José Luis Boffi

José Luis Boffi (9 April 1897 – 23 March 1981) was an Argentine football player and manager.

José Luis Boffi
Boffi in 1925
Personal information
Full nameJosé Luis Boffi
Date of birth(1897-04-09)9 April 1897
Place of birthBuenos Aires, Argentina
Date of death23 March 1981(1981-03-23) (aged 83)
Place of deathBuenos Aires, Argentina
Position(s)Midfielder
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1917–1925Vélez Sarsfield
1925–1931Everton
International career
1921Argentina1(0)
Managerial career
1928–1931Everton (assistant)
1932–1940Vélez Sarsfield
1942–1943Santiago Morning
1944–1945Audax Italiano
1945Bernardo O'Higgins
1946–1947Magallanes
1949Chile
1952Colo-Colo
1954–1956Huachipato
1956–1957Rangers
1958–1960Lister Rossel
1961Huachipato
1961Santiago Morning
1962–1963Lister Rossel
1966Santiago Morning
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Playing career

In his homeland, Boffi stood out as a player of Vélez Sarsfield.[1]

In June 1925, Boffi came to Chile as team captain of a squad from the Asociación Amateur de Football (Amateur Football Association), an Argentine league based in Buenos Aires founded in 1919, in the context of a tour. Everton de Viña del Mar offered him a contract and Boffi offered them a team shirt set from Argentina. After returning for a short time to his homeland, he returned to Chile in September of the same year to sign with Everton, bringing with him shirts of Boca Juniors whose model the club adopted.[2][3]

Coaching career

At the same time he was a player of Everton, he served as assistant coach.[3]

As a head coach, he began his career with Vélez Sarsfield in his homeland.[4]

Boffi developed the most part of his career in Chile. In the Chilean Primera División, he led clubs such as Audax Italiano (1944–1945),[5] Colo-Colo (1952),[6] Rangers de Talca (1956–1957) and Santiago Morning (1942–1943, 1951, 1966).[7]

At lower divisions, he led clubs such as Bernardo O'Higgins (March 1945),[8] Huachipato (1954–1956, 1961) and Lister Rossel (1958–1960, 1962–1963).[9][10][11]

In June 1949, he also assumed as coach of the Chile national team. Subsequently, he and Waldo Sanhueza made up a technical pair and led the team in an unofficial friendly against the Mendoza team in Santiago on 12 October of the same year, winning by 3–2.[12]

References