Por qué los números de las camisetas de fútbol son diferentes según el país



¿Por qué los números de camiseta de fútbol son diferentes según el país? Suscríbete: | 🔔¡Asegúrate de habilitar todas las notificaciones automáticas!🔔 Mira los videos más recientes: Los números de camiseta se usaron por primera vez en el fútbol europeo el 25 de agosto de 1928 en partidos entre Sheffield Wednesday y Arsenal, y Chelsea y Swansea Town. Estos accesorios iniciaron la convención de numerar a los jugadores de derecha a izquierda, de atrás hacia adelante, según la ubicación del campo. Suscríbase al Podcast de Tifo Football: Siga a Tifo Football: Sitio web: Twitter: Facebook: Instagram: Escuche el podcast de Tifo Football: Acast: Podcasts de Apple: Spotify: Suscríbase al Podcast de Tifo Football: Suscríbase a Tifo Basketball en Ver más Tifo Football: Tácticas explicadas: Finanzas y leyes: Tifo Football Podcast: Videos más recientes: Videos populares: Producido por Tifo Studios: Echando un vistazo ilustrado al hermoso juego. Música extraída de About Tifo Football: análisis de fútbol informativo e ilustrado. Hogar de WhiteboardFootball®. Tifo ama el fútbol. Sabemos que existe un apetito por el contenido reflexivo e inteligente, por las cosas que simplifican lo complicado. Nuestros videos ilustrados y de acción en vivo de YouTube abordan todos los aspectos del juego, incluidas las tácticas, la historia y el negocio del fútbol. Brindamos análisis sobre la Premier League, Champions League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga, World Cup y más. Nuestros podcasts entrevistan a algunas de las principales figuras del juego. Y nuestro editorial cubre el fútbol con profundidad y perspicacia. Tifo Football solía ser uMAXit Football: cambiamos nuestro nombre en noviembre de 2017 para articular mejor quiénes somos y lo que nos importa: hacer que el fútbol sea accesible para sus fanáticos a través de la narración de historias y la experiencia y el conocimiento de nuestro equipo de escritores y productores. Tifo fue nominado por la Football Supporters’ Federation para el premio ‘Best Online Media’ en 2017 y 2018. También hacemos videos personalizados. #númerosdecamisa #númerosdeequipo #tácticas

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32 comentarios en “Por qué los números de las camisetas de fútbol son diferentes según el país

  1. Funny story about Brazil. Here, the numbering depends on the local adaptation of the WM in the so called diagonal system. It basically depended on which half back dropped to the line and was kept more offensively . Usually it was the left half back, but occasionally it was the right half back, in which case the number of the right back was 4 and not 2, reading 6, 3, 2, 4. Just like the Argentinian case. Some Brazilian clubs, like Corinthians and Fluminense, held to this tradition right up to the '90's.

  2. I'm not sure but I think it was on Euro84 that the portuguese national team mix up numbers and used a completely random number selection to confuse the man marking system of their opponents.

    They've reached the semi finals and only lost against Platini's France on their home soil.

  3. in the 1970s and early 1980s the Argentinian world cup squads were numbered alphabetically, which could look a bit weird, with goalkeepers with number 5 or 7 (Fillol) and midfield players with number 1 (Ardiles)

  4. It’s interesting to compare with Rugby Union where the sport abandoned a brief flirtation with squad numbers in the 90s and has stuck rigidly to a position based 1-15 system ever since. Even though the positions and their numbers are not formally defined in the rules of either sport the numbers and their positions are the same worldwide in rugby union even if the names of the positions are not always the same. Tinkering with the numbers and their positions is frowned upon. Whereas even when football was 1-11 playing a number in the ‘wrong’ position was common. I remember a Nottingham Forest match where Brian Clough played his son Nigel at right back but Nigel wore 9 because that was his normal number.

  5. Trent Alexander Arnold is a text book definition of a 66. John Terry was a key figure in the evolution of the no. 26 role. Despite being a 14, Thierry Henry was rarely a second substitute and usually started. Fabien Barthez totally re-defined the number 16 role.

  6. When I was playing amateur football in the seventies, lads would automatically grab their favourite shirt, centre forwards would grab the 9, team loudmouth would grab the 10 and because of Best, Keegan, etc, the 7 caused a fight. I always grabbed the 11 first as nobody wanted it.

  7. In the 70ies, 80ies and 90ies (at least) in Italy 2 was right back, 3 left back, 5 stopper (centre back) and 6 was the sweeper (Scirea, Baresi…) number 4 was a centre midfielder, usually a holding mid.

  8. Strikers with attitude issues #45, winger converted to CM #31, winger /Striker #14, a year to late but still great propper soccer intelligence, thank you tifo, Joe devine?

  9. FIFA need to impose rules to force teams to keep to shirt number traditions. First team players should also be banned from wearing numbers over 25.

  10. lol this explains a lot of the confusion we had playing in an international school with lads from all over… had a great german defensive guy that played as '6' which, me playing goalkeeper and being from Argentina, meant that he should stayed in the defensive….and the guy just keep going back to the midfield while I screamed at him savagely to get back down….20 years later, now I know why

  11. what number should I be? I am a very pacey right wing that has a pretty balanced style on the pitch, not a huge goalscorer but can finish if I get the oppurtunity

  12. Back in my country, which I won't mention, Ronaldo fanboys wear 7 while Messi fanboys wear 10. Playing in a dusty bumpy ground, sometimes there are two Messis and Ronaldos in a match.

  13. I really like the traditional use of shirt numbers – I used to wear my favourite number, 2 and I was a right back.
    I heard that Steven Gerrard didn't want to wear 10 for England, preferring number 4 as that's what he saw as his role.

  14. In Germany you usually call the deepest midfielder "Sechser" (nr.6), the one ahead "Achter" (nr.8) and if there´s a third one that´s even more attacking you´d call that one "Zehner" (nr.10) to the extent that some people get confused once you say "attacking midfielder" instead of "Zehner".

  15. Germany's number policy be like: "yeah whatever" with some of the best players wearing substitute numbers like 16 (Fritz Walter, Philipp Lahm), 13 (Gerd Müller, Michael Ballack, Thomas Müller) or 18 (Klinsmann, Kroos)

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