Luis Aragonés
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | José Luis Aragonés Suárez | ||
Position(s) | Striker (retired) | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Fenerbahçe (coach) |
José Luis Aragonés Suárez (born July 28, 1938 in Hortaleza, Madrid), sometimes referred to as simply Luis, is a former Spanish footballer and national coach, and currently the coach of Fenerbahçe S.K.
Aragonés has spent the majority of his career as a player and coach at Atlético Madrid. He was a prominent player and then coach of the successful Atlético team of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The team won La Liga four times, reached the final of the European Cup and won the Intercontinental Cup. Between 1964 and 1974 he played 265 La Liga games for Atlético and scored 123 goals. Aragonés has coached the club on four separate occasions. He has also played with several other clubs, most notably Real Betis, and played 11 times for Spain, scoring three goals. Apart from Atlético he has also coached seven other La Liga clubs as well as the Spanish national football team who he led to their 2nd European Championship title in 2008. He became the head coach of the Turkish football team Fenerbahce after Euro 2008, and this is the first time that Aragonés coaches outside of his native Spain.
Early career
Aragonés began his playing career with CD Getafe in 1957. In 1958 he signed for Real Madrid but never made it into the senior team. He spent most of his time at Real Madrid on loan to other clubs, including Recreativo de Huelva and Hércules CF and Úbeda CF and playing for AD Plus Ultra, the Real Madrid reserve team. In 1960 he joined Real Oviedo and made his debut in the Primera Division. Between 1961 and 1964 he played for Real Betis, making 86 league appearances and scoring 33 goals. He was part of the team champion of Euro 1964, being reserve in the quarterfinals against Ireland
Atlético de Madrid
While at Atlético, Aragonés acquired the nickname Zapatones, meaning big boots and he was known as a free kick specialist. He was a regular goalscorer and in 1970 he shared the Pichichi with his fellow Atlético forward José Eulogio Gárate and Amancio. In 1974 he scored in the 1-1 draw with Bayern Munich as Atlético held the German team in the European Cup final before losing 4-0 in the replay. After retiring as a player Aragonés was appointed Atlético coach for the first time in 1974. He soon earned himself a new nickname, El Sabio de Hortaleza (The Wise Man from Hortaleza).
Spanish national football team
At the 2006 World Cup, Spain won all 3 group games before facing France in the Second Round. After taking the lead through David Villa, they lost 3-1 following goals from Franck Ribéry, Patrick Vieira and Zinedine Zidane. At Euro 2008, Spain also won all 3 group games, beat 2006 World Cup champions Italy on penalty kicks in the quarterfinals, beat Russia 3-0 in the semifinal, and in the final defeated Germany 1-0 through a Fernando Torres goal, giving Aragonés his first piece of silverware as Spain's manager and earning Spain's first major trophy in 44 years.
Thierry Henry incident
In 2004 Aragonés was appointed coach of Spain. During a training session in the same year, a Spanish TV crew filmed Aragonés trying to motivate José Antonio Reyes by making offensive references to Reyes' Arsenal F.C. black team-mate, Thierry Henry, saying:
Tell that negro de mierda (black shit) that you are much better than him. Don't hold back, tell him. Tell him from me. You have to believe in yourself, you're better than that negro de mierda.[1]
The incident caused uproar in the British media with calls for Aragonés to be sacked. [citation needed] After an investigation into the events during the match, UEFA fined the RFEF 100,000 Swiss francs/87,000 USD and warned that any future incidents would be punished more severely. UEFA noted that possible punishments could include suspension from major international tournaments or the closure of Spain's home international matches to supporters.
In response to this, Aragones has said in public that he is a racist, and claimed that he would never consider having black friends. Brazilian-born black midfielder Marcos Senna stated:
He is not a racist. 'Aragonés is a spectacular person. [Former Spain defender] Donato, who is black, is one of his best friends. Maybe something escaped, a word, and he was misinterpreted. He helped a lot bringing me to the Spain team, and the fact people thought he was racist was minimised by the fact he called me. I see the way he treats me and how he likes me. 'He calls me "The Brazilian". Sometimes I take a free-kick in training and he shouts, "Hey Brazilian, don't take it that way, hit a folha seca [falling leaf] like Nelinho [scorer of one of the World Cup's greatest goals in 1978]." He is a surprising guy, because he is really serious, but then he comes with jokes. The guys adore Aragonés.' ref>Senna steals show, Duncan Castles, Guardian Online, June 29 2008</ref>
Honours
Club
- Atlético Madrid
- La Liga: 1966, 1970, 1973
- Copa del Generalísimo: 1965, 1972
Manager
- Atlético Madrid
- La Liga: 1977
- Copa del Rey: 1976, 1985, 1992
- Intercontinental Cup: 1974
- Supercopa de España: 1985
- FC Barcelona
- Copa del Rey: 1988
Individual
- Pichichi Trophy: 1969-70
References
Source: http://www.ntvmsnbc.com/news/450301.asp
External links
- Luis quédate!
- La Liga Player stats
- La Liga Manager stats
- Spain manager stats
- Spain player stats
- Cultural divide at the heart of race row
- Official Fan Site
{{subst:#if:Aragones, Luis|}} [[Category:{{subst:#switch:{{subst:uc:1938}}
|| UNKNOWN | MISSING = Year of birth missing {{subst:#switch:{{subst:uc:LIVING}}||LIVING=(living people)}} | #default = 1938 births
}}]] {{subst:#switch:{{subst:uc:LIVING}}
|| LIVING = | MISSING = | UNKNOWN = | #default =
}}
- Living people
- LIVING deaths
- Spanish footballers
- Spain international footballers
- Spain national football team managers
- Spanish football managers
- La Liga footballers
- Recreativo de Huelva footballers
- Atlético de Madrid footballers
- Real Betis footballers
- Real Oviedo players
- Getafe CF footballers
- Hércules CF footballers
- La Liga managers
- Atlético de Madrid managers
- FC Barcelona managers
- RCD Espanyol managers
- Real Betis managers
- Real Oviedo managers
- RCD Mallorca managers
- Valencia CF managers
- Sevilla FC managers
- Fenerbahçe football managers
- 2006 FIFA World Cup managers
- UEFA Euro 2008 managers
- UEFA European Football Championship-winning managers
- Turkish Super League managers