Nils Liedholm

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Nils Liedholm
LiedholmMilan.jpg
Personal information
Date of birth (1922-10-08)8 October 1922
Place of birth Valdemarsvik, Sweden
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Place of death Cuccaro Monferrato, Italy
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Position(s) Attacking Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1938–1943 Valdemarsviks IF
1943–1946 IK Sleipner 60 (24)
1946–1949 IFK Norrköping 48 (22)
1949–1961 AC Milan 359 (81)
International career
1947–1958 Sweden 23 (12)
Managerial career
1961–1963 AC Milan (assistant coach)
1963–1966 AC Milan
1966–1968 Verona
1968–1969 Monza
1969–1971 Varese
1971–1973 Fiorentina
1973–1977 AS Roma
1977–1979 AC Milan
1979–1984 AS Roma
1984–1987 AC Milan
1987–1989 AS Roma
1992 Verona
1997 AS Roma
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Nils Liedholm (8 October 1922 – 5 November 2007)[1] was a Swedish football midfielder and coach. Il Barone (The Baron), as he is affectionately known in Italy, was renowned for being part of the Swedish "Gre-No-Li" trio of strikers along with Gunnar Gren and Gunnar Nordahl at A.C. Milan and the Swedish national team, with which he achieved notable success throughout his career. Liedholm was an offensive playmaker who was renowned for his excellent passing ability throughout his career, as well as his vision, control, class, and his elegant style of play; he is regarded as one of Milan's greatest ever players.[2] As a coach, he was in charge of several teams in Italy, managing for nearly four decades; he is regarded as one of the most successful managers in Italian football history.[3] At the end of the 20th century Liedholm was voted the best Swedish player of the millennium by the readers of Sweden's largest newspaper, Aftonbladet.

Club playing career

Liedholm joined his first club, Valdemarsviks IF, in 1938. In 1942 he joined IK Sleipner and in 1946 moved to IFK Norrköping, a bigger Swedish club with whom he won two Swedish league titles. During his time with Norrköping, he also earned 18 caps for the Swedish national team, winning the gold medal at the 1948 Summer Olympics. This eventually gave him the chance to join Milan in 1949. He made his Serie A debut on 11 September 1949 in a 3–1 win against Sampdoria. In his first season with Milan, the midfielder played 37 games and scored 18 goals. In 1951, Liedholm won the first of his four scudetto titles. Another three titles followed in 1955, 1957 and 1959. A player with a club that was having the best spell of its life up to that point, Liedholm also won the Latin Cup in 1951 and 1956 and was Captain of Milan in the 1958 European Cup Final against Real Madrid, losing 2–3 (after extra time). It is said that Real Madrid great Alfredo Di Stefano who, felt despite victory knew it was a match Milan could have won. Asking Liedholm to exchange shirts, Liedholm said to him "Keep it. That won't matter. The only thing that will be remembered from this match down the years is that Real Madrid won".

Famous for his passing abilities and tactical awareness, Liedholm was the creator of many of Gunnar Nordahl's goals. Nordahl is the third best scorer in the Serie A with 225 goals in 257 games, behind leading scorer Silvio Piola who has scored 274 goals and Francesco Totti. According to legend, it took two years playing for Milan until Liedholm misplaced his first pass at the San Siro, the rarity prompting a five-minute ovation from the home crowd.[4][5]

Liedholm was also one of the first players to realise the importance of fitness to a good performance. Consequently, he put in many more hours of training than other players, saying himself that he did the 100 metres, 3000 metres, javelin, shot put and high jump twice a week.[5] His club career would continue until he was almost 40.

National team playing career

Having helped Sweden win the gold medal in the 1948 Olympic tournament, Liedholm was the captain of the national squad at the 1958 World Cup, celebrated in his home country. Aged almost 36, he helped Sweden to reach the World Cup final, where the team lost out to a Brazil side that included Didi and 17-year-old Pelé. Liedholm scored the opening goal of the final, which makes him the oldest player to score in a World Cup Final; however, Brazil came back and won the match 5–2.

Coaching career

After he retired from playing, Liedholm enjoyed some time in the backrooms at Milan, before getting promotion for both Verona and then Varese. This brought him to the attention of Fiorentina and then Milan, where he finally took control of the first team. He guided them to their tenth league title in 1979 before moving on to become the manager of Roma. Leading talents such as Paulo Roberto Falcão and Bruno Conti, he took them to their second league title ever in 1983 using the zonal marking system, which was unusual in Italy at the time. A year later, his Roma side lost on penalties to Liverpool in the European Cup Final. He also won the Coppa Italia three times with Roma, in 1980, 1981 and 1984.

As well as saying that the modern game is much more frantic and fast-paced than when he was involved, Liedholm, always a professional, also observed that "they [players] do not do much to avoid fouling players... It is too easy to stop a player by fouling him. Proper training teaches you how to win the ball without committing a foul, which is much more difficult.[5]

After leaving the game (but still living in Italy), Liedholm ran a vineyard for a while together with his son Carlo. He died on 5 November 2007 in his home in Cuccaro Monferrato, Province of Alessandria.[1]

Statistics for Milan

Club Season League Cup Europe Other Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Milan 1949–1950 37 18 - - - - - - 37 18
1950–1951 31 13 - - - - 2 0 33 13
1951–1952 38 9 - - - - - - 38 9
1952–1953 30 6 - - - - 2 1 32 7
1953–1954 31 10 - - - - - - 31 10
1954–1955 28 6 - - - - 1 1 29 7
1955–1956 31 1 - - 6 0 2 0 39 1
1956–1957 26 4 - - - - 2 1 28 5
1957–1958 24 7 - - 8 2 - - 32 9
1958–1959 30 1 2 1 - - - - 32 2
1959–1960 28 3 - - 4 0 3 2 35 5
1960–1961 25 3 1 - - - 2 - 28 3
Total 359 81 3 1 18 2 14 5 394 89

*European competitions include the UEFA Champions League

*Other competitions include the Latin Cup & Amicizia Cup

Honours

Player

Olympic medal record
Representing  Sweden
Men's Football
Gold medal – first place 1948 London Team Competition
IFK Norrköping
Milan[2]
Sweden

Manager

Varese
Milan[2]
Roma

1982–83

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Individual

  • Seminatore d'Oro: 1974–75, 1983
  • A.C. Milan Hall of Fame[2]

Other sports

He also was a bandy player in Valdemarsvik and the district team of Östergötland. He was an honorary chairman of the Italian Bandy Federation.[1]

References

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External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by Milan captain
1956-1961
Succeeded by
Francesco Zagatti

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