Tomás Carlovich | |
Fullname: | Tomás Felipe Carlovich |
Birth Date: | 19 April 1946 |
Birth Place: | Rosario, Argentina |
Death Place: | Rosario, Argentina |
Height: | 1.83 m[1] |
Position: | Central midfielder |
Youthyears1: | 1960–1964 |
Youthclubs1: | Rosario Central |
Youthyears2: | 1965–1968 |
Youthclubs2: | Sporting of Bigand |
Years1: | 1969–1970 |
Clubs1: | Rosario Central |
Caps1: | 2 |
Goals1: | 2 |
Years2: | 1971 |
Clubs2: | Flandria |
Caps2: | 4 |
Goals2: | 1 |
Years3: | 1972–1975 |
Clubs3: | Central Córdoba |
Caps3: | 58 |
Goals3: | 48 |
Years4: | 1975–1976 |
Clubs4: | Independiente Rivadavia |
Caps4: | 15 |
Goals4: | 8 |
Years5: | 1976 |
Clubs5: | Rosario Central |
Caps5: | 3 |
Goals5: | 1 |
Years6: | 1977 |
Clubs6: | Colón de Santa Fe |
Caps6: | 5 |
Goals6: | 1 |
Years7: | 1978 |
Clubs7: | Central Córdoba |
Caps7: | 2 |
Goals7: | 1 |
Years8: | 1978–1979 |
Clubs8: | Deportivo Maipú |
Caps8: | 13 |
Goals8: | 7 |
Years9: | 1979 |
Clubs9: | Andes Talleres |
Caps9: | 17 |
Goals9: | 16 |
Years10: | 1980–1983 |
Clubs10: | Central Córdoba |
Caps10: | 82 |
Goals10: | 34 |
Years11: | 1984 |
Clubs11: | Pergamino |
Caps11: | 10 |
Goals11: | 5 |
Years12: | 1985 |
Clubs12: | Newell's Old Boys of Cañada de Gómez |
Caps12: | 7 |
Goals12: | 4 |
Years13: | 1986 |
Clubs13: | Central Córdoba |
Caps13: | 8 |
Goals13: | 2 |
Years14: | 1987–88 |
Clubs14: | Argentino (MM) |
Caps14: | 40 |
Goals14: | 23 |
Totalcaps: | 266+ |
Totalgoals: | 154+ |
Tomás Felipe Carlovich (19 April 1946[2] – 8 May 2020), nicknamed El Trinche,[3] was an Argentine professional football player and coach. His position on the field was central midfielder, playing in several clubs although he is mostly associated with Central Córdoba, where he became an idol[4] and the most representative player of the club along with Gabino Sosa.[5] Due to his ball control and dribbling ability, many people saw Carlovich as a pure representative of creole football, although he had played only a few matches in the top division of Argentine football.[6] Carlovich also had a brief stint as coach in Central Córdoba, although he stated that he was not interested in taking over the senior squad again after resigning.[7] He is the only one recognized by the regional league. Two of the world's greatest football superstars like, Diego Maradona and Pelé.
Carlovich grew up in Belgrano neighborhood, Rosario. Carlovich (Croatian: Karlović) was of Croatian descent: his father, Mario Karlović, was an immigrant from Zagreb. Once settled in San Francisco de Santa Fe he met Carlovich's mother, Elvira Vega. He started in the youth ranks of Rosario Central, and in 1965 he was briefly loaned to Sporting de Bigand, where he won the Southern Sports League championship.[8] in 1969 decade he began to play football in Rosario Central, but he received most recognition during his tenure in Central Córdoba. Playing for Central Córdoba, Carlovich won the promotions of 1973 and 1982. He was in Central Córdoba in four stages: 1972–1975, 1978, 1980–1983 and 1986, playing nine seasons, and scoring 28 goals in 236 games.[9]
In 1976 he played for Independiente Rivadavia. In one of the friendly matches, the team defeated Italian AC Milan with a score of 4–1. In 1977 he played for Colón de Santa Fe. In 1978 he played for Central Córdoba Played 2 matches in the Argentina championship. In 1978–1979 he played for Deportivo Maipú. In 1979, the team defeated Inter Milan with a score of 3–1 in a friendly match. In 1979 he played for Andes Talleres. In one of the friendly matches, the team defeated AC Milan with a score of 3–2.[10] [11] [12]
Furthermore, in 1984 he went through Provincial of Pergamino and, in 1985, he played for Newell's Old Boys of Cañada de Gómez, an entity belonging to the Cañadense Football League. He retired in October 1988, at the age of 42, in Argentino, from Monte Maíz.[13]
During a match between Central Córdoba and Talleres de Remedios de Escalada, a supporter encouraged Carlovich to make a double nutmeg, moving the ball first forward, then back. This request was immediately fulfilled by "El Trinche", causing a huge ovation from his fans in the grandstand. This nutmeg would be repeated many times by Carlovich during his career.
A specialist in pipes, one of his characteristic plays was the so-called "double pipe", by which he passed the ball between the opponent's legs in two consecutive moments, snubbing the same player twice.[14]
The last match as a preparation for the 1974 World Cup found the Argentina national football team going to Rosario to play a friendly game against a squad formed exclusively by players born in that city. Some of the Rosarian players were prominent footballers, such as Mario Zanabria, Daniel Killer, Carlos Aimar and Carlovich as well.[15]
At the end of the first half, the team from Rosario led 3–0. The supremacy of the local team was so big that the Argentina national team coach, Vladislao Cap, asked for his colleague to exclude Carlovich for the second half, and this is what finally happened. The final score was 3–1 [16] [17]
In 1976, he was called up to the Argentina national team for one of the friendly matches before the 1978 World Cup, but did not arrive at the team's location.[18]
Left-foot talent, number 5 in Central midfielder the back, Carlovich was a very technically gifted player. During the friendly match against the Argentine selection in 1974, he inflicted a legendary bridge on Francisco Sá.[19] The legend, unverifiable, says that he invented the double small bridge, even more humiliating for the adversary.[20] El Trinche himself wanted to put things into perspective. “Here in Rosario, there are tons of inventions around me. But they are false. People in Rosario love to tell stories. I would have made small bridges going back and forth (the famous doble caño), but it’s not that important.[21]
The prestigious sports magazine El Grão described him like this: He had his style: he was an elegant, virtuous and somewhat disdainful central midfielder. He walked slowly, but with reasoning inversely proportional to his walk. Carlovich is something like the greatest exponent of the lyrical arc of Argentine football.[22] Because he played most of his career in lower categories of Argentine football (he gave up fame and the first division to continue playing with his friends), GloboEsporte.com defined him as "The best Argentine player that the world hasn't seen".[23]
In 2002, the municipality of Rosario named him an Illustrious Athlete, which allowed him to collect the only money he contributed monthly in the house he shared with his wife and two of his children at that time, until he began laying floors with one of his siblings. His tribulations came from before, when severe pain began to afflict him that turned out to be the product of coxofemoral osteoporosis. Friends and relatives mobilized and, with the collaboration of Rosario mayor Miguel Lifschitz, he was able to get a prosthesis on his right hip in October 2005.[24]
In 2011, the program Informe Robinson on the Spanish radio station Canal Plus made a special program about him. During that report, Jorge Valdano revealed that the former Rosario player and technical director Marcelo Bielsa attended Central Córdoba games, for four uninterrupted years, to see him play. Furthermore, in said report, it was mentioned that Trinche was once considered a reinforcement for the New York Cosmos, but that Pelé would have prevented him from being hired.[25]
In 2019, a play titled El Trinche, the best soccer player in the world, written by Jorge Eines and José Ramón Fernández, inspired by his legacy, was presented at the Cooperation Cultural Center in the city of Buenos Aires.[26] [27]
On 6 May 2020, Carlovich was assaulted and beaten by a young man who stole his bicycle. Carlovich fell and hit his head on the ground, Taken to hospital and died two days later On 8 May 2020.[28] Juan Ariel Maidana, 32, was arrested by the police as the alleged perpetrator of the attack, and he was remanded in preventive detention.[29] After due judicial process, he was sentenced to 33 years in prison for the crime of homicide.[30]
Carlovich was even compared with Diego Maradona when some referred to him as "the Maradona that never was" because of his bohemian style of life his refusal Famous teams like Boca Juniors and his refusal to play in clubs outside Argentina.[31] [32] [33] famous overseas teams like. AC Milan, Inter Milan and Paris Saint-Germain tried to sign him, but Carlovich declined the offers. At the end of his career, Brazilian star Pelé tried to convince him to play for the New York Cosmos but he also refused.[34] [35] [36] [37]
Carlovich is considered one of the best Argentine football players ever. José Pekerman chose him as the best central midfielder he had ever seen; César Luis Menotti said, "Carlovich is one of those kids whose unique toy has been a ball since they were born. Watching him playing football was impressive". Diego Maradona, when arriving at Newell's Old Boys and after being defined by a journalist as "the best footballer", replied: "The best footballer has already played in Rosario, and his name is Carlovich".[15] In February 2020, when Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata went to Rosario to play Rosario Central, Maradona met Carlovich and expressed his admiration again, saying to him "you were better than me".[34] [38]
Sporting of Bigand[39]
Central Córdoba
Rosario Central[40]