THE ARCHIVE
Europe
Passing through | Passing through |
|
Fred Pentland came to manage Athletic Bilbao in 1923, following in the footsteps of another Englishman, a trained masseur by the name of Mr Barnes. The arrival of Pentland, who had played for Blackburn Rovers (among others) in the first decade of the century, coincided with the first clear signs of professionalism in the Spanish game. Pentland had been interned in Germany during the First World War and seems to have spent most of his time training German officers. In 1920 he managed the French football team at the Antwerp Olympics and then spent a year at Racing Santander, whereupon Athletic literally bought him from the Cantabrian club, offering him 1,000 pesetas a month – a decent sum in those days. “Freddie” Pentland is revered in the club’s history, although it’s hard to decide whether that is due to his inspired management or because he embodied to perfection the idea of the eccentric English gentleman. He was known as bombín (bowler hat) and photographs suggest he was not so much eccentric as barking mad. Pentland’s first act at Athletic was to show the players how to tie their bootlaces correctly – “get the simple things right and the rest will follow” was apparently his motto. Pentland smoked big cigars and wore his bowler, even in training, but his contribution to Spanish football is not to be scoffed at. He is remembered above all as an advocate of the short-passing game, as opposed to the cruder style still embarrassingly referred to in Spain as “the old 1-2-3”. Barcelona, halfway through the first league campaign of 1928-29, decided to adopt lo de Pentland (Pentland’s way), and won the title with it. Their stature in the game from 1928 onwards inevitably influenced others in adopting the “ball into feet” approach. That this system was associated with an Englishman seems something of an irony, and truth to tell it was more likely that Pentland had left England precisely because of his reluctance to play under the auspices of the big hoof. In 1923 Athletic won the cup playing the possession game but, after two trophyless years, opened a debate over which system should be adopted. Pentland, perhaps sensing problems, moved on to Oviedo. From WSC 169 March 2001. What was happening this month On the subject...
Comments (0)
Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.
|
| «Previous | | | Next» |
|---|
Today's most read WSC articles
Oldham Athletic Dowie, Wembley, Division Two |
Steve Ragg |
WSC 194 Apr 03 |
Teenage anguish - USA MLS youth development |
Mike Woitalla |
WSC 145 Mar 99 |
Major success? MLS's first season |
Mike Woitalla |
WSC 118 Dec 96 |
The domination game Praising Chelsea |
WSC |
WSC 217 Mar 05 |
Unpopularity contest West Ham and Terence Brown |
Darron Kirkby |
WSC 223 Sep 05 |
Amir Karic and Ulrich Le Pen Not worth the money? |
Jonathan Barnes |
WSC 221 Jul 05 |
States of happiness 1999 women's World Cup |
Ethan Zindler |
WSC 151 Sep 99 |
Firm Favourites: Old Firm Sectarianism in Scotland |
Dianne Millen |
WSC 206 Apr 04 |
No love, no joy Tim Lovejoy’s rubbish autobiography |
Taylor Parkes |
WSC 250 Dec 07 |
Kenny Achampong Tricky midfielder who disappeared |
Tom Davies |
WSC 179 Jan 02 |








Subscribe to this comment's feed