Monday, March 16, 2015
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Venezuela had two big news
in 1979: new champion and second level championship. Eight clubs
participated in the first second level tournament, but there was no
promotion yet. Just for the record, the participants: Aragua FC,
Atlético Portuguesa, Endeca-Lara, Falcón FC, Industriales de
Oriente, Petroleros del Zulia, Polisport-Lara, Unión Deportiva
Valera. The first division remained closed league, so it hardly
mattered who won the second level.
The professional first
division had the typical for South America tw0stage formula: standard
league championship at first, and then the top 6 clubs proceeded to
the second stage mini-league. Nothing was carried over from the first
stage, not even bonus points – there was third stage: a play-off
between the champions of the first two championships. The only
surprise to outsiders was Portuguesa FC, the champions of the
previous 4 years: they barely qualified for the second round, having
just a point more than Deportivo Italia, which finished 7th.
The the reason for the sudden decline became clear: Portuguesa FC
had financial difficulties and owed money to the Venezuelan Football
Federation. Unable to pay its due, the club was disqualified and
Deportivo Italia went to play the final stage instead of Portuguesa
FC. The league was more or less equal – at least 8 of the members.
After them was Deportivo Portugues, neither here, nor there – they
fell behind the top 8, yet, were much stronger the bottom three,
leaving Valencia FC 5 points behind. Three outsiders – Valencia FC
, 10th with 16 points, the forgotten by now
Miranda-Canarias (Los Teques) - 11th with 11 points, and
the absolute outsider Atletico Falcon (Coro) last with only 8 points.
So much for the bottom of the league, which finished the season
early.
On the top single point
divided positions and Deportivo Tachira clinched the first place with
29 points. ULA Merida was 2nd with 28, Deportivo Galicia -
3rd with 27 points. Deportivo Tachira was a surprise, but
first stage meant only qualification for the final, so they were not
expected to play very hard in the second phase.
The battle in the second
stage went between the above mentioned three teams, Deportivo Italia,
replacing Portuguesa FC, Atletico Zamora , and Estudiantes (Merida).
Most likely, Deportivo Tachira and Deportivo Italia were expected to
be the weaker teams at the final, but it was not so: Estudiantes
(Merida) were.
Estudiantes did not win even
a match in the second stage: they lost five games and tied the other
five, thus finishing last with 5 points. Atletico Zamora were barely
better than Estudiantes – and also entirely out of the race for
first place: they earned 6 points, but won 2 matches.
The rest of the final group
were pretty much equal in strength – 2 points divided 1st
from 4th at the end, and head-to-head record determined
the winner. Deportivo Italia competed well, but finished 4th
with 11 points. ULA Merida was 3rd with 12 points.
Deportivo Tachira and Deportivo Galicia finished with 13 points.
nd... head-to-head
record benefited Deportivo Tachira. Both clubs had exactly the same
records otherwise: 6 wins, 1 tie, 3 losses. Tachira had 15-7
goal-difference and elsewhere would be 2nd placed team,
but local rule made them winners. Since they won both stages, there
was no final play-off – Deportivo Tachira won the title.
Deportivo Galicia, with the
help of Peruvian imports, had the best goal-difference in the
mini-league: 17-7. Yet, they finished 2
st place over Deportivo
Galicia in the second stage. One can say the boys just fought well
and wit ha bit of luck came on top by tiny margin. Mat be not great
winners, but instant legends, for this was the very first title the
club won.
The champions were not
overwhelming victors: they won the first stage by a point and only
head-to-head record gave them 1
At the time, their log had
no 5 stars included, of course – they just got their first. They
also continued the dominance of young clubs in the national
championship – since 1975, the Venezuelan champions were very, very
young clubs. Deportivo Tachira was founded in 1974 – a bit later
than Portuguesa FC, who won 4 titles in a row, starting in 1975. It
took only 5 years of existence for the club from San Cristobal to
triumph. The credit goes to their founder: in 1970 Italian immigrant
Gaetano Greco founded amateur club in San Cristobal – Juventus,
named after the famous club from Turin. The original colours followed
the name – black and white. Greco noticed that not only the city,
but the whole province had no professional team and swiftly changed
things by founding a new club in January 1974– Deportivo Tachira.
It was new club, yet... not entirely new, for it was based on
Juventus – players were moved to the new club, named at first
Deportivo San Cristobal. The colours were blue and white – the
colours of Italy. This did not last long – in January 1975 the club
was renamed Deportivo Tachira – so to represent not just the city,
but the whole province, and the colours changed to yellow and black.
The new colours also represented the province, but additionally they
were preferred by the Uruguayan coach Jose 'Pocho' Gil – a Penarol
(Montevideo) fan. The changes proved to be final – name and colours
remain. The beginning was on grand and ambitious scale and only few
years after foundation the young club won its first title. Thus, they
got – and deserved it too – the nickname El
equipo que nació grande ( the
club which was born big). As a final note,
this was their only second season playing oficially under the name
Deportivo Tachira – the club was renamed in 1975, but played in
first division as Deportivo San Cristobal until 1978.
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
Monday, March 9, 2015
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Monday, March 2, 2015
Colombia
– since there were no promotion and relegation, the only change for
the new season was a name. Cristal Caldas became Once Caldas. The
other changes were less visible to outsiders who rarely, if at all,
glanced in the direction of that country: transfers. Big names played
in Colombia since the introduction of the rogue professional league
in the late 1940s. Foreign players were abundant in the 1970s thanks
to lax rules and easy naturalization. In 1979 two Peruvians arrived,
both well known – Jose Velasquez and Hugo Sotil. If it was European
transfer, it would have been first page news... but this transfer was
not even noticed, despite the strong 1978 World Cup Peru had just a
few months earlier. Those two joined the massive group of foreigners
playing for Colombian clubs – like Alejandro Estanislao Semenewicz,
the Argentinian midfielder, who won 4 Libertadores and 1
Intercontinental Cup with Independiente in the first half of the
1970s. However, Sotil, plagued by personal problems very similar to
those George Best had, had disastrous time in Colombia: he was in in
and out of the line-up of Deportivo Independiente Medellin (DIM),
played 33 matches in which scored 8 goals, and thought of retiring.
It was not the aging and fading stars who shined in Colombia, but
lesser known players – the Argentine striker Oswaldo Palavecino
(Atletico Nacional) was typical example: run of the mill in
Argentina, he was long-lasting big star in Colombia.
Lastly,
shirt adverts were coming to South America – still an early and a
bit confusing stage.
Atletico
Nacional and Atletico Junior ready to clash. Junior displays
uniformity – except the goalkeeper. Nacional is something else...
only 4 players show adds, the others play with plain shirts. Their
naturalized Argentine keeper Raul Ramon Navarro Paviato plays with
strange for the time shirt with number 50. Even the kit is not
uniform – another Argentine, Hector 'Palito' Candau uses different
manufacturer. Immediately to the left of the referees Oswaldo
Palavecino plays with adds, the future great coach and star Colombian
defender in 1979, Francisco Maturana plays with plain shirt. Simple
days... or confused days... depending on opinion.
The
championship itself was the usual complicated South American formula.
One champion, but two separate championships... The winners of
Apertura and Finalizacion, if different, met at the end to decide the
champion of the year. Torneo Apertura was simple enough: classic
league championship. The 14 teams played twice against each other and
after 26 rounds it ended with simple final table. Well, not so simple
after all...
Deportes
Tolima was the outsider this year – by far. They won only 2 matches
and tied 6. 10 points – the 13th
had 22!
Jumping
ahead, Tolima did not improve in the second championship either –
there they managed 3 points more – 13 – which were good for...
13th
place. Yet, the weakest had nothing to worry about – no matter how
bad they were, they were members of the closed league. No relegation.
The
quality of football was not high, especially when it came to scoring
and winning. 42 goals were the most scored in Apertura and the record
did not belong to the leading teams, but to clubs in the middle of
the table:
Millonarios,
who finished 8th
with 26 points, and Once Caldas – 4th.
Along
with Millonarios, another traditionally strong club underperformed –
DIM.
Sotil
is obviously out, Velasquez – standing second from left – was not
enough inspiration, Deportivo Independiente Medellin finished 6th
with 27 points.
Most
of the league was fairly equal – the 13th
placed Cucuta Deportivo finished with 22 points.
Standing, from left:
Miguel
Núñez , Pitula Martínez, Francisco Nieto, Arnoldo Alberto 'el
guajiro' Iguarán Zúñiga, Romero .
Crouching: Antonio Pérez, Salvador López Quiceno, Alberto 'el chamizo' Cañas, Manuel Rosendo Magán, Abel Dagracca, Rodrigo Cosme.
Crouching: Antonio Pérez, Salvador López Quiceno, Alberto 'el chamizo' Cañas, Manuel Rosendo Magán, Abel Dagracca, Rodrigo Cosme.
Cucuta
were weak, but not much weaker than Union Magdalena, which finished
5th
with 28 points – 9 of the 14 clubs were divided at the end by 6
points.
Atletico
Nacional – with plain shirts here – finished 9th.
Independiente
Santa Fe – 7th.
Four
clubs competed for top spots – Atletico Junior finished 4th
with 32 points. Once Caldas was 3rd
with 33. America and Deportivo Cali both had 34 points and exactly
the same goal-difference of +10 goals. The champion of Apertura had
to decided by play-off. Two matches were played and both finished
0-0. Then goal-average was used as a tie-breaker – it was still
popular method at the time and not at all nowadays. The goal-average
usually benefits... lower scoring teams. America was 29-19, Deportivo
– 37-27. America won...
Deportivo
Cali – unlucky in Torneo Apertura.
America
Cali – lucky winners of Apertura. That meant they ensured at least
playing for the title at the end of the season.
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