José Ramón Sandoval
José Ramón Sandoval | ||
Sandoval as coach of Rayo Vallecano
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Personnel | ||
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Surname | José Ramón Sandoval Huertas | |
birthday | May 2nd, 1968 | |
place of birth | Madrid , Spain | |
size | 178 cm | |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1996-1999 | CD Humanes | |
1999-2001 | AD Parla | |
2001-2003 | CD Humanes | |
2003-2004 | CA Pinto | |
2006-2007 | Getafe CF B | |
2007-2010 | Rayo Vallecano B | |
2010–2012 | Rayo Vallecano | |
2012-2014 | Sporting Gijón | |
2015-2016 | Granada CF. | |
2016 | Rayo Vallecano | |
2018 | Cordoba FC | |
2018 | Cordoba FC | |
2020– | CF Fuenlabrada |
José Ramón Sandoval Huertas (born May 2, 1968 in Madrid ) is a Spanish football coach. As a player, he worked his way up through various amateur clubs up to the Primera División , where he was last coach of Granada CF from May 2015 to February 2016 . Sandoval previously worked at Rayo Vallecano and Sporting Gijón .
Career
José Ramón Sandoval was born on May 2, 1968 in the Spanish capital, Madrid . While he did not appear as a football player, he started his career as a coach in 1996 with the amateur club CD Humanes . He worked there for three years until 1999 before moving to AD Parla . With the fifth division Sandoval rose in the 1999/2000 season in the Tercera División , where seventh place succeeded in safe relegation. In 2001 he returned to Humanes, where he was under contract for another two years until 2003. From 2003 to 2004, José Ramón Sandoval coached the team of CA Pinto in the Tercera División for a year and was with this third of his season.
After working for the Madrid city selection team, José Ramón Sandoval became the coach of Getafe FC's second team in 2006 . In the Tercera División they ended the season in second place of season seven, but failed in the promotion playoffs at FC Andorra . Then the collaboration with coach José Ramón Sandoval was ended after only one year. He was then responsible for the second team of the Madrid-based club Rayo Vallecano from 2007 to 2010 . With Rayo B he played all three seasons in the Tercera División. After jumping out thirteen and five in the first two years, the team was ranked first in season seven in the 2009/10 season. After a success over CE l'Hospitalet , the first promotion of the second team from Rayo Vallecano to the Segunda División B succeeded a little later .
In the summer of 2010, José Ramón Sandoval rose within the club and was the new coach of the first team of Rayo Vallecano in the Segunda División . In his first season as a coach, he led the team to second place in the second Spanish football league, only behind Betis Sevilla . This entitled to promotion to the Primera División , for the first time since relegation from this league in 2003. In addition, Sandoval was awarded the Miguel Muñoz Trophy as the best coach of the Segunda División in the 2010/11 season. After the promotion, however, Rayo Vallecano found himself in the relegation battle and only managed to stay in the league with luck on the last day of the game, while Villarreal FC surprisingly had to go into the second division. Sandoval's contract was not extended and he was replaced by Paco Jémez as head coach of Rayo Vallecano.
In the same year, José Ramón Sandoval took over the coaching position at first division relegated Sporting Gijón , where he spent the following two years as head coach. After the direct resurgence as tenth of the Segunda División 2012/13 was clearly missed in the first year , they ranked fifth in the same league the following year. Sandoval was fired after the 37th matchday and replaced by Abelardo Fernández , who could not achieve the desired promotion, but failed in the promotion playoffs at UD Las Palmas .
After a few months without a job, José Ramón Sandoval took over the coaching position at Granada CF from Abel Resino towards the end of the Primera División 2014/15 . Sandoval led Granada, which was penultimate at the time, to relegation and ended the season in seventeenth place, which meant they could keep up through the better goal difference. This was followed by continued employment beyond the end of the season. After a 2-1 loss to Valencia CF , Sandoval was released on February 22, 2016 and replaced by José Manuel González López .
In the summer of 2016, José Ramón Sandoval returned to Rayo Vallecano, succeeding Paco Jémez. He was the successor of his own successor at the club that had just been relegated from the Primera División.
successes
- Promotion to the Primera División : 1 ×
- 2010/11 with Rayo Vallecano
- Miguel Muñoz Trophy : 1 ×
- 2010/11 as coach of Rayo Vallecano
Web links
- José Ramón Sandoval's professional coach on BDFutbol.com (Spanish)
- José Ramón Sandoval on goal.com (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Jose Ramon Sandoval and Granada CF part company , accessed April 18, 2016
- ↑ Jose Gonzalez replaces Jose Ramon Sandoval as Granada coach , accessed April 18, 2016
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Sandoval, José Ramón |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Sandoval Huertas, José Ramón (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | spanish soccer coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 2nd, 1968 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Madrid , Spain |