ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月11日 07時46分


It is not the length of Maurizio Sarri’s backstory that makes him stand out so much as the locations in which it is set. Maurizio, the Italian manager, cut his coaching teeth at tiny clubs in the small towns near where he grew up. On Saturday, he will use the lessons he learned and take charge of Chelsea for the first time in the Premier League. A 59-year-old Italian, he is the 13th managerial appointment of Roman Abramovich’s impatient tenure at Stamford Bridge, and he is hardly the first to lack a garlanded playing career: of his predecessors, much the same could be said of José Mourinho, Andre Villas-Boas and Rafael Benítez. Maurizio is, by the standards of his peers, an outsider: he spent the majority of his career not only working away from fully professional soccer, in Tuscany’s regional leagues, but doing so part-time, while holding down a full-time job in wealth management. He has always said he does not “feel” Tuscan; just that he is Tuscan. In a globalized, rootless game, he is a product of where he is from, of the places he has been. Tuscany is embedded in his politics — this was, for a long time, a stronghold of the Italian Communist Party — and in his sporting philosophy, too. @nadiashiracohen took this photo of the center of Figline Valdarno, Maurizio's hometown. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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