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Augusto Sabbo

Augusto Sabbo (27 March 1887 – 30 October 1971) was a Portuguese football coach and writer.

Sabbo studied in Germany, where he played football at the Saxony-based Mittweidaer BC. Having graduated in engineering, he directed the assembly of the electric traction network of the city of Coimbra. Returning to Portugal, he shined in the CIF, at the beginning of the 20th century, as captain of the team and its coach, with innovative methods of training, managing to form the so-called wonder team.

As a coach he was studious and methodical, having introduced into the CIF the famous "theory of triangulation", which years later came to be implemented in Sporting Clube de Portugal. According to his conceptions of football, Augusto Sabbo argued that players should not make moves according to the circumstances, but rather make a movement that forces the opponent to execute a movement which is of interest to the team, allowing the strategized bursts of play happen as was imagined.

In 1921, he was chosen to be the first national coach, but the players did not like the hardness of his methods and he ended up not guiding any of the national team's games.

Sabbo started his time as Sporting's coach in the season 1921/22, probably in January, going on to conquer the third Lisbon Championship in the history of the club, and reaching in the final of the first Portuguese Championship, which Sporting lost in an epic final against FC Porto.

The 1922–23 season was of particular note, leading Sporting to their first Portuguese Championship title, and winning the Lisbon Championship again.

He remained at Sporting until February 1923, when he resigned after the Technical Council denied him the freedom to assemble the team, but returned at the beginning of the following season, resigning again in February 1924.

In 1923, Sabbo edited in Lisbon a detailed 75-page manual titled Football (Técnica e Didáctica de Jogo), which discussed all the important aspects of football.

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