Umberto Caligaris
Personal information | |||||||||
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Date of birth | June 26, 1901 | ||||||||
Place of birth | Casale Monferrato, Italy | ||||||||
Date of death | October 19, 1940 39) | (aged||||||||
Place of death | Torino, Italy | ||||||||
Height | 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) | ||||||||
Playing position | Defender | ||||||||
Senior career* | |||||||||
Years | Team | Apps† | (Gls)† | ||||||
1919–1928 | Casale | ||||||||
1928–1935 | Juventus | ||||||||
1935–1937 | Brescia | ||||||||
National team | |||||||||
1922–1934 | Italy | 59 | (0) | ||||||
Teams managed | |||||||||
1935–1937 | Brescia | ||||||||
1938–1940 | Juventus | ||||||||
Honours
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* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. † Appearances (Goals). |
Umberto Caligaris (Italian pronunciation: [umˈbɛrto kaliˈɡaris]; July 26, 1901 – October 19, 1940) was an Italian international footballer who played, normally at left back, for A.S. Casale and Juventus. His 59 caps for the Italian national team stood as a record for many years.
Born in Casale Monferrato (Piedmont), Caligaris spent the first nine years of his career with the local team, A.S. Casale. He made his debut for them on October 12, 1919 in a match against local rivals Valenzana Calcio which Casale won 3–1. Casale was then in the Italian First division (the predecessor to Serie A) and had won the championship in 1914. However they were never to repeat that success and although during Caligaris’s career with the club they twice qualified for the inter-regional semi-final of North Italy, they were unable to get further.
The Italian national team, however, did provide scope for his talents. He received his first cap in 1922 against Austria, selected in place of Virginio Rosetta as right back flanking the great Genoese left back Renzo De Vecchi (“Son of God” to the fans), who had been playing for Italy since 1910. From then until De Vecchi’s retirement from international football in March 1925, Rosetta and Caligaris were in competition for the right back position. He played for Italy in the 1924 Olympics, the match against Spain being the first in which he played alongside Rosetta.
After winning a bronze medal at the 1928 Summer Olympics, Caligaris left Casale to join Rosetta at Juventus. Here the two full backs, backed by Italian international goalkeeper Giampiero Combi, formed a formidable defensive combination. Juventus won five scudettoes in a row in the years 1930–35.
Caligaris’s final game for Italy, on February 11, 1934 was, like his first, against Austria. (Although a member of the Italian squad, he did not play in any of the 1934 World Cup matches.) His record of 59 caps for Italy was only surpassed in 1971 by Giacinto Facchetti.
Caligaris coached Juventus from 1939 until his death in Turin in October of the following year.
Legacy
During the 1970s, an annual under-21 football tournament was named in the Italian's honour. The "Caligaris" International Tournament took place in the player's hometown of Casale Monferrato.[1]
References
- General
- Umberto Caligaris – International Appearances from RSSSF
- The article on Umberto Caligaris from the Italian Wikipedia.
- DatabaseOlympics.com profile
- Specific
- ↑ "The Forgotten Italian Job of 1974" – Blackpool-mad.co.uk
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