Editor’s note: This article was originally published in May 2020, but has been updated ahead of the release of the new documentary Ange & The Boss, which will be screened in select cinemas from March 13.
MELBOURNE — There are a lot of statues in Melbourne’s Olympic precinct.
Bronze statues encircle the famous Melbourne Cricket Ground, tributes to immortals of Australian sport such as Norm Smith, Betty Cuthbert and the great Sir Donald Bradman, while just across Olympic Boulevard are monuments dedicated to Bob Rose and John Landy’s immortal moment of sportsmanship with Ron Clarke. Permanent reminders of the legends of the past, they are fitting ornaments for the crown jewel of a city that, without the international renown of an Opera House or Harbour Bridge, has fashioned an identity as a cultural, artistic and preeminent athletic destination.
But elsewhere, off the boulevard and hidden away next to AAMI Park, stands a lonesome effigy of a man Melbourne Victory director John Didulica describes as having “the greatest story in the history of football” — Hungarian legend Ferenc Puskás.
No nation in the world had a better footballing team than Hungary in the early 1950s, and Puskás, known as “The Galloping Major,” was at its heart.
Suffering just a single defeat between 1950 and 1956, the Magnificent Magyars swept all before them on the way to gold at the 1952 Olympic Games and demolished an archaic England 6-3 and 7-1 in two friendlies, the first of which at Wembley Stadium was retrospectively dubbed “The Match of the Century.”
After arriving at the 1954 FIFA World Cup as an almost unbackable favourite, Hungary’s 3-2 final loss at the hands of West Germany, despite being up 2-0 within 10 minutes, was so unexpected that it was dubbed “The Miracle of Bern.” While the game served as a key landmark for a West Germany attempting to fashion a new national identity following World War II, so great was the outpouring of frustration and anger at the result back in Hungary that some have claimed the defeat helped lay the seeds of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.
Disenfranchised and unable to return to his homeland due to the unrest, Puskás resurfaced two years later after signing with Real Madrid as a 31-year-old, a move that helped propel Los Blancos to heights that still echo today.
Puskás spent eight seasons with Madrid, scoring a remarkable 242 goals in 262 appearances and playing a key role in the original Galacticos sides that won five Spanish titles, the Spanish Cup and three European Cups. Sir Alex Ferguson — who was among an astonishing 127,621 at Hampden Park when Puskás scored four goals in the 1960 European Cup final — said Puskás was “without question, one of the greatest players of all time.” These days, FIFA hands out the annual Puskás Award to the individual who scored the most beautiful goal.
In short, few people in the history of football have been better than Puskás.
The Melbourne-based tribute, depicting Puskás in full flight as he prepares to let loose with his lethal left foot, is, therefore, a fitting one. As respectful as it is, though, it’s somewhat incongruous with the Hungarian’s actual connection to Australia. For as long and celebrated as his career was, the great forward never played a competitive game in the country, with the Hungarian revolution ahead of the 1956 Melbourne Olympics dashing Australia’s chance to see Puskás play in the flesh.
Instead, Puskás’ contributions were delivered many, many years after his playing career ended and a journeyman coaching run took him across Europe, the Americas and the Middle East. Then, almost unfathomably for a character of his esteem, the footballing titan found himself coaching South Melbourne in Australia’s National Soccer League during the late ’80s and early ’90s. But despite his celebrity — and successes — Puskás’ tenure has become an almost forgotten chapter in Australian football history.
It’s a period remarkable not only for the presence of one of the greatest of all-time in what was ostensibly a footballing backwater, but also because it coincided with a group of players who have gone on to play a significant part in the development of the Australian game. South’s team in the 1991 Grand Final is a veritable laundry list of figures who have propelled the sport ever forward.
Striker Joe Palatsides now serves as an assistant coach at women’s football powerhouse Lyon. Fellow attacker Paul Trimboli heads up Football Victoria’s high performance and pathway programs, and Kimon Taliadoros was a founding father of Australian football’s players’ union and is now the president of Football Victoria. Midfield general Paul Wade captained the Socceroos and went on to forge a successful career in Australia’s media. Squad members Peter Tsolakis, Danny Wright, and Mike Peterson all went on to coach South Melbourne, and defender Mehmet Durakovic won multiple trophies while coaching in Malaysia.
The biggest name to emerge from the group, however, is Ange Postecoglou. After serving as Puskás’ left-back, chauffeur, translator and captain, Postecoglou went on to forge a coaching career that will likely stand alone in the pantheon of Australian coaches when all is said and done. The defender guided South to back-to-back titles in the late ’90s and repeated the feat in the A-League with Brisbane Roar before being named Socceroos boss in 2013. He led the nation to the 2014 World Cup and, after winning the Asian Cup on home soil in 2015, clinched qualification for Brazil 2018 before moving to J-League side Yokohama F. Marinos, with which he once again found success, with a league title in 2019. After winning a swathe of trophies with Celtic, Postecoglou is now the head coach of Tottenham Hotspur.
“I was captain when he came to the club,” Postecoglou told ESPN. “His English wasn’t great. In fact, he couldn’t really speak any. But his Greek wasn’t bad, so I could make conversation with him, and I ended up being his interpreter.
“I was only 24 or 25 at the time. We were a young group, but he instilled a fearlessness in us. We weren’t afraid to lose or make mistakes. He just wanted us to love the game, enjoy the game, and that is something I’ve taken into my football.”
Fittingly, given the twists and turns his life had already taken, Puskás’ arrival at South 31 years ago wasn’t straightforward. The then 61-year-old originally journeyed to Australia not to lead the NSL heavyweights but to serve as a youth coach at a fledgling side in southeast Melbourne called Parkmore SC. The club’s Hungarian backers envisioned him moulding Melbourne’s most talented youngsters into potential superstars who could, taking advantage of his connections, be moved on to European clubs.
“The man that owned the club was a gentleman by the name of George Biritz,” said James Galanis, another of Puskás’ acolytes who is now serves as the director of technical operations for New Jersey Youth Soccer.
“Some issues popped up between George and Ferenc, and he gathered us up one day and said he was leaving. It happened to be that two players on the team were the sons of former South Melbourne board members. As soon as they got wind that Ferenc was leaving, they went up to him and asked: ‘Do you want us to talk to South Melbourne?’
“He said yeah, [and] they went back to South Melbourne … and they agreed terms.”
However, despite his leaving the local scene for the national stage, Puskás’ reputation, even at his new club, didn’t universally precede him — for though football is the world’s game, it definitely was not Australia’s.
“When he first arrived, we’re thinking … we actually weren’t thinking,” Wade said. “They said, ‘We’ve got a new coach called Ferenc Puskás.’
“And we’re thinking: ‘Yeah, right, good on ya. Which suburb is he from?’
“We had no idea. It wasn’t until they showed us some stuff of him playing for Real Madrid that you go, ‘S—, wow … that was a bit embarrassing.’
“But we honestly didn’t know. We were a long way from Europe, a long way from the big stage. I’m embarrassed now, but back then, we weren’t exposed to people like him.”
Australian football was still semi-professional in 1989, and the national team, aside from an appearance at the 1974 World Cup, was largely anonymous on the world stage. A small domestic scene was dominated by communities brought to Australia in a wave of post-WWII European migration that, with football serving as the glue to bring these new Australians together, led to the creation of clubs that became the backbone of the NSL.
“When he first came out, South was in the process of signing Mickey [Petersen] from Brunswick Juventus,” Tsolakis told ESPN. “And they’ve got him in the car driving to the ground, and they’re talking about ‘Juventus, Juventus, Juventus.’
“[Puskás] asked, ‘What are you worried about? I’ll make one phone call to the president, and we’ll get onto it and sort out the transfer.’
“And they had to say, ‘No, no, no, boss — it’s the Juventus in Melbourne!'”
Despite having undeniable passion and a strong community focus, the NSL was dwarfed by other sports in Australia. With the league struggling for popular recognition, crowds were relatively poor, and the clubs were largely run by volunteers rather than professionals.
“We were playing Sunshine George Cross,” said Peter Filopoulos, who was voted on to South’s board in 1995 and subsequently named the club’s first full-time general manager. “Puskás sees two blonde kids, and he says to one of our directors, ‘I want the blonde kid, blonde!’ in broken English.
“So [South Melbourne] went and signed Gary Hasler. Then Gary Hasler rocks up to training, and Puskás says, ‘Who the f— is he?’
“And he’s told that’s the player you wanted us to sign, and he says: ‘Not him! The other one!’ He meant David Clarkson, but we’d signed Gary Hasler!”
Regardless of the league’s haphazard nature, mainstream disinterest mattered little to the loyal contingent that was aware of the greatness that had arrived in the NSL, and South, undefeated at their Middle Park home, improved from eighth in 1989 to second in Puskás’ first campaign in 1989-90. While in a broader context they might paint a picture of the commercial struggles of the NSL, figures collated by Australian football stats doyen Andrew Howe show that South’s approximate gate increased to 4,240 in the first year of Puskás’ tenure, 4,966 in his second and 5,500 in his third and final season.
“I think it was our parents that were even more excited,” Peter Kotsiris, who produced South matchday programs during Puskás’ tenure, told ESPN. “He was of their vintage, playing through the ’50s and ’60s.
“We had only heard of the legend. We had never seen him play.”
Perhaps indicative of the instinctual ease with which he played, Puskás brought an innocently simplistic and, above all, attacking-minded tactical view of the game to South. Be it by design, coaching limitation or some level of both, his sides were allowed almost total freedom to follow their instincts and play a creative and entertaining brand of football.
“He was very simple with his coaching, very effective but very simple,” Tsolakis said. “His motto was that if you concede two goals, we’ve got to score three.”
Training sessions proved even more straightforward: lots of ball work, shooting — “Shoot the ball, boy!” — and practice games every Thursday. There was little defensive work and even less fitness training.