Eddie Firmani

Eddie Firmani
Personal information
Full name Edwin Ronald Firmani
Date of birth August 7, 1933 (1933-08-07) (age 78)
Place of birth Cape Town, South Africa
Playing position Striker
Youth career
1949–1950 Clyde F.C. (Cape Town)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1950–1955 Charlton Athletic 112 (51)
1955–1958 Sampdoria 63 (52)
1958–1961 Internazionale 82 (48)
1961–1963 Genoa 62 (25)
1963–1965 Charlton Athletic 55 (32)
1965–1967 Southend United 55 (24)
1967–1968 Charlton Athletic 10 (6)
1975 Tampa Bay Rowdies 1 (0)
National team
1956–1958 Italy 3 (2)
Teams managed
1967–1970 Charlton Athletic
1975–1977 Tampa Bay Rowdies
1977–1979 New York Cosmos
1980 Philadelphia Fury
1981–1982 Montreal Manic
1984 New York Cosmos
1985–1990 Kazma Sporting Club
1991–1992 FC Montreal Supra
1992–1993 Sur FC
1993 Montreal Impact
1996 New York/New Jersey MetroStars
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Edwin Ronald "Eddie" Firmani (born 7 August 1933 in Cape Town) is a retired football player and manager. He was born in South Africa but represented Italy internationally.

Contents

Playing career

Firmani played as a centre or inside forward. He joined English team Charlton Athletic in 1950 and became a regular goal scorer, including scoring five goals in a 6–1 win against Aston Villa in 1955. At the time the Charlton team included several South Africans, John Hewie, Stuart Leary and Sid O'Linn. During his first spell with Charlton he married Pat Robinson, daughter of the club's assistant manager. Later in 1955 he moved to Italian team Sampdoria for £35,000, which at the time was a record transfer fee involving a British club, beginning an eight year spell in Italy when he gained three caps for the Italian national team, qualifying for the national team because his grandfather was Italian. He also played for Internazionale and Genoa.

He returned to England in 1963, linking up again with Charlton. After two years he moved to Southend United but returned to The Valley for a third spell with Charlton two seasons later. In total, he made 177 appearances for the Addicks, scoring 89 goals. In recognition of his talents, he was named as Charlton's greatest overseas player in 2005. Firmani is the only man ever to have scored 100 League goals in both England and Italy. In 1975, he played one game for the Tampa Bay Rowdies of the North American Soccer League.[1]

Managerial career

In 1967 Firmani was appointed Charlton manager and retired as a player. In his second season in charge, Charlton finished third in the Second Division just missing out on promotion. He was fired in March 1970 with the Addicks battling against relegation to the Third Division. Firmani moved to North America and managed several North American Soccer League sides: Tampa Bay Rowdies, New York Cosmos and Philadelphia Fury which turned into Montreal Manic. He managed the Rowdies to the NASL championship in 1975 in his first year in charge and was named the NASL coach of the year in 1976 and also won the NASL championship with New York Cosmos in 1978. He later managed Canadian side Montreal Impact in 1993 and lastly the Major League Soccer side New York/New Jersey MetroStars in 1996.

In 1960 Firmani wrote a volume of autobiography "Football with the Millionaires", which provides an interesting contrast between the lifestyle of Italian footballers and their English counterparts in the era of the maximum wage.

The Middle East

Firmani coached in the Middle East during the mid-to-late 1980s, and in the early 1990s. He worked as a manager in both Kuwait and later in Oman. He mentioned in an interview how he and his wife had "liked it in Oman", and then described how he had led Sur to the first division for the first time in the club's history. [2] After Sur was promoted to first division, Mohammed Bahwan, son of famous Omani car-dealership owner, Saud Bahwan, gave Firmani and members of the club large bounuses.[3]

He was also held captive during the First Gulf War, but was released unharmed.[4]

References

External links