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Hugo Gatti

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Full name
  
Hugo Orlando Gatti

Name
  
Hugo Gatti

1960–1961
  
Role
  
Football player


Years
  
Team

Height
  
1.85 m

1962–1964
  
Playing position
  
Hugo Gatti httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22

Date of birth
  
(1944-08-19) 19 August 1944 (age 71)

Place of birth
  

Boca jrs 5 vs universidad catolica 0 copa direct tv 1998 despedida de hugo gatti


Hugo Orlando Gatti, Loco Gatti (born 19 August 1944) is a former Argentine professional football goalkeeper who played in the Argentine First Division for 26 seasons and set a record of 765 appearances. He won three national championships, two Copa Libertadores tournaments, and one Intercontinental Cup with Boca Juniors, and played professionally until the age of 44.

Contents

Hugo Gatti Hugo Gatti arquero dueo de un particular estilo cumple

Gatti, nicknamed El Loco (The Madman) was recognized for his charisma, his innovative playing style for his position and his eccentricity. He developed himself into a goalkeeper who relied on positional play rather than on his reflexes. He would frequently leave the penalty area to function as an additional field player, and join his teammates in defense – and many times in attack. Unlike most goalkeepers of his era, he made extensive use of his feet, head, and chest to control or strike the ball. He was one of the pioneers of the achique, the goalkeeping technique of running out to challenge an oncoming opposing player. He was also notable at facing penalty kicks, saving 26 of them throughout his career, tied for the most ever in Primera División with contemporary goalkeeper Ubaldo Fillol.

Hugo Gatti Hugo Gatti Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Gatti was voted Player of the Year of Argentina in 1982, and was ranked as the third best Argentine goalkeeper of the 20th Century in a poll by the IFFHS.

Hugo Gatti GATTI HUGO 19761988 BOQUENSE Pinterest

Hugo Gatti:Pele must be separated away from the other players, after talking of others


Early life and career

Hugo Gatti Diego Armando Maradona y El Loco Gatti Argentinos Juniors vs Boca

Born in Carlos Tejedor, Province of Buenos Aires, Gatti was the youngest of siblings. During his youth he was adept at playing as a striker, which according to himself was the best way of knowing how forwards tend to think and behave.

Amateur career

Hugo Gatti Hugo Orlando Gatti Boca Juniors Pinterest

In 1960, at the age of 16, he attended a C.A. River Plate match and saw Amadeo Carrizo play, who would become one of his role models as a goalkeeper. He then started playing for Atlanta in the Argentine sixth division. His Primera División debut came in 1962 against Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata.

Early career

Hugo Gatti Hugo Gatti Diego Maradona y Miguel Brindisi Survival Kits

Gatti played 38 matches for Atlanta, and after that he was acquired by River Plate. He played 77 matches for River between 1964 and 1968, alternating as the first choice goalkeeper with Amadeo Carrizo, until he was transferred to Gimnasia y Esgrima, for which he appeared in 244 league matches between 1969 and 1974. In 1975, he joined Unión de Santa Fe, which put on an impressive season with coach Juan Carlos Lorenzo.

Boca Juniors

Although Gatti was already famous prior to his arrival to Boca Juniors, it was in that club where he became legendary, and it is Boca Juniors the club he is historically most associated with. Gatti played a total 381 league matches and 47 Copa Libertadores matches for the Xeneizes from 1976 until his retirement in 1988. He is the goalkeeper with the most appearances in Boca Juniors history and the second overall player behind Roberto Mouzo, who played in 396 league matches.

His debut with Boca occurred on 15 February 1976. In 1976, he won the double of the Metropolitano and the Copa Libertadores. In the Copa Libertadores final, he saved a crucial penalty kick by Cruzeiro player Vanderlei. The following year, Boca won the Copa Libertadores again, and then beat Borussia Mönchengladbach in the final of the Intercontinental Cup. He won his third Metropolitano in 1981.

The 1980s were a difficult time for Boca, and Gatti had periods of inactivity during those years. His last match was on 11 September 1988, a day in which an error by him cost him Boca the result. He was made a reserve after that, and he would never play an official match again.

On 24 January 1984, a friendly match between Boca Juniors and Gimnasia y Esgrima was played as a tribute to him.

International career

With the Argentine national team, Gatti won 18 caps. between 1967 and 1977. His international debut was on 13 August 1967 against Paraguay. He was part of the 1966 World Cup squad, but did not play as the first choice keeper was Antonio Roma. Argentina did not qualify for the 1970, and for the 1974 tournament, he was not selected to the squad. He was a starter during many friendlies prior to the 1978 World Cup under coach Cesar Menotti, but Gatti was left out of the finals squad in favour of Ubaldo Fillol.

His last international match was on 5 June 1977.

Post-retirement

Gatti has continued to be involved in football since his retirement as a player, writing columns and opinions that have been controversial at times. As of 2010 he lives in Spain and collaborates with several media. notably "Punto Pelota". And as of 2012 he collaborates in several football shows in Argentina.

Club

Boca Juniors
  • Primera División (3): 1976 Metropolitano, 1976 Nacional, 1981 Metropolitano,
  • Copa Libertadores (2): 1977, 1978
  • Intercontinental Cup (1): 1977
  • Individual

  • Player of the Year of Argentina: 1982
  • Trivia

  • In 1980, Gatti said of then youth player Diego Maradona: "...es un gordito que juega muy bien al fútbol" ([Maradona] "is a fattie that plays football very well"). In a subsequent match, Maradona, at the time playing for Argentinos Juniors, scored 4 times against Boca and Gatti in a 5–2 win. Before the match he said that he would "put four past him" and he did.
  • References

    Hugo Gatti Wikipedia