SPAIN
New Spain coach Lopetegui promises evolution not revolution
Newly-named Spain coach Julen Lopetegui vowed to build upon the groundwork already laid by outgoing manager Vicente del Bosque as he took over the squad.
Lopetegui presented as Spain coach
Newly-named Spain coach Julen Lopetegui, who guided Spain's youth teams to international success, vowed to build upon the groundwork already laid by outgoing manager Vicente del Bosque as he was officially presented in Las Rozas on Thursday evening.
The RFEF named the 49-year-old former goalkeeper as the new coach, just weeks after Del Bosque resigned following Spain's defeat to Italy in the Last 16 of Euro 2016.
“We will not be having a revolution, but rather an evolution within our ideas”, Lopetegui told a news conference at the federation's headquarters in Las Rozas de Madrid. “We will take advantage of all that Spanish football has done right for many years, we are not going to waste that. But we will adapt to each moment, to each rival, football does not stop. Spanish football is proud of its past, but we will look to the future”.
Del Bosque had led Spain to the 2010 World Cup and Euro 2012 titles, after taking over from Euro 2008-winning coach Luis Aragonés. But the second half of his stint was disappointing, with the 2-0 defeat to Italy following a shock group-stage exit from the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, and he was criticised for not having given the newer generation more of a chance.
Lopetegui, who was sacked by FC Porto in January, signed a two-year contract which will see him manage Spain until the next World Cup in 2018 in Russia. Thanks to his success with Spain's Under-19s and Under-21s, he has long been a favourite of RFEF president Ángel María Villar, who made the appointment before concentrating on his bid to replace Michel Platini as UEFA chief.
Lopetegui is reported to have overcome stiff competition from veteran former Sevilla and Athletic Club coach Joaquin Caparrós for the post. He confirmed media reports that he had been in talks with English second-division side Wolverhampton Wanderers but said those discussions “took a back seat” when he got the call from the Spanish Federation.
Over his career, Lopetegui has achieved varying degrees of success on the pitch and as a coach. His spells as a goalkeeper at Real Madrid and Barcelona saw him spend much of his time on the bench. But he was highly successful at smaller club Logronés from 1991 to 1994 at a time when the team was in the country's first division. Retiring from professional football in 2002, he became coach of Second Division Rayo Vallecano where he had last played before retiring.
He then moved on to Real Madrid where he coached the club's reserves, Castilla - the same post that Zinedine Zidane held before moving on to managing the first team. But Lopetegui, who hails from the northern Basque country, really made his name when he coached the national team's U-19s, U-20s and U-21s from 2010 to 2014.
He led his teams to victory in the 2012 European Under-19 Championship and a year later in the Under-21 European Championship which featured David de Gea, Thiago Alcántara and Álvaro Morata, all of whom were at Euro 2016.
Fresh from that success, he took over Porto in 2014 and led them to the quarter-finals of the 2014/15 Champions League. A famous 3-1 win over Pep Guardiola's Bayern Munich in the first leg of the quarter-final was quickly forgotten as Bayern bounced back to thrash Lopetegui's men 6-1 in the second leg, to progress to the last four. Porto also finished runners-up to rivals Benfica in the Portuguese league in his first season in charge.
Lopetegui signed Iker Casillas from Real Madrid in July 2015, but that did little to help and he was sacked in January with Porto languishing in third behind Benfica and Sporting Clube, having been knocked out at the group stages of the Champions League.