(Redirected from Luis Fernandez)
'Luis Fernández' (born on
October 2,
1959 in
Tarifa,
Spain) is a
Spanish-
French former
football (soccer) defensive midfielder, who retired in 1993 to become a manager. He has managed
AS Cannes and
Paris Saint-Germain among other clubs, and is the individual credited with bringing
Ronaldinho to Europe. He was most recently the manager of
La Liga side
Real Betis, with a tenure from December 27, 2006 to June 10, 2007.
[1]
As an active player, Fernández got 60 international
caps and 6 goals for the
French national team, between 1982 and 1992.
Luis Fernandez is in the
Dream Team RMC with ''
Luis Attaque''.
Biography
Player
It was at Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) that Luis Fernández signed his first professional contract, at 19 years of age. Quickly he established himself as a solid defensive midfielder, excelling in winning the ball, but also capable of precise passing, and at the end of the year 1982 he was called up for the French national team and debuted against the
Netherlands on November 10, 1982. At only 23 years, Luis Fernández was immediately an important part of the team that only months earlier had been semi-finalists of the
1982 FIFA World Cup. He formed the national midfield with such French national greats as
Jean Tigana in the defensive midfield, and the offensive players
Alain Giresse and
Michel Platini, a midfield that became known as the "magic square". With the national team, Fernandez won the
Euro 1984 at home in France, and reached the semi-final of the
1986 FIFA World Cup in
Mexico. At the time of this tournament.
After the elimination from the 1986 World Cup, and just after he had won the French
Ligue 1 championship with PSG, Fernández made the decision to join
Jean-Luc Lagardere's team
Racing Club de Paris. But in spite of a team that was strong on paper, the club and Fernandez didn't succeed, and he left Racing after three seasons. Following the 1986 World Cup, the French national team did not manage to qualify for
Euro 1988 and the
1990 FIFA World Cup.
From Racing, Fernández went to AS Cannes in 1989, a more modest club with a friendlier environment. He was still a part of the French national team in spite of a declining physique. Not a starting player under new national team manager Michel Platini, Fernández would play the role of a late joker, with the job to clinch a result at the end of the match. Fernández took part in the
Euro 1992, where France were eliminated in the group stage, and Fernández decided to end his international career. On the club level AS Cannes were relegated to
Ligue 2 at the end of the 1991-1992 season, but Fernández decided to remain with the club and end his career when his contract ran out. But Fernández wasn't allowed a slow retirement, when after a few weeks, AS Cannes decided to entrust Luis Fernandez with the post of manager. Fernandez thus finished the season as a coach-player, and led Cannes back to Ligue 1 at the end of the season, and definitively switched to the career as a manager.
Manager
After the promotion of AS Cannes to the Ligue 1, Luis Fernández continued his work at the club and qualified for the
UEFA Cup. He won the ''Best Trainer of Ligue 1'' award at the end of the season 1993-1994, on grounds of Fernández' alluring philosophy of offensive tactics with a use of young players. The profile of Fernández particularly interested Paris Saint-Germain. Despite winning the Ligue 1 championship and a good run in the
European Cup, PSG failed to play attractive football, partly because of the
Portuguese trainer
Artur Jorge, who applied a more rigid strategic system. The board of PSG saw in Fernandez the ideal manager to reform the image of the club.
The first season of Luis Fernández in Paris Saint-Germain was a success. Even though PSG was quickly outpaced in the Ligue 1 championship race by an irresistible
FC Nantes side, PSG managed to win the two national Cups, the
Coupe de France and
Coupe de la Ligue, as well as an impressive showing in the
UEFA Champions League concluded by elimination in the semi-finals by
AC Milan. The strongest displays by Fernandez and the PSG team being the quarterfinal win, over two matches, against the great
FC Barcelona side of
Johan Cruyff. The second season at PSG, saw the beginning of the end for Fernandez. Beaten to the title once more in Ligue 1, PSG found the European competitions to be a breath of fresh-air, and they won the
European Cup Winners Cup after victory in the final against
Rapid Vienna, making Fernandez the first French manager to win a major european trophy. This prestigious victory was not sufficient to keep Fernandez in the PSG hotseat however, following the missed championship, Fernandez left Paris Saint-Germain at the end of the 1995-1996 season.
Fernández was then contacted by Athletic Bilbao from the Spanish
La Liga, a club Fernández managed to qualify for the Champions League, and where he would spend four seasons.
In 2000, Fernández returned to France and in December that year he once more took the seat at PSG, replacing
Philippe Bergeroo. Even though he was in charge of a team of such stars as
Jay-Jay Okocha,
Nicolas Anelka and especially
Ronaldinho, Fernández never got the results to satisfy the ambitions of the club. In spite of the support of the fans with whom his popularity always remained very strong, Luis Fernández was fired at the end of the 2002-2003 season, after two and half years.
Six months later, Luis was in Spain, brought into the
RCD Espanyol team in December 2003 to save them from near certain relegation, and at the end of the season Fernández had succeeded in keeping the club in the Spanish top flight. After one year of inactivity, Luis Fernandez took a more low-profile job in June 2005 as the manager of
Al Rayyan Sports Club in
Qatar, a club which he decided to leave in November 2005 in order to join the
Israeli club
Beitar Jerusalem as a general manager as well as trainer.
2005-06 With Beitar
Beitar Jerusalem's owner, the famous
Arcadi Gaydamak, expected much of the manager, whom he chose after a long search for a foreign manager who would raise the club's profile and attract more fans. Fernández's position was complicated by the factor that he was brought into the club to work with the previous manager, the controversial
Dutchman Ton Kaanen. To Fernández Kaanen was little more than an amateur who struck gold by conning Gaydamak into giving him the job of manager. The relationship between them rapidly transformed into enmity, and Kaanen incited fans' support for him against Fernández through media reports that he leaked. Gaydamak then responded by sacking Kaanen and giving him smaller responsibilities, causing Kaanen to jump ship to
Maccabi Tel-Aviv and working as their manager until the end of the season. The rivalry between the two became a media circus: Though Beitar's record at the end of the season placed them in third place and earned them a place in the
UEFA Cup, Kaanen and Maccabi defeated them twice, and Fernández lost a variety of games to clubs that were rated far lower than Beitar, such as
SC Ashdod or
Hapoel Kfar Saba (the latter managed by
Eli Ohana, the Beitar icon who had been fired as manager earlier in the season before being replaced by Kaanen). Nevertheless, by the end of the season the Frenchman had developed his own following among Beitar's huge fan base. At the end of the 2005/2006 football season, Luis left
Beitar Jerusalem after he got into a conflict with the club's fans.
Real Betis Balompié
Luis Fernandez joined
Real Betis half way through the 2006/2007
La Liga season and Betis's
centenary season. Fernandez was released on
June 10,
2007 following a 5-0 loss at the
Estadio Manuel Ruiz de Lopera to
CA Osasuna, with just one game remaining in
Betis's relegation threatened season. Including
cup games, Luiz Fernandez competed as
Real Betis manager in 26 games - winning 5, drawing 16, and losing 7.
Honours
'Player'
★ ''Winner''
★
★
Coupe de France: 1982 and 1983, with
PSG.
★
★
Euro 1984, with the French national team.
★
★
Artemio Franchi Trophy: 1985, with the French national team.
★
★ French
Ligue 1: 1986, with PSG.
★ ''Runner-up''
★
★
Coupe de France: 1985, with PSG.
'Manager'
★ ''Winner''
★
★
Coupe de France: 1995, with PSG.
★
★
Coupe de la Ligue: 1995, with PSG.
★
★
Cup Winners' Cup: 1996, with PSG.
★
★
Trophée des Champions: 1996, with PSG.
★
★
UEFA Intertoto Cup: 2001, with PSG.
★ ''Runner-up''
★
★ French
Ligue 1: 1996, with PSG.
★
★ Spanish
La Liga: 1998, with
Athletic Bilbao.