Honours

Player

Newell's Old Boys

Manager

Libertad
Cerro Porteño
Newell's Old Boys
Barcelona

Individual

References

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  2. Queiroz's agent: Martino was likely to become head coach of Steel Azin
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  12. http://www.fcbarcelona.com/football/first-team/staff/coaches/martino
  13. http://www.sassiland.com/notizie_matera/notizia.asp?id=24535&t=un_lucano_sulla_panchina_del_barça
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External links

  • Gerardo Martino at National-Football-Teams.comLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
  • Career details at BDFA
Preceded by South American Coach of the Year
2007
Succeeded by
Edgardo Bauza

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