The Real Madrid Way. Steven G. Mandis
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The game is widely regarded as one of the best soccer games ever played and the one that opened people’s eyes to what soccer could be. The flow of goals and graceful and beautiful play was breathtaking and had the Glasgow crowd completely awestruck.68 The next day a Daily Mail article stated, “It’s just a pity that the thousands of people at the game, and those who have to return to watching Scottish football, must have thought that they were dreaming.” Jimmy Johnstone, the great Scottish soccer player who saw the game in person when he was sixteen years old, said, “The match remained the biggest single influence on my career. It was like a fantasy staged in heaven. I had never seen football like it, nor would I ever again. I’ll recite the names of that Madrid forward line till the day I die.”69
Real Madrid had won its fifth consecutive European championship. As a result, Muñoz became the first person to win the competition as both a player and a coach, Di Stéfano and Puskás became the first to ever score hat tricks in a final, and Di Stéfano became the only player to score in five consecutive European Cup finals. Also, Paco Gento, who appeared in all five of the European Cup finals for Real Madrid, would play in three more and win yet another in 1966. Three of the twenty-five Real Madrid players were graduates of the Real Madrid youth academy.
The 1959–60 Real Madrid team that won its fifth European Cup in Hampden Park, Glasgow, beating Eintracht of Frankfurt (7–3) in what has been considered the best final in European Cup history. Back row (left to right): Dominguez, Marquitos, Santamaría, Pachín, Vidal, Zárraga. Front row: Canario, Del Sol, Di Stéfano, Puskas, Gento.
It is important not to get lost in nostalgia about Real Madrid’s on-field performance from 1955–60, during their five-time European championship run. Galácticos 1.0 became a legend, for good reasons, and this legend has been conveyed from generation to generation of the Real Madrid community and global soccer fans. A collective memory of it exists. However, it is critical to go back and understand what happened then. The club had the best players in the world and was beautiful to watch, but they did not win every game; they didn’t win every Spanish league championship; and they had coaching turmoil.
Coaching
Bernabéu took over as president in 1943. Before he hired Muñoz in 1960, who would coach until 1974, Bernabéu changed coaches fourteen times in seventeen years. Only one coach, José Villalonga, lasted more than three years. During the 1955–60 European Cup run, the club changed coaches six times: José Villalonga, Luis Carniglia, Miguel Muñoz, Carniglia (again), Manuel Fleitas, and Muñoz (again). Two coaches were fired right after winning a European Cup: Villalonga and Carniglia.
Table 3.1: Real Madrid Coaching Changes Between 1955 and 1960
* Fired shortly after winning a European Cup.
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