Viktor Maslov (footballer, born 1910) explained

Viktor Maslov
Fullname:Viktor Aleksandrovich Maslov
Birth Date:27 April 1910
Birth Place:Moscow, Russian Empire
Death Place:Moscow, Soviet Union
Years1:1930
Clubs1:RDPK Moscow
Years2:1931–40
Clubs2:FC Torpedo Moscow[1]
Years3:1941
Clubs3:FC Profsoyuz-1 Moscow[2]
Years4:1941–42
Clubs4:FC Torpedo Moscow
Caps1:?
Goals1:?
Caps2:?
Goals2:?
Caps3:?
Goals3:?
Caps4:?
Goals4:?
Manageryears1:1942–48
Managerclubs1:FC Torpedo Moscow
Manageryears2:1949–51
Managerclubs2:Torpedo Gorky
Manageryears3:1954–55
Managerclubs3:FC FShM Moscow
Manageryears4:1956
Managerclubs4:Burevestnik Chişinău
Manageryears5:1957–61
Managerclubs5:FC Torpedo Moscow
Manageryears6:1962–63
Managerclubs6:FC SKA Rostov-na-Donu
Manageryears7:1964–70
Managerclubs7:FC Dynamo Kyiv
Manageryears8:1971–73
Managerclubs8:FC Torpedo Moscow
Manageryears9:1975
Managerclubs9:FC Ararat Yerevan

Viktor Aleksandrovich Maslov (Russian: Виктор Александрович Маслов; April 27, 1910 in Moscow – May 11, 1977) was a Soviet and Russian footballer and coach. He was especially notable during his coaching career. He won numerous USSR Championships with clubs Torpedo Moscow, Dynamo Kyiv, and one with FC Ararat Yerevan.[3]

Career

He is often seen as being one of the most innovative and influential football managers of all time. He was the first to experiment with players' nutrition, and invented the 4-4-2 formation, along with the notion of pressing, which, in the words of Jonathan Wilson "may be seen as the birth of modern football".[4] Wilson credits Maslov as one of the progenitors of the pressing game. This was a key development, as before Maslov, teams tended to allow their opponents more time on the ball, whereas Maslov's strategy of pressing denied players this time and space, and led to the game based more on speed and fitness that is common across the top European and South American leagues today.

Notes and References

  1. Previous names of Torpedo were AMO and ZiS (Stalin Memorial Plant).
  2. In 1941 Torpedo, Lokomotiv, Metallurg, and Krylya Sovetov were merged and reorganized into Profsoyuz-1 and Profsoyuz-2 competing in the same league.
  3. http://www.dynamo.kiev.ua/Press/Other/maslov.htm "Victor Maslov did not avoid rough words, if the footballers did not understand the point of the game"
  4. https://www.theguardian.com/football/2008/jun/08/euro2008 guardian.co.uk – The end of forward thinking