Harry Game
Personal information
Date of birth (1923-09-27)27 September 1923
Date of death 26 March 2017(2017-03-26) (aged 93)
Position(s) Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Millwall
Cardiff City
Crystal Palace
Managerial career
1950–1953 Panathinaikos
1953–1960 Antwerp
1960–1963 Panathinaikos
1963–1965 Hapoel Tel Aviv
1965–1968 Antwerp
1971–1974 Hapoel Tel Aviv
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Harry Game was an English football player and manager.

He played as a striker for Millwall FC, Cardiff and Crystal Palace. He stopped football as an athlete at the age of 24 due to a serious injury. In the period 1950-51, at the age of 27, he assumed the technical leadership of the Panathinaikos team in Greece. The team had proceeded with renewal by acquiring footballers such as Linoxylakis, Panakis, Nempidis. Harry Game introduced innovative training methods to the team, was strict and pursued competitive discipline.

During his second season, 1951-52, at Panathinaikos, the team began to show remarkable results and won the Athens Championship. The Greek championship was not held due to the obligations of the national team. In the period 1952-53, Petropoulos, Roditsas, Filippou and other notable athletes were transferred to Panathinaikos. Panathinaikos won the Greek Championship undefeated in the final phase having only one defeat in the Athens Championship which they also won, which also qualified them for the final phase of the Panhellenic. Family problems as well as internal disputes in the team, forced Harry Game to return to England with the consequence that he could not complete his project.

He then went to Belgium and Antwerp where he stayed for 7 years and worked successfully. During this time the Royal Antwerp team won the Belgian Cup in 1955 and the Belgian championship in 1957. In 1956 and 1958 his team finished second in the Belgian championship.

At the age of 37, Harry Game returned to Greece again to take up the role of coach at Panathinaikos. A year earlier, the first First National Championship was held in Greece, with Panathinaikos winning it with 3 veteran athletes, Antonis Miyakis and co-coaches Odysseas Tsoutsos and Nikos Simos, in the technical leadership. It was Mimi Domazos' first season at Panathinaikos. With the addition of Phylakouris and Pytichoutis, Panathinaikos had a highly successful year winning the Greek Championship with 7 points difference from 2nd Olympiakos, 10 from Panionios and 11 from AEK. The team's great performance was in the wide-ranging 8-1 victory over Progressevtii with 3 goals from Andreas Papaemmanouil. In the same period, Harry Game was the coach of Panathinaikos in the team's first official European participation as Panathinaikos competed for the first time in the European Champions Cup against Spartak Hradec Kralove. The qualification was decided by a goal in the 89th minute scored by the Czech team in the first match.

The following year, Takis Loukanidis is transferred to Panathinaikos while the team is in excellent condition. Panathinaikos scored its first defeat in the league on matchday 27 against PAOK. The following matchday, Panathinaikos had also mathematically won the championship with the consequence of competing in the 30th and last matchday at the Karaiskaki stadium, already being the champion in a match that ended with 1-1. It was the third consecutive championship for Panathinaikos and Harry Game's third with the club. With his conquest, he is the coach of Panathinaikos with the most championships in Greece to this day (he is followed by Bobek, Puskas and Rotsa with 2). In the same year in Europe under coach Harry Game, Panathinaikos was eliminated by Juventus after remarkable performances (1-1 in Leoforo and 2-1 in Torino).

The next season, Harry Game had the opportunity to win another championship with Panathinaikos. It tied in the Greek championship with AEK and a play-off match was needed to be crowned champion. The match ended with a score of 3-3, but AEK was the one that emerged as the champion as the goal difference was in their favor. The match was attended by Stefan Bobek, who replaced Harry Game after the completion of the Championship, continuing his work with similar success. Then he found himself again in the technical leadership of Royal Antwerp.

Honours edit

Panathinaikos
Royal Antwerp
  • Belgian Championship: 1956–57
  • Belgian Cup: 1954–55
Hapoel Tel Aviv

References edit

https://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/harry-game/erfolge/trainer/31135


Category:1911 births Category:1976 deaths Category:English footballers Category:Association football goalkeepers Category:Blackburn Rovers F.C. players Category:Northampton Town F.C. players Category:English football managers Category:R.S.C. Anderlecht managers Category:Belgium national football team managers Category:English Football League players



Ivić edit

Champions League edit

By nation edit

Teams from thirteen nations have been to a Champions League final, and teams from ten of those have won the competition. Since the 1995–96 season, other than Porto's win in 2003–04, the winners have come from one of only four nations – Spain (11), England (6), Germany (4) and Italy (4) – and other than Monaco in 2003–04 and Paris Saint-Germain in 2019–20, the runners-up have all come from the same four nations.

Appearances by nation (1992–2023)
Nation GS apps Clubs Titles
  Spain 104 13 12
  England 100 10 6
  Germany 91 14 4
  Italy 90 10 5
  France 71 11 1
  Portugal 57 5 1
  Russia 43 7 0
  Netherlands 43 7 1
  Ukraine 35 2 0
  Greece 34 3 0
  Turkey 33 6 0
  Belgium 28 6 0
  Scotland 22 2 0
  Switzerland 14 5 0
  Czech Republic 13 3 0
  Romania 12 4 0
  Norway 12 2 0
  Austria 11 4 0
  Denmark 10 5 0
  Sweden 9 4 0
  Croatia 9 2 0
  Israel 6 3 0
  Cyprus 5 2 0
  Belarus 5 1 0
  Serbia 4 2 0
  Slovakia 3 3 0
  Poland 3 2 0
  Bulgaria 3 2 0
  Hungary 3 2 0
  Slovenia 3 1 0
  Finland 1 1 0
  Kazakhstan 1 1 0
  Azerbaijan 1 1 0
  Moldova 1 1 0
TOTAL 880 147 30*


Brescia seasons edit

1992–present edit

Results of league and cup competitions by season
Season Division P W D L F A Pts Pos Cup Super
Cup
Competition Result Name Nat. Goals
League Europe Top league scorer[B]
1965–66 Serie A 34 12 8 14 43 44 32 9th
1966–67 Serie A 34 7 14 13 22 40 28 14th
1967–68 Serie A 30 8 6 16 20 35 22 14th
1968–69 Serie B 38 17 14 7 46 24 48 2nd
1969–70 Serie A 30 5 10 15 20 35 20 14th
1970–71 Serie B 38 15 16 7 39 27 46 5th
1971–72 Serie B 38 11 16 11 29 25 38 12th
1972–73 Serie B 38 7 17 14 26 37 31 17th
1973–74 Serie B 38 10 16 12 35 36 36 12th
1974–75 Serie B 38 10 17 11 24 28 37 9th
1975–76 Serie B 38 13 17 8 42 37 43 5th
1976–77 Serie B 38 9 14 15 35 46 32 16th
1977–78 Serie B 38 9 17 12 35 40 35 14th
1978–79 Serie B 38 11 17 10 41 41 39 8th
1979–80 Serie B 38 17 11 10 39 27 45 3rd
1980–81 Serie A 30 4 17 9 19 25 25 14th
1981–82 Serie B 38 8 15 15 27 40 31 18th
1982–83 Serie C1 34 9 14 11 29 29 32 11th
1983–84 Serie C1 34 11 17 6 35 28 39 5th
1984–85 Serie C1 34 15 18 1 47 18 48 1st
1985–86 Serie B 38 17 13 8 41 28 47 2nd
1986–87 Serie A 30 7 8 15 25 35 22 14th
1987–88 Serie B 38 11 17 10 30 26 39 8th
1988–89 Serie B 38 9 16 13 27 29 34 16th
1989–90 Serie B 38 10 17 11 31 34 37 10th
1990–91 Serie B 38 9 19 10 29 32 37 9th
1991–92 Serie B 38 14 21 3 54 31 49 1st 2R Maurizio Ganz   ITA 19 ♦
1992–93 Serie A 34 9 12 13 36 44 30 15th 2R Florin Răducioiu   ROM 13
1993–94 Serie B 38 15 14 9 68 53 44 3rd R16 Maurizio Neri   ITA 10
1994–95 Serie A 34 2 6 26 18 65 12 18th 2R
1995–96 Serie B 38 12 10 16 48 49 46 16th 1R Maurizio Neri   ITA 15
1996–97 Serie B 38 18 12 8 49 34 66 1st PR Maurizio Neri   ITA 12
1997–98 Serie A 34 9 8 17 45 63 35 15th R32 Dario Hübner   ITA 16
1998–99 Serie B 38 14 14 10 44 33 56 7th R32 Dario Hübner   ITA 21
1999–2000 Serie B 38 16 15 7 54 38 63 3rd GS Dario Hübner   ITA 21
2000–01 Serie A 34 10 14 10 44 42 44 8th QF Dario Hübner   ITA 17
2001–02 Serie A 34 9 13 12 43 52 40 13th SF Luca Toni   ITA 13
2002–03 Serie A 34 9 15 10 36 38 42 9th R32
2003–04 Serie A 34 9 13 12 52 57 40 11th R32 Roberto Baggio
Andrea Caracciolo
  ITA
  ITA
10
2004–05 Serie A 38 11 8 19 37 54 41 19th R32
2005–06 Serie B 42 15 15 12 54 44 60 10th R16
2005–06 Serie B 42 19 10 13 51 43 67 6th R16 Davide Possanzini   ITA 13
2007–08 Serie B 42 20 12 10 59 40 72 5th ? Davide Possanzini   ITA 16
2008–09 Serie B 42 18 13 11 54 40 67 4th ? Andrea Caracciolo   ITA 15
2009–10 Serie B 42 21 9 12 60 44 72 3rd ? Andrea Caracciolo   ITA 23
2010–11 Serie A 38 7 11 20 34 52 32 19th ? Andrea Caracciolo   ITA 12
2011–12 Serie B 42 15 12 15 48 50 57 8th ? Jonathas   BRA 16
2012–13 Serie B 42 15 17 10 58 50 62 6th ? Andrea Caracciolo   ITA 15
2013–14 Serie B 42 15 14 13 56 53 59 13th 3R Andrea Caracciolo   ITA 19
2014–15 Serie B 42 12 12 18 54 63 42* 20th 4R
2015–16 Serie B 42 14 12 16 55 64 54 11th W
2016–17 Serie B 42 11 17 14 49 58 50 15th RU
2017–18 Serie B 42 11 15 16 41 52 48 16th W
2018–19 Serie B 36 18 13 5 69 42 67 1st Alfredo Donnarumma   ITA 25 ♦
2019–20 Serie A 38 6 7 25 35 79 25 19th
2020–21 Serie B 38 15 11 12 61 53 56 7th Florian Ayé   FRA 16
2021–22 Serie B 38 17 15 6 55 35 66 5th Stefano Moreo   ITA 9

Big Four edit

Results of the 'Big Four' from 1946 to 1991
Season DZG HAJ PAR RSB
1946–47 2nd 4th 1st 3rd
1947–48 1st 2nd 3rd 5th
1948–49 4th 3rd 1st 2nd
1950 4th 1st 3rd 2nd
1951 2nd 3rd 4th 1st
1952 4th 1st 6th 2nd
1952–53 7th 2nd 3rd 1st
1953–54 1st 4th 2nd 3rd
1954–55 3rd 1st 5th 4th
1955–56 4th 12th 2nd 1st
1956–57 5th 3rd 4th 1st
1957–58 1st 9th 2nd 4th
1958–59 5th 7th 2nd 1st
1959–60 2nd 5th 3rd 1st
1960–61 4th 3rd 1st 2nd
1961–62 3rd 5th 1st 4th
1962–63 2nd 11th 1st 7th
1963–64 3rd 10th 5th 1st
1964–65 8th 12th 1st 3rd
1965–66 2nd 13th 11th 5th
1966–67 2nd 7th 3rd 5th
1967–68 3rd 4th 2nd 1st
1968–69 2nd 6th 3rd 1st
1969–70 6th 7th 2nd 1st
1970–71 3rd 1st 5th 6th
1971–72 8th 10th 5th 2nd
1972–73 8th 9th 4th 1st
1973–74 7th 1st 4th 3rd
1974–75 5th 1st 6th 3rd
1975–76 3rd 2nd 1st 4th
1976–77 2nd 8th 4th 1st
1977–78 4th 3rd 1st 2nd
1978–79 2nd 1st 15th 3rd
1979–80 12th 5th 13th 1st
1980–81 5th 2nd 8th 1st
1981–82 1st 3rd 6th 2nd
1982–83 3rd 2nd 1st 5th
1983–84 12th 5th 2nd 1st
1984–85 6th 2nd 3rd 4th
1985–86 6th 4th 1st 2nd
1986–87 6th 8th 1st 3rd
1987–88 4th 13th 2nd 1st
1988–89 5th 3rd 6th 2nd
1989–90 2nd 3rd 4th 1st
1990–91 2nd 6th 3rd 1st
Top four 29 25 33 39
Titles 4 7 11 18
(Out of 45 seasons)
  League champions


Ivić edit

Croatia at World Cup edit

List of matches France edit

World Cup Round # Opponent Confederation Score Result Location Croatia scorers
1930
(Coach: Caudron)
Group stage 01   Mexico CONCACAF 4–1 W Montevideo Laurent, Langiller, Maschinot (2)
02   Argentina CONMEBOL 0–1 L Montevideo
03   Chile CONMEBOL 0–1 L Montevideo
1934
(Coach: Kimpton)
Round of 16 04   Austria UEFA 2–3 (a.e.t.) L Turin Nicolas, Verriest
1938
(Coach: Barreau)
Round of 16 05   Belgium UEFA 3–1 W Colombes Veinante, Nicolas (2)
Quarter-finals 06   Italy UEFA 1–3 L Colombes Heisserer
1954
(Coach: Pibarot)
Group stage 07   Yugoslavia UEFA 0–1 L Lausanne
08   Mexico CONCACAF 3–2 W Geneva Vincent, Cardenas, Kopa
1958
(Coach: Batteux)
Group stage 09   Paraguay CONCACAF 3–1 W Félix-Bollaert, Lens Stanić, Prosinečki, Šuker
10   Yugoslavia AFC 1–0 W Beaujoire, Nantes Šuker
11   Scotland CONMEBOL 0–1 L Parc Lescure, Bordeaux
Round of 16 12   Northern Ireland UEFA 1–0 W Parc Lescure, Bordeaux Šuker
Quarter-final 13   Brazil UEFA 3–0 W Gerland, Lyon Jarni, Vlaović, Šuker
Semi-final 14   West Germany UEFA 1–2 L Stade de France, Saint-Denis Šuker
1998 Group stage 01   Jamaica CONCACAF 3–1 W Félix-Bollaert, Lens Stanić, Prosinečki, Šuker
02   Japan AFC 1–0 W Beaujoire, Nantes Šuker
03   Argentina CONMEBOL 0–1 L Parc Lescure, Bordeaux
Round of 16 04   Romania UEFA 1–0 W Parc Lescure, Bordeaux Šuker
Quarter-final 05   Germany UEFA 3–0 W Gerland, Lyon Jarni, Vlaović, Šuker
Semi-final 06   France UEFA 1–2 L Stade de France, Saint-Denis Šuker
Third place match 07   Netherlands UEFA 2–1 W Parc des Princes, Paris Prosinečki, Šuker
2002 Group stage 08   Mexico CONCACAF 0–1 L Denka Big Swan, Niigata
09   Italy UEFA 2–1 W Kashima Soccer, Ibaraki Olić, Rapaić
10   Ecuador CONMEBOL 0–1 L International Stadium, Yokohama
2006 Group stage 11   Brazil CONMEBOL 0–1 L Olympiastadion, Berlin
12   Japan AFC 0–0 D Frankenstadion, Nuremberg
13   Australia OFC 2–2 D Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion, Stuttgart Srna, N. Kovač
2014 Group stage 14   Brazil CONMEBOL 1–3 L Arena de São Paulo, São Paulo Marcelo (o.g.)
15   Cameroon CAF 4–0 W Arena da Amazônia, Manaus Olić, Perišić, Mandžukić (2)
16   Mexico CONCACAF 1–3 L Arena Pernambuco, Recife Perišić
2018 Group stage 17   Nigeria CAF 2–0 W Kaliningrad Stadium, Kaliningrad Etebo (o.g.), Modrić
18   Argentina CONMEBOL 3–0 W Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, Nizhny Novgorod Rebić, Modrić, Rakitić
19   Iceland UEFA 2–1 W Rostov Arena, Rostov-on-Don Badelj, Perišić
Round of 16 20   Denmark UEFA 1–1 (a.e.t.) (3–2 p) D Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, Nizhny Novgorod Mandžukić
Quarter-finals 21   Russia UEFA 2–2 (a.e.t.) (4–3 p) D Fisht Olympic Stadium, Sochi Kramarić, Vida
Semi-finals 22   England UEFA 2–1 (a.e.t.) W Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow Perišić, Mandžukić
Final 23   France UEFA 2–4 L Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow Perišić, Mandžukić
2022 Group stage 24   Morocco CAF 0–0 D Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor
25   Canada CONCACAF 4–1 W Khalifa International Stadium, Al Rayyan Kramarić (2), Livaja, Majer
26   Belgium UEFA 0–0 D Ahmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
Round of 16 27   Japan AFC TBD TBD Al Janoub Stadium, Al Wakrah