Table Of ContentCubierta Page: 1
Sobre el autor Page: 2
Créditos Page: 3
Índice Page: 4
Dedicatoria Page: 5
Prólogo Page: 6
Introducción Page: 8
1. La Furia Page: 10
2. Raíces británicas Page: 11
3. Raíces españolas Page: 14
4. Vascos Page: 17
5. Catalanes Page: 20
6. Madridistas Page: 22
7. Los problemas crecen Page: 23
8. Fútbol con cojones Page: 25
9. La magia de Mr. Pentland Page: 30
10. La conexión sudamericana Page: 33
11. Se avecina tormenta Page: 34
12. Fútbol contra el enemigo (1) Page: 36
13. Fútbol contra el enemigo (2) Page: 39
14. Franco al poder Page: 44
15. El Mundial de 1950 Page: 49
16. Los chicos de Almagro Page: 53
17. Di Stéfano Page: 56
18. Kubala y otros húngaros Page: 58
19. Herrera, el Mago Page: 62
20. Un oficial al mando Page: 66
21. Rivales Page: 69
22. La muerte de Franco Page: 74
23. La Quinta del Buitre y Raúl Page: 80
24. De Dios, Mammón y la filosofía Page: 84
25. El factor Cruyff y Venables Page: 89
26. El muchachote de Barakaldo Page: 92
27. El Sabio de Hortaleza Page: 95
28. De Beckham a Guardiola Page: 99
29. Campeones del Mundo Page: 105
30. Después del Mundial Page: 111
31. Eurocopa de 2012 Page: 114
Epílogo de Vicente del Bosque Page: 118
Bibliografía seleccionada Page: 119
Agradecimientos Page: 120
Notas Page: 121
Contracubierta Page: 122
Description:With its victory in the 2010 World Cup and the 2008 and 2012 European Championships, the Spanish national soccer team became the first in history to win three major trophies in a row. De Riotinto a la Roja explores the long and fraught development of soccer in Spain that began with a group of British engineers and sailors playing soccer in Bilbao’s shipyards and ultimately led to an influx of South American and European stars whose engagement with homegrown players helped overcome political rivalries and resulted in some of the most exciting and technically sublime soccer ever seen. The book journeys through some of the most extraordinary characters and matches that have defined Spanish soccer while also serving as an invaluable study on Spain’s recent history, during which regional tensions and sectarianism have played out on soccer pitches all over the country—especially in the rivalry between F. C. Barcelona and Real Madrid, two of the richest, most powerful, and successful teams in the sport’s history. Above all, however, the book explores the journey of a national team that went largely unnoticed for most of its history until a succession of players and coaches, heirs of foreign and domestic talent that had taken root throughout the 20th century, led Spanish soccer to glory.