08/10/2020 - 11:06
- Clarín.com
- sports
Boca started up. Miguel Ángel Russo's was one of the teams that resumed training this Monday, after the AFA and the clubs received authorization from the National Government to resume activity, and he is already thinking about the "debut" for the Copa Libertadores next September .
At the Ezeiza campus, the Xeneize squad divided into groups to work on the three fields ready to start moving. There is a long way to go on the physical side after five months of quarantine. But in the photos distributed by the club, a highly motivated Carlos Tevez was finally seen on the pitch.
The xeneize coach followed all the actions with the panoramic view that he could have from the dining room of the premises, located on the first floor of module 3 of the premises. The idea is that you take care of yourself and supervise yourself from a distance, at least during the first days.
A member of the Boca coaching staff supervises the training of a group of players Photo: Boca Press
The first group, which had already completed the first day's work, was made up of Gastón Avila, Ramón Ábila, Esteban Andrada, Julio Buffarini and Gastón Gerzel.
Buffarini, with chinstrap, at the Boca complex in Ezeiza Photo: Boca Press
The second group was made up of Manuel Roffo, Frank Fabra, Carlos Zambrano, Pol Fernández, Agustín Obando and Carlos Tevez.
In the third are Carlos Izquierdoz, Leonardo Jara, Nicolás Capaldo and Enzo Roldán.
The "group 4" is made up of Agustín Rossi, Emmanuel Más, Jorman Campuzano, Sebastián Villa, Mauro Zárate and Aarón Molinas.
Walter Bou, Lisandro López, Iván Marcone, Emanuel Reynoso and Eduardo Salvio are part of the fifth group and the last and smallest group is made up of Marcelo Weigandt, Mateo Retegui and Sebastián Pérez.
The idea that the coaching staff has once the first two weeks of training are completed and with a view to the resumption of the Libertadores (on September 17 they will visit Libertad de Paraguay) is to hold a concentration in a hotel near the Ezeiza campus , to work in a "bubble" format, as the teams of the MLS and the NBA in the United States have done.