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Luis de la Fuente (footballer, born 1961)

Luis de la Fuente Castillo (born 21 June 1961) is a Spanish football manager and former professional player who played as a left-back. He is the manager of the Spain national team.

Luis de la Fuente
Personal information
Full name Luis de la Fuente Castillo[1]
Date of birth (1961-06-21) 21 June 1961 (age 62)[2]
Place of birth Haro, Spain[2]
Height 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Position(s) Left-back
Team information
Current team
Spain (manager)
Youth career
1976–1978 Athletic Bilbao
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1978–1982 Bilbao Athletic 59 (3)
1981–1987 Athletic Bilbao 146 (1)
1987–1991 Sevilla 86 (4)
1991–1993 Athletic Bilbao 22 (1)
1993–1994 Alavés 35 (3)
Total 348 (12)
International career
1978–1979 Spain U18 4 (0)
1982–1984 Spain U21 4 (0)
1988 Spain Olympic 1 (0)
Managerial career
1997–2000 Portugalete
2000–2001 Aurrerá
2001–2005 Sevilla (youth)
2005–2006 Athletic Bilbao (youth)
2006–2007 Bilbao Athletic
2009–2011 Bilbao Athletic
2011 Alavés
2013–2018 Spain U19
2018–2022 Spain U21
2021 Spain U23
2022– Spain
Medal record
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He amassed La Liga totals of 254 matches and six goals over 13 seasons, with Athletic Bilbao and Sevilla, winning two league titles with the former including a double with the Copa del Rey in 1984.

De la Fuente began working in the Spanish youth teams in 2013, managing the under-19 team to victory in the 2015 European Championship and the under-21 side to the 2019 equivalent. He coached the Olympic team to the silver medal at the 2020 games, and took over at the seniors in 2022, winning the 2023 UEFA Nations League.

Playing career edit

Born in Haro, La Rioja, de la Fuente graduated from Athletic Bilbao's youth system,[3] and made his senior debut with the reserves in 1978, in the Segunda División B. On 8 March 1981, he made his first-team – and La Liga – debut, coming on as a second-half substitute in a 0–0 away draw against Valencia CF.[4]

De la Fuente was definitely promoted to the main squad in the summer of 1982. He scored his first professional goal on 26 March of the following year, closing the 4–0 home rout of RC Celta de Vigo.[5]

In July 1987, de la Fuente signed for fellow top-flight club Sevilla FC,[6] and continued to appear regularly the following campaigns. In 1991, he returned to Athletic for a 20 million pesetas fee,[7] but was sparingly used.

De la Fuente joined Deportivo Alavés in 1993, with the side in the third tier. After one season, he retired at the age of 33.[3]

Coaching career edit

Early years edit

De la Fuente's first managerial job was at Club Portugalete, in the regional leagues. In summer 2000, he was appointed at Segunda División B club CD Aurrerá de Vitoria,[8] but was sacked in March of the following year in spite of a seventh place in the table.[9]

After a spell back at Sevilla (academy), de la Fuente returned to Athletic.[10] Initially a manager of the youths and the reserves,[11] he also acted as match delegate for two years[12] before returning to his previous duties.[13]

On 13 July 2011, de la Fuente was named Alavés coach,[14] being dismissed on 17 October.[15]

Spain youths edit

On 5 May 2013, de la Fuente was appointed at the helm of the Spain under-19 team,[16] who won the 2015 UEFA European Championship in Greece.[17] He became manager of the under-21 side in July 2018, after Albert Celades resigned.[18] His first competition was the 2019 European Championship in Italy, conquered after the 1–0 final defeat of Germany in Udine.[19]

On 8 June 2021, de la Fuente and his team filled in as the Spain senior side for a UEFA Euro 2020 friendly against Lithuania, after the aforementioned squad had gone into isolation when Sergio Busquets tested positive for COVID-19.[20] They won 4–0 in Leganés.[21]

De la Fuente was also in charge of the Spanish Olympic team at the delayed 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo.[22] His side won the silver medal, losing 2–1 to Brazil in the final.[23]

Spain senior edit

On 8 December 2022, de la Fuente was appointed as head coach of the senior side, as Luis Enrique resigned following a round-of-16 penalty shootout elimination at the 2022 FIFA World Cup by Morocco.[24] He was officially presented four days later, with a contract running until UEFA Euro 2024 with the option to be extended.[25]

De la Fuente won 3–0 in a European qualifier at home to Norway in his first game on 25 March 2023, with two goals by 32-year-old debutant Joselu.[26] He led the country to victory in the 2022–23 UEFA Nations League (a first ever), defeating Croatia 5–4 on penalties following a 0–0 draw in Rotterdam.[27]

Style of coaching edit

Due to his background coaching in youth setups, de la Fuente liked to work with younger players familiar to him and not high-maintenance. Mikel Merino and Mikel Oyarzabal won the under-21 European championship title during his tenure, and later represented the full team under the same manager.[28] He explained his philosophy by stating that "I come from a grassroots background. Our commitment, to the people we trust in the youth system, is not a pose, it is a conviction".[29]

Spain often dominated possession under de la Fuente, also starting to use a more traditional centre-forward and delivering more crosses to the box.[28]

Managerial statistics edit

As of match played 26 March 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record Ref
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Portugalete   1 July 1997 30 June 2000 122 69 34 19 231 104 +127 056.56
Aurrerá   1 July 2000 14 March 2001 32 11 13 8 29 25 +4 034.38 [30]
Bilbao Athletic   8 July 2006 28 May 2007 38 11 12 15 39 49 −10 028.95 [31]
Bilbao Athletic   8 July 2009 7 July 2011 76 21 29 26 64 79 −15 027.63 [32]
Alavés   13 July 2011 17 October 2011 11 4 4 3 15 13 +2 036.36 [33]
Spain U19   5 May 2013 24 July 2018 46 31 6 9 90 37 +53 067.39 [34]
Spain U21   24 July 2018 8 December 2022 42 34 4 4 113 24 +89 080.95 [35]
Spain U23   1 June 2021 7 August 2021 7 3 3 1 10 6 +4 042.86 [36]
Spain   8 December 2022 Present 12 8 2 2 30 10 +20 066.67 [37]
Total 386 192 107 87 621 347 +274 049.74

Honours edit

Player edit

Athletic Bilbao

Manager edit

Spain U19

Spain U21

Spain U23

Spain

References edit

  1. ^ "Squad List: Men's Olympic Football Tournament Tokyo 2020: Spain (ESP)" (PDF). FIFA. 22 July 2021. p. 16. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  2. ^ a b Luis de la Fuente at WorldFootball.net
  3. ^ a b Falagán, Aser (7 August 2021). "De la Fuente, el éxito de un técnico discreto" [De la Fuente, the success of a low-key manager]. El Comercio (in Spanish). Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  4. ^ "0–0: Abdicación valencianista ante el Athletic" [0–0: Valencianista abdication against Athletic]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). 9 March 1981. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  5. ^ Castañeda, Eduardo (27 March 1983). "El Athletic, sin problemas" [Athletic, no problems]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  6. ^ Granado, Luis (6 July 1987). "El lateral del Athletic De la Fuente firma hoy contrato por el Sevilla" [Athletic full-back De la Fuente signs contract with Sevilla today]. ABC (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  7. ^ "El Sevilla traspasa a De la Fuente al Athletic de Bilbao por veinte millones" [Sevilla transfer De la Fuente to Athletic de Bilbao for twenty millions]. ABC (in Spanish). 5 September 1991. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  8. ^ "Una apuesta para dar un salto cualitativo" [A bet to make a jump of quality]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). 2 September 2000. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  9. ^ Parcero, Bruno (14 March 2001). "Los nervios afloran en el tramo final" [Nerves everywhere in final stretch]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  10. ^ "Luis de la Fuente, el último fichaje para Lezama" [Luis de la Fuente, last signing for Lezama]. Diario AS (in Spanish). 21 June 2005. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  11. ^ "Luis de la Fuente, new Bilbao Athletic coach". Athletic Bilbao. 8 July 2006. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  12. ^ "Luis de la Fuente, the new delegate". Athletic Bilbao. 16 July 2007. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  13. ^ "Luis de la Fuente ya trabaja con el Bilbao Athletic" [Luis de la Fuente already works with Bilbao Athletic]. El Correo (in Spanish). 8 July 2009. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  14. ^ "Luis de la Fuente retorna al Alavés como entrenador después de 17 años" [Luis de la Fuente returns to Alavés as a manager 17 years later]. Marca (in Spanish). 13 July 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  15. ^ M. Otero, Pablo (16 October 2011). "El Alavés destituye a su técnico Luis de la Fuente" [Alavés dismiss their manager Luis de la Fuente]. Marca (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  16. ^ "La Federación Española ficha a Luis De la Fuente, que dirigirá la Sub'19" [The Spanish Federation signs Luis De la Fuente, who will manage the under-19s]. El Correo (in Spanish). 5 May 2013. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  17. ^ a b "Los campeones Sub-19 ya están en España" [The Under-19 champions are already in Spain]. El Mundo (in Spanish). 20 July 2015. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  18. ^ "OFICIAL: Luis de la Fuente seleccionador sub 21" [OFFICIAL: Luis de la Fuente under-21 manager] (in Spanish). El Desmarque. 24 July 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  19. ^ a b Fisher, Ben (30 June 2019). "Classy Spain sink Germany to lift Euro Under-21 Championship". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  20. ^ G. Matallanas, Javier; Santos Chozas, Sergio (7 June 2021). ""Estoy preparado si tengo que dirigir a la Selección en la Eurocopa"" ["I'm prepared if I have to lead the national team at the Euros"]. Diario AS (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  21. ^ Feldman, Ben (8 June 2021). "Spain youngsters impress in Lithuania rout". Marca. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  22. ^ "Pedri, Garcia & Torres among Spain's Euro 2020 players named in Tokyo Olympics squad". Goal. 29 June 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  23. ^ a b "Tokyo Olympics 2021 medal count updates: who has won more? Tally by country, today, 7 August". Diario AS. 7 August 2021. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  24. ^ Lara, Miguel Ángel; Picó, Diego (8 December 2022). "Luis de la Fuente is Spain's new coach, succeeding Luis Enrique". Marca. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  25. ^ "Luis de la Fuente, en su presentación: "Va a ser una etapa fantástica"" [Luis de la Fuente, in his presentation: "This will be a fantastic spell"] (in Spanish). Royal Spanish Football Federation. 12 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  26. ^ "Spain 3–0 Norway". BBC Sport. 25 March 2023. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  27. ^ a b Smith, Emma (18 June 2023). "Croatia 0–0 Spain (Spain win 5–4 on penalties)". BBC Sport. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  28. ^ a b Corrigan, Dermot (20 November 2023). "This is Luis de la Fuente's Spain: Functional, lower-profile and with realistic expectations". The Athletic. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
  29. ^ "Spain 'contenders' at Euro 2024 but need 'time', says De La Fuente". The Sun. 24 March 2024. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  30. ^ "Matches Luis de la Fuente, 2000–01 season". BDFutbol.
  31. ^ "Matches Luis de la Fuente, 2006–07 season". BDFutbol.
  32. ^ "Matches Luis de la Fuente, 2009–10 season". BDFutbol.
    "Matches Luis de la Fuente, 2010–11 season". BDFutbol.
  33. ^ "Matches Luis de la Fuente, 2011–12 season". BDFutbol.
  34. ^ "Spain U19: Matches". Soccerway. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  35. ^ "Spain U21: Matches". Soccerway. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  36. ^ "Spain U23: Matches". Soccerway. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  37. ^ "Spain: Matches". Soccerway. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  38. ^ a b ""The Barge years. The Athletic of 1983 and 1984"". Athletic Bilbao. 8 November 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  39. ^ Gomes, Julio (18 January 2021). "Athletic Bilbao mostra que é possível resistir e, vez ou outra, ser feliz..." [Athletic Bilbao show it's possible to resist, and win, now and then...] (in Portuguese). Universo Online. Retrieved 26 December 2022.

External links edit

  • Luis de la Fuente at BDFutbol
  • Luis de la Fuente manager profile at BDFutbol
  • Luis de la Fuente at Athletic Bilbao

luis, fuente, footballer, born, 1961, other, people, named, luis, fuente, luis, fuente, disambiguation, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, fuente, second, maternal, family, name, castillo, luis, fuente, castillo, born, june, 1961, spanish, football. For other people named Luis de la Fuente see Luis de la Fuente disambiguation In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is de la Fuente and the second or maternal family name is Castillo Luis de la Fuente Castillo born 21 June 1961 is a Spanish football manager and former professional player who played as a left back He is the manager of the Spain national team Luis de la FuentePersonal informationFull nameLuis de la Fuente Castillo 1 Date of birth 1961 06 21 21 June 1961 age 62 2 Place of birthHaro Spain 2 Height1 72 m 5 ft 8 in Position s Left backTeam informationCurrent teamSpain manager Youth career1976 1978Athletic BilbaoSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1978 1982Bilbao Athletic59 3 1981 1987Athletic Bilbao146 1 1987 1991Sevilla86 4 1991 1993Athletic Bilbao22 1 1993 1994Alaves35 3 Total348 12 International career1978 1979Spain U184 0 1982 1984Spain U214 0 1988Spain Olympic1 0 Managerial career1997 2000Portugalete2000 2001Aurrera2001 2005Sevilla youth 2005 2006Athletic Bilbao youth 2006 2007Bilbao Athletic2009 2011Bilbao Athletic2011Alaves2013 2018Spain U192018 2022Spain U212021Spain U232022 SpainMedal record Men s football Representing Spain as head coach UEFA Nations League Winner 2023 Netherlands Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 Team UEFA European Under 21 Championship Winner 2019 Italy San Marino UEFA European Under 19 Championship Winner 2015 Greece Club domestic league appearances and goals He amassed La Liga totals of 254 matches and six goals over 13 seasons with Athletic Bilbao and Sevilla winning two league titles with the former including a double with the Copa del Rey in 1984 De la Fuente began working in the Spanish youth teams in 2013 managing the under 19 team to victory in the 2015 European Championship and the under 21 side to the 2019 equivalent He coached the Olympic team to the silver medal at the 2020 games and took over at the seniors in 2022 winning the 2023 UEFA Nations League Contents 1 Playing career 2 Coaching career 2 1 Early years 2 2 Spain youths 2 3 Spain senior 3 Style of coaching 4 Managerial statistics 5 Honours 5 1 Player 5 2 Manager 6 References 7 External linksPlaying career editBorn in Haro La Rioja de la Fuente graduated from Athletic Bilbao s youth system 3 and made his senior debut with the reserves in 1978 in the Segunda Division B On 8 March 1981 he made his first team and La Liga debut coming on as a second half substitute in a 0 0 away draw against Valencia CF 4 De la Fuente was definitely promoted to the main squad in the summer of 1982 He scored his first professional goal on 26 March of the following year closing the 4 0 home rout of RC Celta de Vigo 5 In July 1987 de la Fuente signed for fellow top flight club Sevilla FC 6 and continued to appear regularly the following campaigns In 1991 he returned to Athletic for a 20 million pesetas fee 7 but was sparingly used De la Fuente joined Deportivo Alaves in 1993 with the side in the third tier After one season he retired at the age of 33 3 Coaching career editEarly years edit De la Fuente s first managerial job was at Club Portugalete in the regional leagues In summer 2000 he was appointed at Segunda Division B club CD Aurrera de Vitoria 8 but was sacked in March of the following year in spite of a seventh place in the table 9 After a spell back at Sevilla academy de la Fuente returned to Athletic 10 Initially a manager of the youths and the reserves 11 he also acted as match delegate for two years 12 before returning to his previous duties 13 On 13 July 2011 de la Fuente was named Alaves coach 14 being dismissed on 17 October 15 Spain youths edit On 5 May 2013 de la Fuente was appointed at the helm of the Spain under 19 team 16 who won the 2015 UEFA European Championship in Greece 17 He became manager of the under 21 side in July 2018 after Albert Celades resigned 18 His first competition was the 2019 European Championship in Italy conquered after the 1 0 final defeat of Germany in Udine 19 On 8 June 2021 de la Fuente and his team filled in as the Spain senior side for a UEFA Euro 2020 friendly against Lithuania after the aforementioned squad had gone into isolation when Sergio Busquets tested positive for COVID 19 20 They won 4 0 in Leganes 21 De la Fuente was also in charge of the Spanish Olympic team at the delayed 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo 22 His side won the silver medal losing 2 1 to Brazil in the final 23 Spain senior edit On 8 December 2022 de la Fuente was appointed as head coach of the senior side as Luis Enrique resigned following a round of 16 penalty shootout elimination at the 2022 FIFA World Cup by Morocco 24 He was officially presented four days later with a contract running until UEFA Euro 2024 with the option to be extended 25 De la Fuente won 3 0 in a European qualifier at home to Norway in his first game on 25 March 2023 with two goals by 32 year old debutant Joselu 26 He led the country to victory in the 2022 23 UEFA Nations League a first ever defeating Croatia 5 4 on penalties following a 0 0 draw in Rotterdam 27 Style of coaching editDue to his background coaching in youth setups de la Fuente liked to work with younger players familiar to him and not high maintenance Mikel Merino and Mikel Oyarzabal won the under 21 European championship title during his tenure and later represented the full team under the same manager 28 He explained his philosophy by stating that I come from a grassroots background Our commitment to the people we trust in the youth system is not a pose it is a conviction 29 Spain often dominated possession under de la Fuente also starting to use a more traditional centre forward and delivering more crosses to the box 28 Managerial statistics editAs of match played 26 March 2024 Managerial record by team and tenure Team Nat From To Record Ref G W D L GF GA GD Win Portugalete nbsp 1 July 1997 30 June 2000 122 69 34 19 231 104 127 0 56 56 Aurrera nbsp 1 July 2000 14 March 2001 32 11 13 8 29 25 4 0 34 38 30 Bilbao Athletic nbsp 8 July 2006 28 May 2007 38 11 12 15 39 49 10 0 28 95 31 Bilbao Athletic nbsp 8 July 2009 7 July 2011 76 21 29 26 64 79 15 0 27 63 32 Alaves nbsp 13 July 2011 17 October 2011 11 4 4 3 15 13 2 0 36 36 33 Spain U19 nbsp 5 May 2013 24 July 2018 46 31 6 9 90 37 53 0 67 39 34 Spain U21 nbsp 24 July 2018 8 December 2022 42 34 4 4 113 24 89 0 80 95 35 Spain U23 nbsp 1 June 2021 7 August 2021 7 3 3 1 10 6 4 0 42 86 36 Spain nbsp 8 December 2022 Present 12 8 2 2 30 10 20 0 66 67 37 Total 386 192 107 87 621 347 274 0 49 74 Honours editPlayer edit Athletic Bilbao La Liga 1982 83 1983 84 38 Copa del Rey 1983 84 38 Supercopa de Espana 1984 automatically awarded after winning the double 39 Manager edit Spain U19 UEFA European Under 19 Championship 2015 17 Spain U21 UEFA European Under 21 Championship 2019 19 Spain U23 Summer Olympics silver medal 2020 23 Spain UEFA Nations League 2022 23 27 References edit Squad List Men s Olympic Football Tournament Tokyo 2020 Spain ESP PDF FIFA 22 July 2021 p 16 Retrieved 29 August 2021 a b Luis de la Fuente at WorldFootball net a b Falagan Aser 7 August 2021 De la Fuente el exito de un tecnico discreto De la Fuente the success of a low key manager El Comercio in Spanish Retrieved 16 September 2021 0 0 Abdicacion valencianista ante el Athletic 0 0 Valencianista abdication against Athletic Mundo Deportivo in Spanish 9 March 1981 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Castaneda Eduardo 27 March 1983 El Athletic sin problemas Athletic no problems Mundo Deportivo in Spanish Retrieved 12 October 2015 Granado Luis 6 July 1987 El lateral del Athletic De la Fuente firma hoy contrato por el Sevilla Athletic full back De la Fuente signs contract with Sevilla today ABC in Spanish Retrieved 12 October 2015 El Sevilla traspasa a De la Fuente al Athletic de Bilbao por veinte millones Sevilla transfer De la Fuente to Athletic de Bilbao for twenty millions ABC in Spanish 5 September 1991 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Una apuesta para dar un salto cualitativo A bet to make a jump of quality Mundo Deportivo in Spanish 2 September 2000 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Parcero Bruno 14 March 2001 Los nervios afloran en el tramo final Nerves everywhere in final stretch Mundo Deportivo in Spanish Retrieved 16 September 2021 Luis de la Fuente el ultimo fichaje para Lezama Luis de la Fuente last signing for Lezama Diario AS in Spanish 21 June 2005 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Luis de la Fuente new Bilbao Athletic coach Athletic Bilbao 8 July 2006 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Luis de la Fuente the new delegate Athletic Bilbao 16 July 2007 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Luis de la Fuente ya trabaja con el Bilbao Athletic Luis de la Fuente already works with Bilbao Athletic El Correo in Spanish 8 July 2009 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Luis de la Fuente retorna al Alaves como entrenador despues de 17 anos Luis de la Fuente returns to Alaves as a manager 17 years later Marca in Spanish 13 July 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2015 M Otero Pablo 16 October 2011 El Alaves destituye a su tecnico Luis de la Fuente Alaves dismiss their manager Luis de la Fuente Marca in Spanish Retrieved 12 October 2015 La Federacion Espanola ficha a Luis De la Fuente que dirigira la Sub 19 The Spanish Federation signs Luis De la Fuente who will manage the under 19s El Correo in Spanish 5 May 2013 Retrieved 12 October 2015 a b Los campeones Sub 19 ya estan en Espana The Under 19 champions are already in Spain El Mundo in Spanish 20 July 2015 Retrieved 28 June 2019 OFICIAL Luis de la Fuente seleccionador sub 21 OFFICIAL Luis de la Fuente under 21 manager in Spanish El Desmarque 24 July 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2019 a b Fisher Ben 30 June 2019 Classy Spain sink Germany to lift Euro Under 21 Championship The Guardian Retrieved 1 July 2019 G Matallanas Javier Santos Chozas Sergio 7 June 2021 Estoy preparado si tengo que dirigir a la Seleccion en la Eurocopa I m prepared if I have to lead the national team at the Euros Diario AS in Spanish Retrieved 8 June 2021 Feldman Ben 8 June 2021 Spain youngsters impress in Lithuania rout Marca Retrieved 9 June 2021 Pedri Garcia amp Torres among Spain s Euro 2020 players named in Tokyo Olympics squad Goal 29 June 2021 Retrieved 7 July 2021 a b Tokyo Olympics 2021 medal count updates who has won more Tally by country today 7 August Diario AS 7 August 2021 Retrieved 20 August 2021 Lara Miguel Angel Pico Diego 8 December 2022 Luis de la Fuente is Spain s new coach succeeding Luis Enrique Marca Retrieved 9 December 2022 Luis de la Fuente en su presentacion Va a ser una etapa fantastica Luis de la Fuente in his presentation This will be a fantastic spell in Spanish Royal Spanish Football Federation 12 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Spain 3 0 Norway BBC Sport 25 March 2023 Retrieved 26 March 2023 a b Smith Emma 18 June 2023 Croatia 0 0 Spain Spain win 5 4 on penalties BBC Sport Retrieved 19 June 2023 a b Corrigan Dermot 20 November 2023 This is Luis de la Fuente s Spain Functional lower profile and with realistic expectations The Athletic Retrieved 19 March 2024 Spain contenders at Euro 2024 but need time says De La Fuente The Sun 24 March 2024 Retrieved 24 March 2024 Matches Luis de la Fuente 2000 01 season BDFutbol Matches Luis de la Fuente 2006 07 season BDFutbol Matches Luis de la Fuente 2009 10 season BDFutbol Matches Luis de la Fuente 2010 11 season BDFutbol Matches Luis de la Fuente 2011 12 season BDFutbol Spain U19 Matches Soccerway Retrieved 12 December 2022 Spain U21 Matches Soccerway Retrieved 12 December 2022 Spain U23 Matches Soccerway Retrieved 12 December 2022 Spain Matches Soccerway Retrieved 12 December 2022 a b The Barge years The Athletic of 1983 and 1984 Athletic Bilbao 8 November 2019 Retrieved 22 July 2021 Gomes Julio 18 January 2021 Athletic Bilbao mostra que e possivel resistir e vez ou outra ser feliz Athletic Bilbao show it s possible to resist and win now and then in Portuguese Universo Online Retrieved 26 December 2022 External links editLuis de la Fuente at BDFutbol Luis de la Fuente manager profile at BDFutbol Luis de la Fuente at Athletic Bilbao Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luis de la Fuente footballer born 1961 amp oldid 1217897153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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