- Mario Varglien
-
Mario Varglien Personal information Full name Mario Varglien Date of birth 26 December 1905 Place of birth Fiume, Austria-Hungary Date of death 1978 Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in) Playing position Defensive Midfielder Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 192?-2? U.S. Fiumana 192?-27 Pro Patria 1927-42 Juventus F.C.[1][2] 353 (17) 1943-44 U.S. Triestina 11 (0) National team 1935 Italy[3] 1 (0) Teams managed 1946-1947 Triestina 1948-1951 Como 1951-1952 Pro Patria 1952-54 Roma * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Mario Varglien (26 December 1905 - 1978) also known as Varglien I was an Italian football player born in Fiume (modern Rijeka). He played club football for Juventus, winning five Serie A championships, he was also part of the Italian national football team which won the 1934 World Cup.
His brother, Giovanni Varglien also played football in Italy.
Contents
Honours
Club
- 1930-31 Serie A (Juventus)
- 1931-32 Serie A (Juventus)
- 1932-33 Serie A (Juventus)
- 1933-34 Serie A (Juventus)
- 1934-35 Serie A (Juventus)
- 1937-38 Coppa Italia (Juventus)
- 1941-42 Coppa Italia (Juventus)
International
- 1934 FIFA World Cup (Italy)
References
- ^ Forza-Juventus.com
- ^ Mario Varglien's statistics Juventus - MyJuve.it
- ^ RSSSF.com
Preceded by
Luis MontiJuventus F.C. captains
1938-1942Succeeded by
Pietro RavaItaly squad – 1934 FIFA World Cup Winners (1st Title) GK Cavanna • GK Combi (c) • GK Masetti • DF Allemandi • DF Caligaris • DF Monzeglio • DF Rosetta • MF Bertolini • MF Castellazzi • MF Ferraris • MF Monti • MF Pizziolo • MF Varglien • FW Arcari • FW Borel • FW Demaria • FW Ferrari • FW Guaita • FW Guarisi • FW Meazza • FW Orsi • FW Schiavio • Coach: PozzoU.S. Triestina Calcio – managers Soutschek (1929–30) · Tóth (1930–31) · Révész (1931–3x) · Grassi (193x–32) · Csapkay (1932–34) · Tóth (1934–3x) · Villini (193x–3x) · Loschi (193x–3x) · Kovács (193x–3x) · Konrád (193x–38) · Tóth (1938–3x) · Kovács (193x–3x) · Nehadoma (193x–3x) · Loschi (193x–39) · Monti (1939–40) · Soutschek (1940–41) · Villini (1941–4x) · Testolina (194x–43) · Villini (1945–46) · Varglien (1946–47) · Rocco (1947–50) · Guttman (1950–52) · Perazzolo (1952–53) · Rocco (1953) · Feruglio (1953–56) · Pasinati (1956–57) · Olivieri (1957–59) · Trevisan (1959–61) · Tagliavini (1974–79) · Varglien (1979–80) · Bianchi (1980–81) · Buffoni (1981–84) · Giacomini (1984–85) · Ferrari (1985–88) · Lombardo (1988–90) · Giacomini (1990–91) · Veneranda (1991) · Zoratti (1991–92) · Perotti (1992–93) · Russo (1993) · Buffoni (1993–94) · Pezzato (1994–95) · Roselli (1995–97) · Lombardi (1997) · Marchioro (1997–98) · Beruatto & Dossena (1998) · Ferrario (1998–99) · Mandorlini (1999) · Cosantini (1999–2000) · Rossi (2000–03) · Tesser (2003–05) · Buffoni & Calori (2005) · Vierchowod (2005) · De Falco (2005) · Russo (2005–06) · Agostinelli (2006–07) · Varrella (2007) · Maran (2007–09) · Gotti (2009) · Somma (2009–10) · Arrigoni (2010) · Iaconi (2010) · Salvioni (2010–11) · Pavanel (2011–)
A.S. Roma – managers Garbutt (1927–29) · Baccani (1929–30) · Burgess (1930–32) · Barr (1932–3) · Kovács (1933–34) · Barbesino (1934–38) · Ara (1938–39) · Schaffer (1939–42) · Kertész (1942–43) · Masetti (1943–45) · Degni (1945–47) · Senkey (1947–48) · Brunella (1948–49) · Bernardini (1949–50) · Baloncieri (1950) · Serantoni (1950) · Masetti (1950–1951) · Viani (1951–1953) · Varglien (1953–54) · Carver (1954–56) · Sárosi (1956) · Masetti (1956–57) · Stock (1957–58) · Nordahl (1958–59) · Sárosi (1959–60) · Foni (1960–61) · Carniglia (1961–63) · Krieziu (1963) · Foni (1963–64) · Miró (1964–65) · Lorenzo (1965–66) · Pugliese (1966–68) · Herrera (1968–70) · Tessari (1970) · Herrera (1971–72) · Trebiciani (1972–73) · Liedholm (1973–77) · Giagnoni (1977–78) · Valcareggi (1978–79) · Liedholm (1979–84) · Eriksson (1984–86) · Sormani (1986–87) · Liedholm (1987–89) · Spinosi (1989) · Liedholm (1989) · Radice (1989–90) · O. Bianchi (1990–92) · Boškov (1992–93) · Mazzone (1993–96) · C. Bianchi (1996–97) · Liedholm & Sella (1997) · Zeman (1997–1999) · Capello (1999–2004) · Prandelli (2004) · Völler (2004) · Delneri (2004–05) · Conti (2005) · Spalletti (2005–09) · Ranieri (2009–11) · Montella (2011) · Luis Enrique (2011–)
Categories:- 1905 births
- 1978 deaths
- Italian footballers
- Italy international footballers
- Juventus F.C. players
- 1934 FIFA World Cup players
- FIFA World Cup-winning players
- Italian football managers
- U.S. Triestina Calcio managers
- Como Calcio 1907 managers
- A.S. Roma managers
- U.S. Triestina Calcio players
- Serie A footballers
- People from Rijeka
- Pro Patria Calcio players
- Fiumana players
- Italian football midfielder stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.