Javier Irureta

Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano (born 1 April 1948), Irureta for short, is a Spanish retired football attacking midfielder and manager.

Javier Irureta
Irureta in 1973
Personal information
Full name Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano
Date of birth (1948-04-01) 1 April 1948
Place of birth Irun, Spain
Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9 12 in)
Position(s) Attacking midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1965–1967 Real Unión 48 (14)
1967–1975 Atlético Madrid 208 (48)
1975–1980 Athletic Bilbao 136 (22)
Total 392 (84)
National team
1969–1971 Spain U23 4 (0)
1967 Spain amateur 4 (2)
1972–1975 Spain 6 (0)
1979 Basque Country 1 (0)
Teams managed
1984–1988 Sestao
1988–1989 Logroñés
1989–1993 Oviedo
1993 Basque Country
1993–1994 Racing Santander
1994–1995 Athletic Bilbao
1995–1997 Real Sociedad
1997–1998 Celta
1998–2005 Deportivo La Coruña
2006 Betis
2008 Zaragoza
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

He had a distinguished playing career with Atlético Madrid and Athletic Bilbao, playing in 344 La Liga games for both teams combined and scoring 70 goals.

Irureta managed several Spanish top flight clubs, most notably Deportivo. He was the only person to have coached both the two major Galician (Deportivo and Celta) and Basque (Athletic and Real Sociedad) sides.

Playing career

Atlético Madrid

Irureta was born in Irun, Gipuzkoa, making his senior debut for local Real Unión in 1965. Two years later he helped them reach the second division play-offs, before joining Atlético Madrid later that year. During his time at the club he was part of a team that won two La Liga titles and a Copa del Rey, playing alongside the likes of Adelardo, Luis Aragonés and José Eulogio Gárate.[1]

The Colchoneros also reached the European Cup final in 1974, but after the winners, FC Bayern Munich, declined to participate in the Intercontinental Cup, they were invited as runners-up: facing Club Atlético Independiente of Argentina the side won 2–1 on aggregate, with Irureta scoring one of the goals in the 2–0 second-leg home victory.[2]

Athletic Bilbao

After eight seasons at Atlético, Irureta returned to the Basque Country and signed for Athletic Bilbao. The highlight of his career there was winning two runners-up medals in 1977 – Spanish and UEFA Cups, as among his teammates were veteran José Ángel Iribar and an emerging José Ramón Alexanko.[3][4]

Irureta retired in 1980 aged 32, with more than 400 official matches to his credit and nearly 100 goals.

Spain

Irureta won six caps for Spain in a three-year span (exactly two years and 11 months). However, he did not experience a successful time with the national side, and never took part in any major tournament; his debut came on 23 May 1972 in a 2–0 friendly win with Uruguay, in Madrid.

Towards the end of his playing career, Irureta also played one game for the Basque Country national team.

Coaching career

Early years / Deportivo

As a coach, Irureta started with lowly Sestao Sport Club and joined CD Logroñés four years later,[5][6] then led Real Oviedo[7] to a sixth-place finish in the 1990–91 season, with subsequent qualification to the UEFA Cup – he repeated the feat with RC Celta de Vigo (where he was awarded Manager of the Year titles by both Don Balón and El País)[8] in 1998. In 1994–95 he briefly returned to Athletic Bilbao,[9][10] then coached neighbours Real Sociedad.[11]

However, Irureta's greatest successes came with Deportivo de La Coruña[12] where he spent seven years,[13] winning another Don Balón coaching accolade in 2000. In his second year he led Depor to its first ever league title,[14] adding runner-up finishes in 2001 and 2002 and third-places in the following two years while also reaching the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals in 2001 and 2002 and the semi-finals in 2004; in 2002 they also won the domestic cup, beating Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.[15]

Betis

Irureta was appointed at Real Betis in June 2006 on a one-year contract,[16] being sacked on 21 December after the team's poor start to the campaign. He stated: "My contract has been rescinded by mutual agreement but I made the first move. We could have continued like this for much longer but it wasn't good".[17][18]

Later career

In October 2007, Irureta put his name forward to be the new coach of English club Bolton Wanderers, but lost out in the running to Gary Megson, and was also touted by December as possible replacement for Real Sociedad's Chris Coleman.[19]

Eventually, he took over at Real Zaragoza after replacing Víctor Fernández.[20] However, on 3 March 2008, after merely one and a half months in charge, he resigned, arguing that never as a manager had he lost four games in a row,[21] and that he did not feel up to the task of stopping the Aragonese side's slump into the relegation zone (eventually, they dropped down a tier). He was quickly replaced by former Zaragoza goalkeeper Manolo Villanova, whom at the time was in charge of SD Huesca.[22]

Managerial statistics

As of 24 May 2019
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record Ref.
G W D L Win %
Sestao 10 June 1984 22 May 1988 186 87 41 58 046.77
Logroñés 22 May 1988 30 January 1989 21 5 9 7 023.81
Oviedo 27 June 1989 5 February 1993 156 54 49 53 034.62
Racing Santander 3 July 1993 9 June 1994 42 17 9 16 040.48 [23]
Athletic Bilbao 9 June 1994 20 March 1995 35 13 9 13 037.14 [24]
Real Sociedad 28 November 1995 6 July 1997 72 31 19 22 043.06 [25]
Celta 6 July 1997 18 May 1998 44 22 9 13 050.00 [26]
Deportivo La Coruña 18 May 1998 31 May 2005 377 187 90 100 049.60 [27]
Betis 11 June 2006 22 December 2006 17 4 5 8 023.53 [28]
Zaragoza 22 January 2008 3 March 2008 6 1 1 4 016.67 [29]
Career Total 956 421 241 294 044.04

Honours

Player

Atlético Madrid

Athletic Bilbao

Manager

Deportivo

Individual

References

  1. "Hay una inestabilidad permanente" ("There's a permanent instability"); El País, 22 December 2011 (in Spanish)
  2. Intercontinental Club Cup 1974; at RSSSF
  3. El traspaso de Irureta ha costado veinticinco millones de pesetas (Irureta transfer has cost twenty five million pesetas); ABC, 9 September 1975 (in Spanish)
  4. Los 50 de la historia del Athletic (The 50 in the history of Athletic); Martí Perarnau, 27 May 2013 (in Spanish)
  5. Irureta firmará por el Logroñés la próxima semana (Irureta will sign for Logroñés next week); Mundo Deportivo, 20 May 1988 (in Spanish)
  6. Logroñés: Javier Irureta, cesado (Logroñés: Javier Irureta, sacked); Mundo Deportivo, 30 January 1989 (in Spanish)
  7. Entrenadores: más descartes (Coaches: further releases); Mundo Deportivo, 25 May 1989 (in Spanish)
  8. Irureta emprende "un proyecto ambicioso" (Irureta takes on "ambitious project"); Mundo Deportivo, 6 July 1997 (in Spanish)
  9. San Mamés da el voto a Arrate (San Mamés votes Arrate); Mundo Deportivo, 9 June 1994 (in Spanish)
  10. Irureta presenta la dimisión en el Athletic (Irureta resigns at Athletic); El País, 20 March 1995 (in Spanish)
  11. Irureta dice ‘sí’ a la Real (Irureta says ‘yes’ to Real); Mundo Deportivo, 28 November 1995 (in Spanish)
  12. Irureta deja el Celta y ya piensa en el Deportivo (Irureta leaves Celta and is already thinking of Deportivo); Mundo Deportivo, 24 May 1998 (in Spanish)
  13. Irureta deja el Deportivo tras siete años como entrenador (Irureta leaves Deportivo after seven years as coach); El País, 31 May 2005 (in Spanish)
  14. El Deportivo salda una deuda histórica (Deportivo take care of historic debt); El País, 20 May 2000 (in Spanish)
  15. Una victoria para la eternidad (Win for eternity); El País, 7 March 2002 (in Spanish)
  16. Irureta returns with Betis; UEFA, 12 June 2006
  17. Irureta says goodbye to Betis; UEFA, 21 December 2006
  18. Irureta tiró la toalla al saberse sentenciado (Irureta threw towel after knowing of his fate); Diario AS, 22 December 2006 (in Spanish)
  19. Bolton again train sights on Megson after Souness snub; The Guardian, 24 October 2007
  20. Zaragoza turn to Irureta; UEFA, 23 January 2008
  21. Javier Irureta dimite como técnico del Zaragoza (Javier Irureta resigns as Zaragoza coach); Marca, 3 March 2008 (in Spanish)
  22. Irureta dimite como entrenador del Zaragoza (Irureta resigns as Zaragoza manager); El Mundo, 3 March 2008 (in Spanish)
  23. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  24. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  25. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  26. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  27. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
    "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  28. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  29. "Irureta: Javier Iruretagoyena Amiano". BDFutbol. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  30. Spain – Footballer of the Year; at RSSSF
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