Nicolas Ladany (also Nicolau Ladányi, 7 April 1889[1]- unknown) was a Hungarian association football coach from Budapest. Most notable are his two Championships of Rio de Janeiro with Botafogo FC in 1930 and 1932. He later became an identity of the show business of Rio de Janeiro.

Nicolas Ladany, 1931
Botafogo 1930. Front row, centre: Carvalho Leite
Hotel Palácio Quitandinha

Career

edit

Ladany was a footballer and served in the Austria armed forces. After World War I he emigrated to the United States of America, where he undertook specialised studies in sports training and became a naturalised citizen in order to run a gymnasium. Reportedly, he was for an extended period director of the Aeskulap Health Institute of New York.[2]

In 1930, he moved to Brazil where he was employed by the legendary president of Botafogo FC, of Rio de Janeiro, later known as Botafogo FR, Paulo Azeredo as "technical director."[3] His employment occurred in the midst of the 1930 season of the Championship of Rio de Janeiro and at that time the sports director at the club was the medical doctor Victor Guisard and the coaching was in the hands of the Englishman Charles Williams, the former Manchester City goalkeeper. Ladany's brief included deploying a psychoanalysis based training programme, which Williams disagreed with. Williams resigned and was initially retained as assistant coach alongside star-player Nilo Braga before quickly moving on to CR Flamengo.[4][5]

Under the stewardship of Ladany Botafogo went on to win the championship by the end of the year, the up to then only fourth title of Botafogo. After finishing only fourth in 1931 Botafogo was champion once more in 1932, with only one defeat and two draws in 22 matches. Stars of Botafogo in that era were players like Carvalho Leite, the team's top-scorer Nilo Braga and Martim Silveira. Botafogo would in this period, which describes the first "golden era" of the club, win also the three championships from 1933 to 1935. However, the latter successes occurred in a period when there were two simultaneous championships in Rio, primarily because the clubs were divided by their attitude towards professionalisation. Ladany himself was an opponent of professionalism, as he thought, Rio could only carry three or four professional teams, and top teams like his Botafogo, had only about four players who would be suitable as professionals.[2] Similar success for Botafogo would only recur in the late 1950s and early 1960s, coinciding with the third presidency of Azeredo, when the side fronted by Garrincha, Nilton Santos and Valdir "Didi" Perreira would win three championships.

By mid 1933, during the course of the season, Ladany switched to crosstown rivals America FC of the new dissident competition of the Liga Carioca de Football, which organised in that year the first professional season in Rio.[6] At Botafogo Ladany was replaced by Victor Guisard. America finished only fifth out of six teams in its league. Until July 1933 he had also served in the Football Commission of AMEA, the governing body of Rio's football since 1924; in consequence of the schism on Rio's football Ladany's fellow members Harry Welfare, Luíz Vinhaes (the coach of the national team at the `1934 World Cup in Italy) and Jayme Barcellos had already resigned by February, leaving the capitão as the only commissioner then.[7] Ladany also acted, at least on occasions, as coach of its selective team.[8]

After his brief time with America, which did not last beyond early February 1934 he went back to the USA for a brief period, where he reported, that he was involved with the training of the USA national team in preparation for the 1934 World Cup. He also reported of the difficulties assembling a strong side, because most players would be from abroad, from countries like Scotland and Spain. He mentioned, on his return in May 1934, that stars there would make in "average 40.000 dollars per year."[9][10]

From October 1934, he was hired as instructor at Liga de Sports da Marinha, the sports club of the navy. Under Ladany's stewardship their football team took take part in qualifying matches for the Campeonato dos Campeões of 1936, organised by the Federação Brasileira de Futebol.[11][12]

In 1938, he became associated with the Casino in Urca, in those days known through stars like Carmen Miranda, where he worked for the publicity department.[13] Later he became artistic director there.

In May 1939, he returned for a few weeks to Botafogo, where he was part of the staff of coach José "Juca da Praia" Ferreira Lemos, whose job later on that year would handed to the great Izidor Kürschner.[14] In the early 1940s he still served the Liga de Sports of the navy.

Until the late 1950s or even into the 1960s Ladany, then called a person "closely associated with the show business of Rio in the era of the casinos," was "social director" (director social) of the famous Hotel Quitandinha in Petrópolis north of Rio, which in that era hosted international stars like Jayne Mansfield.[15]

Nicolau Ladany's daughter, Glória Ladany, started about 1955 as a dancer in the large variety shows of Carlos Machado, and became inside a few years an actress, over the next couple of decades frequently seen in the theatres of Rio de Janeiro. From 1959 forward she also starred in film and television and became a respected, versatile voice actor, dubbing many famous stars.[16][17][18]

Career summary

edit

Clubs

edit
  • 1930-33: Botafogo FC
  • 1933-34: America FC
  • 1939: Botafogo FC (coaching staff)
  • 1934-4x: Liga de Sports da Marinha

Honours

edit

References

edit
  • Diário de Notícias: A palavra do treinador do Botafogo, 24 October 1932, p. 3.
  • Roberto Assaf, Clóvis Martins: Campeonato carioca: 96 anos de história, 1902-1997, Irradiação Cultural, 1997, p. 156, 191.

Notes:

  1. ^ Diário Oficial da União, 1940-07-31, p. 5: "A Nicolau Ladanyi, natural da Hungria, nascido, a 7 de abril de 1889, filho de Martin Ladanyi e de Mitria Zoldi, casado, residente nesta Capital." (naturalisation notices).
  2. ^ a b Diário da Noíte (RJ): "Meia hora de palestra com o capitão Nickolas Ladany, technico de Botafogo", 28 December 1931, p. 6.
  3. ^ The common Portuguese term "técnico" for a football coach would derive from "director technico."
  4. ^ Sérgio Augusto: Botafogo: entre o céu e o inferno. Ediouro Publicações, 2004.
  5. ^ Roberto Assaf, Clóvis Martins: Campeonato Carioca: 96 anos de história, 1902-1997, Irradiação Cultural, 1997, p. 156, 191.
  6. ^ Jornal dos Sports: "Partem hoje as delegações de America e Fluminense", 14 July 1933, p. 1.
  7. ^ Jornal dos Sports: "Tres demissõees num total de quattro membros", 18 February 1933, p. 1
  8. ^ A Noite (RJ): "O presidente da Amea desligou diversos representantes de commissões", 4 July 1933, p. 11
  9. ^ Diário da Noite (RJ): "O América pretende apresentar um grande team em 1934", 2 February 1934, p. 6.
  10. ^ Diário da Noite (RJ): "A bordo do «Southern Cross» regressou o capitão Ladany", 25 May 1934, p. 7.
  11. ^ Liga de Sports da Marinha was founded in 1915 by navy officers. After several name changes it has been known since 1975 as Comissão de Desportos da Marinha. S. Comissão de Desportos da Marinha, Rio de Janeiro via Internet Archive.
  12. ^ A Noite (RJ): O scratch da Marinha que jogará em Campos, 6 January 1937.
  13. ^ O Imparcial (RJ): Anniversarios, 27 May 1938, p. 12.
  14. ^ O Imparcial: "A nova direcção technica do Botafogo F.C. em actividade", 10 May 1939, p. 8.
  15. ^ Correio da Manha (RJ): "Gatos pardos", 12 February 1959, p. 15.
  16. ^ Última Hora (RJ), "Pai da vedetinha Glória Ladany", 14 November 1956, p. 13.
  17. ^ Glória Ladany at IMDb
  18. ^ Dubladores: Gloria Ladany Archived 2014-03-06 at the Wayback Machine, Casa da Dublagem.