quinta-feira, 1 de janeiro de 2015

MAURICIO POCHETTINO



  

Mauricio Pochettino

Mauricio Roberto Pochettino Trossero (locally: [mawˈɾisjo pot͡ʃeˈtino]; born 2 March 1972) is an Argentine former footballerwho played as a central defender, and is the current manager of Tottenham Hotspur.
He spent 17 years as a professional player, 10 of which were in La Liga with Espanyol where he scored 13 goals in 275 games.[2] He also played in France for two clubs, Paris Saint-Germain and Bordeaux, having started his career with Newell's Old Boys. He then went into management at Espanyol and later Southampton.
An Argentine international for four years between 1999 and 2002, Pochettino represented the country at the 2002 World Cup

Club career

Born in Murphy, Santa Fe, Pochettino started his professional career with Newell's Old Boys, moving to RCD Espanyol in Spain for the 1994–95 season as the Catalans had just returned to La Liga. He was an undisputed starter in his six and-a-half years stay, helping the club to the 2000 conquest of the Copa del Rey.
In January 2001, Pochettino signed for Paris Saint-Germain. He was also a regular starter during his stay, and moved for the2003–04 campaign to fellow Ligue 1 outfit FC Girondins de Bordeaux. However, he returned to Espanyol (initially on loan)[3]midway through his first year[4] for two and a half more seasons, still being regularly used except for his last one, and wrapping up his career at the age of 34 with another domestic cup.[5] In his two combined spells at Espanyol, he appeared in nearly 300 official games for the club.[2]

Managerial career

Espanyol

In late January 2009, Pochettino became Espanyol's third coach in the 2008–09 season, with the side ranking third from bottom[9] but eventually finishing comfortably placed (10th), after the coach inclusively asked for "divine intervention".[10] He coached nine club players who were his teammates during his last year and, in early June, renewed his link for a further three years.
In the 2009–10 campaign Pochettino once again led Espanyol to a comfortable league position, in a campaign where club symbol (and his former teammate) Raúl Tamudo fell completely out of favour in the squad's rotation, even more after the January 2010 arrival of Pablo Osvaldo.[11]
On 28 September 2010 Pochettino extended his contract with the club for one more year, until 30 June 2012.[12] On 26 November 2012, however, following a 0–2 home loss against Getafe CF that left the Pericos in the last place with just nine points from 13 matches, his contract was terminated by mutual consent

Southampton

On 18 January 2013, Pochettino was announced as the new first-team manager of Premier League club Southampton,[14] replacing Nigel Adkins[15] and becoming the second Argentine manager in English football, after Osvaldo Ardiles.[16] His first match in charge was five days later, a 0–0 draw against Everton at St Mary's Stadium;[17][18] he recorded his first win as Saints manager on 9 February, 3–1 at home over reigning champions Manchester City.[19]
Pochettino speaks English but when he arrived at Southampton he used a translator in press conferences. An inability to express himself fully, coupled with a strained limitation undertaking complex English-speaking lessons, is the only reason he still uses an interpreter.[20]
He led the Saints to notable victories against other top league sides, including the 3–1 home win over Liverpool on 16 March 2013[21] and the 2–1 victory against Chelsea on 30 March 2013, also at St Mary's.[22]

Tottenham Hotspur

On 27 May 2014, he was appointed head coach of English club Tottenham Hotspur on a five-year contract. He left Southampton after 18 months at the club, becoming Spurs' tenth manager in 12 years.[23]
In his first pre-season managing Spurs, the team faced teams including Seattle Sounders, Chicago Fire Toronto FC, Schalke 04 and Celtic. Under his stewardship, the team went on to be unbeaten in all pre-season matches, winning every game except a 3-3 draw with Seattle Sounders.
On 16 August, in Pochettino's first Premier League match in charge of Tottenham, the club won 1–0 away at West Ham United, debutant defender Eric Dier scoring in injury time. This was followed up by a 4-0 drubbing of QPR in Harry Redknapp's return to White Hart Lane since being sacked in 2012. Having a 100% record in his first 4 matches, his Spurs side have scored 10 goals, conceding just the once in competitive matches.[24] This 100% record ended on 31 August 2014 as Liverpool beat Tottenham 3-0 at White Hart Lane.

Managerial style

Pochettino favours a very high pressing attacking style of football. He usually favours a 4-2-3-1 formation. While doing so, he instructs his team to build pressure from the back, intimidate and unsettle opponents easily. He has also been hailed by many pundits for his focus on developing local players from the clubs' youth academies.[25][26]

Managerial statistics

As of 1 January 2015
TeamFromToRecord
GWDLWin %
Espanyol20 January 200926 November 201216153387032.92
Southampton18 January 201327 May 20146023181938.33
Tottenham Hotspur27 May 2014Present31186758.06
Total25294629637.30

Honours

Player

Newell's Old Boys
Espanyol

Manager



Mauricio Pochettino
Pochettino.jpg
Pochettino (left) playing for Espanyol in a veterans' match in 2011
Personal information
Full nameMauricio Roberto Pochettino Trossero
Date of birth2 March 1972 (age 42)
Place of birthMurphy, Argentina
Height1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Playing positionCentre back
Club information
Current team
Tottenham Hotspur (manager)
Youth career
Newell's Old Boys
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1989–1994Newell's Old Boys153(8)
1994–2000Espanyol216(11)
2001–2003Paris Saint-Germain70(4)
2003–2004Bordeaux11(1)
2004→ Espanyol (loan)21(1)
2004–2006Espanyol38(1)
Total509(26)
National team
1991Argentina U203(0)
1999–2002Argentina20(2)
Teams managed
2009–2012Espanyol
2013–2014Southampton
2014–Tottenham Hotspur
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

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