
Ranked as:
True Greats

La Máquina in Full Flow
Hosts
Graham Dunn, Jamie Rooney
Phil Craig
Guest(s)
In this episode of By Far The Greatest Team, hosts Graham Dunn and Jamie Rooney are joined by Phil Craig to pick aparat the greatness of River Plate 1941-1947 as part of a double episode alongside West Auckland 1909–1911, this discussion turns its focus to Argentina in the 1940s — and to one of the most celebrated teams in South American football history: River Plate’s La Máquina.
While most of the world was at war, football in Argentina flourished. Between 1941 and 1947, River Plate built a side so technically advanced and tactically fluid that it would influence generations to come. Managed by Renato Cesarini and later José María Minella, and powered by the legendary quintet of Muñoz, Moreno, Pedernera, Labruna, and Loustau, La Máquina blended artistry with precision — playing football that seemed a decade ahead of its time.
The conversation explores how River Plate dominated the Argentine Primera División, winning titles in 1941, 1942, 1945, and 1947, while exporting their brand of intelligent movement and positional interchange to the rest of the continent. Their influence spread from Buenos Aires to Montevideo, Turin to Madrid, shaping ideas later seen in the total football of the 1970s.
Graham, Jamie, and Phil unpack the tactical genius of Pedernera as a false nine, the elegance of Moreno and Labruna, and the cultural power of River’s post-war identity. Against a global backdrop of austerity, Argentina’s game thrived — and La Máquina became a symbol of creativity, unity, and brilliance in a world short on joy.
Style of Play
2-3-5 formation, positional interchange, short passing triangles, false nine movement, collective attack, total football prototype
River Plate’s La Máquina played football as performance art — and did so with a structure that predated total football by nearly 30 years. Their standard setup, a fluid 2-3-5 morphing into a 3-2-2-3, encouraged relentless interchanging and positional rotation among the famous front five: Muñoz, Moreno, Pedernera, Labruna, and Loustau.
At the heart of it all was Adolfo Pedernera, functioning not as a conventional centre-forward but as a withdrawn playmaker, drawing defenders out of shape and creating channels for the inside forwards. The system relied on quick passing triangles, constant off-ball movement, and intuitive understanding — a symphony rather than a structure.
Behind them, Moreno provided rhythm, Labruna goal threat, and Loustau balance and flair. The midfield shield, led by Yácono and Rodolfi, ensured that River could dominate possession without losing stability. Matches were often defined by short, fast combinations and a belief in attacking as a collective art form.
“La Máquina” played football that transcended its era — intelligent, improvisational, and joyful. It was the tactical and philosophical blueprint for modern Argentine football and a symbol of how creativity could thrive even in times of global uncertainty.
Main Topics
Iconic Moments
The rise of River Plate’s “La Máquina” during the 1940s
Key players and the tactical revolution of Adolfo Pedernera
Argentine football’s golden isolation during WWII
The influence of La Máquina on future South American and European tactics
The artistry, rhythm, and flair of River Plate’s style
River Plate’s cultural dominance in Buenos Aires and beyond
“La Máquina” front five make debut together (1941)
River win back-to-back titles in 1941 and 1942
Pedernera’s false nine role revolutionises attacking play
The 1945–47 dominance crowns River as Argentina’s team of the decade
Birth of the phrase “El fútbol de los dioses” — “Football of the gods”
Notable Manager
Renato Cesarini, José María Minella
Notable Players
Juan Carlos Muñoz, José Manuel Moreno, Adolfo Pedernera, Ángel Labruna, Félix Loustau, Ricardo Vaghi, Norberto Yácono, Bruno Rodolfi, Carlos Peucelle, Alfredo Di Stéfano (emerging youth), Aristóbulo Deambrossi
River Plate 1941–1947: La Máquina in Motion
Between 1941 and 1947, River Plate built a team that changed football forever. Known as La Máquina — “The Machine” — this Argentine side played with such fluidity and intelligence that they are still regarded as the sport’s first modern team.
While the world was at war, Argentina’s domestic game carried on — and River Plate flourished. Under Renato Cesarini and José María Minella, they assembled a front line that became legend: Muñoz, Moreno, Pedernera, Labruna, and Loustau. Together, they dismantled defences with interchanging movement, short passing, and elegant precision.
At the heart of it all was Adolfo Pedernera, reinventing the centre-forward role into what we now call the false nine. His positioning drew markers away, freeing space for runners like Labruna and Moreno to exploit. River’s football was rhythmic, creative, and ahead of its time — the foundation upon which the likes of Di Stéfano, Cruyff, and Guardiola would later build.
River Plate won four league titles in this era, dominated Buenos Aires football, and set new standards of style and sophistication. For Argentina, they represented artistry amid global turmoil — a reminder that beauty and imagination could still flourish.
La Máquina’s legacy endures not just in their results, but in their influence. They were the original fútbol de los dioses — the football of the gods.

