Martín Anselmi on Porto and Botafogo: “No coach is magic, we need time” | OneFootball

Martín Anselmi on Porto and Botafogo: “No coach is magic, we need time” | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: Portal dos Dragões

Portal dos Dragões

·19 June 2026

Martín Anselmi on Porto and Botafogo: “No coach is magic, we need time”

Article image:Martín Anselmi on Porto and Botafogo: “No coach is magic, we need time”

Martín Anselmi was unveiled at Elche CF with a clear message, a no-nonsense speech, and a direct response to his brief spells at FC Porto and Botafogo. In his presentation, the Argentine coach spoke about the identity he wants to build, the foundation left by last season, and an ambition that refuses to be confined to modest objectives. And when looking back at his most recent path, he left one certainty: “Coaches are not magicians.”

At an early stage of work and defining the direction, Martín Anselmi approached his new setting with one central idea: the team comes before the individual, progress matters more than anxiety, and time remains decisive in any project. Elche CF’s new coach did not indulge in illusions, but he also did not lower the standards for what he wants to see on the pitch.


OneFootball Videos


When explaining his philosophy, Anselmi outlined the profile of the team he wants to build more than he highlighted isolated talents. He did so with a vision of constant competition, without letting himself be carried away either by the euphoria of victory or the weight of defeat.

“I don’t approach football from the individual. The individual depends on the team. Competing means giving your best in every action of the game, regardless of the result,” he said. “Winning must not lead to complacency, losing cannot cause frustration. What matters is that the team is competitive. And that has to be visible from the first match. I want an intelligent team that knows how to suffer and fight at every moment.”

In the Argentine’s words, there is an emotional demand just as strong as the tactical one. The competitiveness he describes does not depend only on playing well, but also on the ability to endure, interpret, and respond in any context.

When speaking about the base left by last season, Anselmi avoided any break driven by vanity and preferred to acknowledge the raw material. He admitted there were qualities in what he found, but made it clear that the goal is not to preserve it: it is to take the team to a higher level.

“We have to add our personal touch, but we cannot be satisfied with what was done that season. I saw a brave team that dares to play,” he explained. “We have to start from there. It can still be better. I love the boldness Elche showed and we have to give it a lot of continuity. Intensity when pressing in the opposition’s half and man-to-man defending.”

The coach thus identifies an inheritance he wants to make the most of without becoming tied to it. The word continuity appears linked to another even more decisive one: intensity, the mark of a team that intends to live in confrontation, not in waiting.

Asked about his short spells at FC Porto and Botafogo, Anselmi responded without dramatizing and with an implicit request for context. More than trying to justify himself, he sought to place the work of coaches within a less immediate and more realistic logic.

“Coaches are not magicians, we try to do our best. Like any worker, we need time to show our work,” he stressed. “We were at an institution [Botafogo] for a very short time during a very chaotic period, which is still ongoing. I don’t know whether the last process can be described as bad because, at the end of the day, I don’t even consider it a process.”

In this response, Anselmi offered an almost structural view of the profession: without time, assessment tends to be more rushed than fair. And by choosing the word “process,” he also suggested that not every experience allows a true measure of a playing idea or a project.

As for the objectives for the season, the new coach rejected the comfort of minimum targets and preferred a more demanding horizon. His ambition, he said, begins with improvement and only then will it translate into the position the team may reach.

“Setting survival in the league or any other objective means limiting ourselves. The objective is to be better and, if we are better, we will aspire to more than last season,” he assured. “I have no doubt that the fans will feel proud of what the players are going to do.”

The idea brings his speech full circle: identity, evolution, and ambition without fear of sounding bigger than the usual caution of presentations. Anselmi did not promise miracles, but he did not hide behind them either.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.

View publisher imprint