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Igor Netto
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Igor Aleksandrovich Netto (Russian: Игорь Александрович Нетто; 9 January 1930 – 30 March 1999)[1] was a Russian footballer, considered one of the country's greatest players ever. He started out playing on the left of defense but, due to his offensive mentality, dribbling and technical abilities turned into a dynamic central midfielder. His versatility and footballing intelligence allowed him to play a number of positions across defense and midfield.
Key Information
Ice hockey and club career
[edit]Besides football, Netto played 22 games in the 1948–49 and 1950–51 seasons as an ice hockey forward for Spartak,[2] but stopped playing to avoid the risk of an injury affecting his football career.[3][4]
During his club career, he played for Spartak Moscow from 1949 until 1966, scoring 37 goals in 367 league games, and winning five Soviet championships and three national cups.
International career
[edit]
He was the captain of the USSR national team from 1952 to 1965. He led the country to the gold medal in the 1956 Summer Olympics,[5] and victory at the first ever European Championship in 1960. He missed all but one match in the 1958 FIFA World Cup due to injury, and also played all four matches in the 1962 FIFA World Cup when the Soviet Union reached the quarterfinals. In total, he collected 54 international caps and scored four goals.[6]
During the 1962 FIFA World Cup match against Uruguay, with the score at 1–1, Igor Chislenko managed to strike through the net, and the resulting goal was mistakenly counted by the referee who had not seen the ball trajectory. Hearing protests from the Uruguayan keeper, Netto confirmed with Chislenko that the ball went through the net, and convinced the referee to discount the goal. USSR still won the game 2–1.[3][4]
Managerial career
[edit]After retiring in 1966, Netto began a career as a coach, training AC Omonia, Shinnik Yaroslavl, Iran, Panionios and Neftchi Baku. He was awarded the Order of Lenin in 1957 for his achievements at the Olympics. The stadium of Spartak Moscow reserves team is named after him.[4]
Personal life
[edit]Netto was of Estonian and Italian descent, with his Italian lineage traced to an Italian gardener who emigrated to the Governorate of Estonia in the 18th century.[7][8] His father Aleksander Netto (1885–1956) was originally a carpenter from Valga, Governorate of Livonia, and his mother Juuli (née Tamm; 1894–1977) was from Vaimastvere, Tartu County. Aleksander left Livonia for Soviet Russia with Red Latvian Riflemen in 1918. Aleksander was a fervent Communist, who acted as a Bolshevik Councilman in Moscow.[9] During the 1930s and Joseph Stalin's Great Purge, the family did not dare to speak Estonian, and Igor learned only Russian.[9] Igor's brother Lev Netto (1925–2017), who spoke Estonian and was named after Lev Trotsky, was a Soviet prisoner for eight years in the Norilsk Gulag.[10] as was also Aleksander's brother Sergei.[11]
Netto was known as goose for his hissing voice, as well as goose-like walk and head shape. On 9 January 1960, he married Olga Yakovleva, an actress. They divorced around 1987 when Netto was suffering from Alzheimer's disease.[3][4]
Career statistics
[edit]- Scores and results list the Soviet Union's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Netto goal.
| No. | Date | Venue | Opponent | Score | Result | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 16 September 1955 | Dynamo Stadium, Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union | 11–1 | Friendly | ||
| 2 | 2 December 1956 | Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne, Australia | 4–0 | 1956 Summer Olympics | ||
| 3 | 27 July 1957 | Dynamo Stadium, Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union | 2–1 | 1958 FIFA World Cup qualification | ||
| 4 | 15 August 1957 | Olympic Stadium, Helsinki, Finland | 10–0 | 1958 FIFA World Cup qualification |
Honours
[edit]Spartak Moscow
- Soviet Top League: 1952, 1953, 1956, 1958, 1962
- Soviet Cup: 1950, 1958, 1963
Soviet Union
Individual
- UEFA European Championship Team of the Tournament: 1960[13]
- UEFA Jubilee Poll (2004): #71[14]
- The best 33 football players of the Soviet Union (13): No. 1 (1950, 1952–1963), No. 2 (1951)
References
[edit]- ^ Igor Netto Archived 6 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine. sports-reference.com
- ^ Нетто Игорь Александрович. spartak-history.ru
- ^ a b c Elena Grigorievskaya (9 January 2014) Рыжие волосы, Гусь и приключения на ипподроме. Самые интересные истории, связанные с Игорем Нетто. gazeta.ru
- ^ a b c d Игорь НЕТТО. rusteam.permian.ru
- ^ "Igor Netto". Olympedia. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
- ^ Igor Netto. national-football-teams.com
- ^ "Igor Netto – a Legend of Spartak Moscow | lucrumbet.com". lucrumbet.com. Archived from the original on 16 May 2021.
- ^ Игорю Нетто - 90 лет!
- ^ a b "Õhtud Moskva lähistel".
- ^ "Lev Netto". 28 April 2022.
- ^ "Списки жертв".
- ^ "Igor Netto - national football team player". eu-football.info.
- ^ "1960 team of the tournament". Union of European Football Associations. 1 February 2011. Archived from the original on 24 July 2020. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
- ^ "UEFA Awards". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 21 December 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
Igor Netto
View on GrokipediaIgor Aleksandrovich Netto (9 January 1930 – 30 March 1999) was a Soviet professional footballer renowned for his midfield prowess and leadership as captain of both Spartak Moscow and the Soviet Union national team.[1] Over an 18-year career with Spartak, he helped secure five Soviet Top League championships and three Soviet Cups, appearing in 368 matches and scoring 36 goals.[2] Netto's international legacy includes captaining the Soviet squad to gold at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne and triumph at the inaugural UEFA European Championship in 1960, achievements that underscored his tactical acumen and inspirational presence on the pitch.[3][4] Widely hailed as one of the finest midfielders in Soviet football history, he exemplified versatility—transitioning from left defense to central midfield—and technical excellence, though he later succumbed to Alzheimer's disease.[2]
Early Life and Youth Career
Birth and Family Background
Igor Aleksandrovich Netto was born on 9 January 1930 in Moscow, then part of the Russian SFSR in the Soviet Union, to parents of Estonian descent who had immigrated during the revolutionary period.[5][4] His father, Aleksander Netto (1885–1956), worked as a carpenter and originated from Valga in the Governorate of Livonia (present-day Estonia-Latvia border region), while his mother, Juuli (née Tamm; 1894–1977), was also Estonian.[6] The family's surname traced back to Italian ancestry through a great-grandfather who had settled in Estonia, but by Netto's birth, they were established as ethnic Estonians in urban Moscow.[6][7] The Netto household included an older brother, Lev, born in 1925, and maintained a modest existence amid the socio-economic disruptions following the 1917 Revolution and Civil War, which had drawn the parents to Moscow for work opportunities.[8] As Baltic-origin residents in the Russian heartland during Stalin's consolidation of power, the family faced the broader instabilities of collectivization, purges, and industrialization drives, though specific personal deprivations beyond general immigrant adaptation are not well-documented in primary accounts.[7] World War II further compounded early hardships, with Moscow enduring aerial bombings and evacuation pressures from 1941 onward, when Netto was 11 years old.[9] Netto's initial schooling occurred in Moscow's state-run system, where physical education was emphasized as a tool for building socialist discipline among youth, reflecting the regime's prioritization of mass sports for ideological mobilization rather than individual merit alone.[10][11] Ethnic minorities like Estonians, while not always primary purge targets in central Russia pre-1940 annexation of Estonia, navigated subtle hierarchies in resource allocation and cultural assimilation policies that favored Slavic majorities.[5][8]Introduction to Sports and Ice Hockey Involvement
Igor Netto's earliest organized athletic involvement centered on ice hockey, where he played as a forward for Spartak Moscow's youth team during the 1948–49 and 1950–51 seasons, accumulating 22 official games and 29 assists.[6][12] This participation aligned with his emergence as a versatile athlete in postwar Moscow, where Spartak's multi-sport structure allowed promising youths to train across disciplines under club auspices.[13] Around age 18–19, Netto shifted exclusively to football, forgoing further ice hockey commitments after Spartak scouts identified his physical prowess— including strength, agility, and endurance— as better suited to the demands of the pitch.[4][2] The decision reflected pragmatic opportunity costs in a resource-constrained environment, as football's prominence in Soviet society offered clearer pathways to professional advancement and material benefits like prioritized nutrition and facilities, unavailable to most civilians.[14] Netto's brief ice hockey stint underscored his adaptability but ultimately served as a foundational phase, honing competitive instincts that translated to football without ideological mandate, as recruitment prioritized innate talent over doctrinal alignment in Spartak's merit-based youth pipeline.[2] This early experimentation bridged his street-level play to structured club development, setting the stage for specialization amid the Soviet regime's centralized oversight of athletics, which funneled talents through factory- and trade union-affiliated teams like Spartak.[12]Club Career
Spartak Moscow Achievements
Igor Netto debuted for Spartak Moscow in the Soviet Top League during the 1949 season, embarking on an 18-year tenure with the club that established him as a cornerstone player and eventual captain.[2] Under his leadership from the mid-1950s, Spartak secured five Top League titles in 1952, 1953, 1956, 1958, and 1962, triumphs achieved despite systemic disadvantages in Soviet football where state-backed rivals like Dynamo Moscow and CSKA benefited from superior funding and institutional support tied to ministries and the military.[15] [2] Netto's midfield presence was instrumental in these victories, providing defensive solidity and orchestration in high-stakes derbies against Dynamo, where Spartak's "people's club" status fostered a resilient, merit-based ethos amid politicized league dynamics.[2] Netto also contributed to three Soviet Cup wins with Spartak in 1950, 1958, and 1963, amassing 368 appearances and 36 goals across all competitions during his club career.[2] His versatility as a central midfielder—excelling in tackling, distribution, and forward surges—enabled key interventions in pivotal matches, such as maintaining possession and breaking presses in title-deciding fixtures against favored opponents.[16] In the 1962–63 European Cup, Spartak advanced to the semi-finals under Netto's captaincy, defeating teams like Rangers before falling to Benfica, a run that showcased his tactical acumen in adapting to European pressures despite the Soviet league's isolation from Western professional structures and funding inequities.[15] Netto's on-field decisions, including precise interceptions and leadership in compact defensive setups, were critical to navigating these continental challenges, underscoring Spartak's overachievement relative to state-prioritized clubs.[16]Playing Style and Key Contributions
Igor Netto was a versatile footballer who began his career as a left-sided defender for Spartak Moscow but transitioned to a central midfield role, embodying the box-to-box archetype with strong defensive capabilities and offensive contributions. His technical proficiency included exceptional vision, precise short passing with his "golden left foot," and dribbling skills honed in confined spaces, allowing him to dictate tempo and execute killer balls effectively. These attributes aligned with Spartak's possession-based, pressing-oriented style, which emphasized teamwork and control rather than long-ball pragmatism prevalent in other Soviet clubs.[4][16][2] Netto's leadership as captain extended to organizing defensive structures and motivating teammates during domestic matches, where his tactical intelligence helped maintain composure under pressure in the Soviet league's competitive environment. For instance, during Spartak's post-war resurgence, his partnership with forwards like Nikita Simonyan facilitated a balanced team dynamic, contributing to sustained challenges against state-favored rivals like Dynamo Moscow by prioritizing reliable positioning over individualistic flair—a reflection of Soviet coaching's emphasis on collective discipline. While contemporaries praised his completeness as a midfielder, the era's rigid training doctrines sometimes limited creative improvisation, favoring endurance and tactical adherence that ensured consistency in high-stakes league encounters.[4][16][17] Empirically, Netto's impact is evident in his 368 appearances for Spartak, where his ability to transition seamlessly from defense to attack bolstered the team's midfield control, enabling effective build-up play in domestic competitions. This reliability distinguished him from more flair-oriented peers, underscoring a pragmatic evolution in Soviet football tactics that valued stamina and tackling alongside technical skill, though it occasionally constrained expansive creativity in favor of structured execution.[2][16]International Career
USSR National Team Role
Igor Netto made his debut for the USSR national football team in 1952 and assumed the role of captain from 1954 to 1964, earning 67 caps in total.[14][18] In this capacity, he served as the primary on-field leader, orchestrating midfield play, dictating tempo, and enforcing tactical discipline to align with the state's expectations for representing Soviet athletic prowess.[4][2] Netto's leadership extended to fostering unity among stars like Lev Yashin, the renowned goalkeeper, through intensive sessions in secluded training camps that emphasized collective discipline over individual flair, mirroring the USSR's ideological commitment to socialist solidarity in sports.[17][19] These environments, controlled by state sporting committees, aimed to mold players into exemplars of Soviet superiority, subjecting them to pressures that prioritized national prestige and ideological conformity.[19] Selection for the national squad occurred within a bureaucratic framework where athletic talent intersected with political vetting, as Soviet authorities favored players demonstrating reliability and alignment with party directives to mitigate risks like defection or dissent during international exposure.[20] Historical analyses of Soviet sports indicate this process often elevated ideologically vetted individuals, potentially sidelining pure merit in favor of those embodying state-sanctioned virtues, though Netto's consistent selection stemmed from his proven leadership and performance.[21]Olympic and World Championship Performances
Igor Netto captained the Soviet Union national football team to the gold medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, starting all five matches as the team advanced through the tournament with victories in the preliminary, quarter-final, semi-final, and final stages.[4] The Soviets defeated Yugoslavia 1–0 in the final on December 1, 1956, relying on disciplined defensive organization under Netto's leadership in midfield, which limited opponents to minimal scoring opportunities despite the physical demands of travel and acclimatization challenges faced by the Eastern Bloc squad.[22] Netto's tactical acumen contributed to the team's success, leveraging state-supported physical conditioning that provided an edge in endurance over Western counterparts, though Soviet isolation from professional leagues constrained improvisational play.[23] In the 1958 FIFA World Cup held in Sweden, Netto sustained an injury early in the tournament, limiting him to one appearance as the Soviet Union reached the quarter-finals before a 2–0 defeat to hosts Sweden on June 19.[18] The team drew 2–2 with England in the group stage on June 8, showcasing resilience despite Netto's absence in subsequent matches, but failed to progress further amid tactical rigidity stemming from centralized training systems that prioritized collective discipline over individual flair.[24] Netto featured in all four matches for the Soviet Union at the 1962 FIFA World Cup in Chile, captaining the side through group stage wins including 2–0 over Yugoslavia on May 31 and 2–1 against Uruguay on June 6, before a 4–4 draw with Colombia on June 3.[24] The Soviets advanced to the quarter-finals but lost 2–1 to Chile on June 10, with Netto's midfield control evident in maintaining possession, though the team's elimination highlighted vulnerabilities in adapting to high-altitude conditions and aggressive South American pressing, factors amplified by the Soviet program's emphasis on technical drills over varied competitive exposure.[18] Across his international career, Netto scored four goals in 54 appearances, underscoring his primary role in orchestration rather than finishing.[18]Managerial and Post-Playing Career
Coaching Positions
Following his retirement from professional playing in 1966, Igor Netto transitioned into coaching, initially taking head roles abroad before returning to contribute to Soviet football structures. His debut as a head coach came with Cypriot club AC Omonia Nicosia in 1967, marking an early foray into management outside the USSR.[2][22] He later served as head coach of the Iran national team from November 1970 to September 1971, overseeing a period of limited success amid the team's developmental challenges in Asian football.[25][2] Upon returning to the Soviet Union, Netto joined Spartak Moscow as an assistant manager in 1974 and 1975, where he emphasized tactical discipline rooted in his midfield experience, though the club's performance remained inconsistent under broader state athletic oversight that often prioritized collective ideology over individual innovation.[26] He also worked extensively with Spartak's youth academy (SDYuShOR Spartak) from the late 1960s until his death in 1990, focusing on player development in a system constrained by centralized planning and limited resources for tactical experimentation.[27][28] These domestic efforts yielded mixed outcomes, with no major titles but contributions to nurturing talent amid administrative interference typical of Soviet sports governance. Netto interspersed Soviet commitments with additional foreign stints, including head coach of Greek club Panionios in the 1976–77 season and Neftchi Baku in 1979, both characterized by modest results that reflected the challenges of adapting his principled, continuity-focused approach to diverse club environments.[26][22] Overall, his coaching career, spanning over two decades, was marked by unsuccessful tenures in head roles despite his playing pedigree, attributable in part to the USSR's bureaucratic constraints that stifled coaching autonomy and innovation.[25] He received recognition as a Merited Coach of the RSFSR in 1986 for his sustained involvement in football development.[28]Administrative Roles in Soviet Football
After retiring from playing in 1966, Igor Netto took on coaching duties at Spartak Moscow's Sports School of Olympic Reserve (SDYUSHOR Spartak), contributing to youth development by mentoring emerging talents including Igor Shalimov.[29] He also briefly coached Spartak's senior team, emphasizing high technical and disciplinary standards derived from his own career.[27] Netto's involvement extended to Spartak's veteran squads, which operated semi-independently but received informal support from federation figures like Nikita Simonyan and Allakverdi Paramonov, highlighting the interplay between club loyalty and national oversight.[30] However, his administrative influence remained constrained by the Soviet football apparatus's rigid hierarchy, where Communist Party directives often superseded expertise, fostering favoritism toward state-backed clubs like Dynamo over independent entities such as Spartak. Netto's principled stance, exemplified by his career-long commitment to fair play, positioned him at odds with systemic exploitation of athletes, including inadequate post-career support, leading to short tenures and eventual sidelining from prominent roles by the 1980s.[29] Centralized planning stifled competitive reforms and youth initiatives Netto favored, as resources were allocated via political quotas rather than merit, perpetuating inefficiencies in player welfare and talent pipelines.[30] Despite these barriers, his work underscored tensions between grassroots athletic priorities and bureaucratic control, with Netto's marginalization reflecting broader purges of non-conformist figures in Soviet sports governance.[29]Personal Life
Family and Relationships
Igor Netto was born on 9 January 1930 in Moscow to Estonian immigrant parents, reflecting the diasporic communities within the Soviet Union following the region's incorporation. His father, Aleksander Netto (1885–1956), worked as a carpenter originating from Valga in the former Governorate of Livonia, while his mother, Juuli Tamm (1894–1977), also hailed from Estonian territories. This heritage positioned the family amid the cultural tensions of Soviet Russification policies, yet Netto maintained a low-profile personal life amid state surveillance of public figures.[4][2] Netto married actress Olga Yakovleva on 9 January 1960, a union that coincided with the peak of his international career but produced no children. The couple divorced around 1987, during Netto's onset of Alzheimer's disease, highlighting the strains of long-term separation due to frequent travels for matches and training camps across the USSR and abroad. Accounts portray Netto's family dynamics as understated, with his humility serving as a pragmatic adaptation to the era's political oversight rather than overt ideological alignment.[6][2] Netto's relationships extended to close ties with teammates like Lev Yashin, forged through shared experiences in Spartak Moscow and the national team, though these bonds emphasized professional camaraderie over personal entanglement in Soviet intrigues. His Estonian roots occasionally surfaced in family narratives, underscoring resilience against assimilation pressures without documented public advocacy that might invite scrutiny.[16]Health Issues and Death
Netto's professional career concluded in 1966 after accumulating injuries that diminished his performance, particularly following persistent issues after 1962 which led to his replacement as national team captain in 1963 and absence from the 1964 European Championships.[2][16] These injuries, common among Soviet players subjected to high-volume training and competitive demands without modern recovery protocols, forced his retirement at age 36.[4] In his later years, Netto developed Alzheimer's disease, which progressively impaired his memory and cognitive functions, beginning noticeably in the late 1980s.[14][6] The condition contributed to his divorce around 1987 and marked a stark decline from his earlier vitality, though he remained a figure of quiet dignity in Moscow.[2] Netto died on March 30, 1999, at the age of 69 in Moscow, succumbing to complications from Alzheimer's disease.[31][32] He was buried at Vagankovskoye Cemetery in Moscow, with his passing mourned by football fans across Russia, reflecting genuine public esteem rather than obligatory state commemoration.[32][2]Legacy and Recognition
Influence on Soviet and Russian Football
Netto's tactical contributions as a defensive midfielder established benchmarks for versatility and leadership in Soviet football, emphasizing possession retention and transitional play derived from Spartak Moscow's style, which he integrated into the national team's framework during the 1950s and 1960s.[17] His proficiency in defensive duties combined with forward distribution influenced subsequent midfielders by modeling a balanced role that prioritized team cohesion over individual flair, aligning with the era's collectivist ethos yet grounded in technical excellence.[16] Within the Soviet sports apparatus, Netto's achievements bolstered the regime's narrative of socialist superiority through football victories, though his personal integrity—exemplified by forfeiting a goal against Uruguay in the 1962 World Cup due to an offside infringement—highlighted individual merit amid state-orchestrated glorification.[33] This system, while fostering competitive structures, curtailed player autonomy and leveraged successes for propaganda, amplifying Netto's stature beyond empirical performance metrics to serve ideological ends.[19] Posthumously, Russian historiography retains recognition of his captaincy and sportsmanship, yet contemporary analyses temper the mythic portrayal with awareness of the coercive elements in Soviet athletics, such as centralized control that suppressed dissent and prioritized national prestige.[4] In causal terms, Netto's on-field acumen provided a genuine edge in international competitions, but the broader Soviet model's reliance on state resources and narrative control diminished opportunities for organic development, a dynamic evident in the post-1991 reevaluation where his legacy endures primarily through club loyalty at Spartak rather than uncritical national veneration.[34] Archival insights into the era's regimentation underscore that while Netto's contributions were substantive, they operated within constraints that favored conformity, influencing Russian football's transition toward greater individualism in the modern period.[35]Awards, Honors, and Posthumous Tributes
Netto was conferred the title of Merited Master of Sport of the USSR on January 26, 1954, recognizing his elite athletic achievements under Soviet sports classification systems that emphasized state-aligned performance metrics.[5] In 1957, he received the Order of Lenin, the highest Soviet civilian decoration, awarded collectively to the national team for advancing mass physical culture and elevating Soviet sports prestige amid Cold War competitions.[14][25] These honors reflected the USSR's structured incentives tying individual recognition to national ideological goals rather than isolated merit.[4] In 1960, Netto was selected for the UEFA European Championship Team of the Tournament following the Soviet Union's victory, highlighting his leadership as captain in a competition that rewarded tactical discipline and collective effort. Later, in 1995, he was posthumously awarded the Order of Friendship by the Russian Federation for contributions to physical culture and sports development, issued prior to his death but affirming enduring official regard in post-Soviet Russia. Following his death on March 30, 1999, tributes included naming the Spartak Moscow reserve team stadium after him, preserving his club legacy amid fan-driven commemorations that persist in Russian football culture.[25] Spartak supporters and broader Russian football enthusiasts continue to honor Netto through memorials and references, underscoring his symbolic role in Soviet-era successes without formal post-1991 institutional halls of fame inductions.[4]Career Statistics
Club Statistics
Igor Netto spent his entire professional club career with Spartak Moscow, debuting in 1948 and retiring in 1966 after 18 seasons. Due to incomplete archival records from the Soviet era, exact figures vary across compilations, but aggregated data indicate he made between 367 and 402 appearances, scoring 36 to 40 goals in all competitions.[2][24][36] The table below presents a breakdown by major competitions, based on one detailed aggregation:| Competition | Appearances | Goals |
|---|---|---|
| Soviet Top League | 334 | 32 |
| Soviet Cup | 37 | 4 |
| Other matches | 31 | 4 |
| Total | 402 | 40 |
International Statistics
Igor Netto earned 54 caps for the Soviet Union national football team between 15 July 1952 and 16 May 1965, during which he scored 4 goals.[37] [24] His appearances spanned friendlies, qualifiers, major tournaments, and Olympic matches, reflecting his role as a mainstay midfielder despite occasional selection pressures stemming from the Soviet football establishment's favoritism toward Dynamo Moscow players over those from rival clubs like Spartak, where Netto starred.[4] Netto's totals were not diminished by these politics, as his tactical acumen and leadership secured his status as captain for extended periods, notably leading the team at the 1958 FIFA World Cup (where injury limited him to one match), the 1960 European Nations' Cup (all three matches en route to victory), and the 1962 FIFA World Cup (five matches).[38] The following table details his appearances and goals by season:| Season | Appearances | Goals |
|---|---|---|
| 1952 | 3 | 0 |
| 1954 | 2 | 0 |
| 1955 | 5 | 1 |
| 1956 | 11 | 1 |
| 1957 | 8 | 2 |
| 1958 | 2 | 0 |
| 1959 | 3 | 0 |
| 1960 | 5 | 0 |
| 1961 | 6 | 0 |
| 1962 | 7 | 0 |
| 1963 | 1 | 0 |
| 1965 | 1 | 0 |
| Total | 54 | 4 |