José María Maguregui























































































José María Maguregui
Personal information
Full name
José María Maguregui Ibarguchi
Date of birth
(1934-03-16)16 March 1934
Place of birth
Miraballes, Spain
Date of death
30 December 2013(2013-12-30) (aged 79)
Place of death
Bilbao, Spain
Height
1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Playing position
Midfielder
Youth career

Villosa
1951–1952
Athletic Bilbao
Senior career*
Years
Team

Apps

(Gls)
1952–1961
Athletic Bilbao

198

(36)
1952
→ Getxo (loan)


1961–1963
Sevilla

19

(0)
1963–1964
Español

14

(3)
1964–1965
Recreativo

8

(3)
Total

239

(42)
National team
1952
Spain U18

2

(0)
1955
Spain B

1

(1)
1955–1957
Spain

7

(1)
Teams managed
1967–1969
Miravalles
1969–1972
Sestao
1972–1977
Racing Santander
1977–1978
Celta
1978–1980
Almería
1980–1983
Español
1983–1987
Racing Santander
1987–1988
Celta
1988
Atlético Madrid
1988–1989
Murcia
1990–1991
Celta
1992–1993
Poli Almería

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

José María Maguregui Ibarguchi (16 March 1934 – 30 December 2013) was a Spanish football midfielder and coach.




Contents





  • 1 Playing career

    • 1.1 International goals



  • 2 Coaching career


  • 3 Death


  • 4 Honours

    • 4.1 Player


    • 4.2 Manager



  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




Playing career


Born in Ugao-Miraballes, Biscay, Maguregui made his professional debuts in 1952 at the age of 18, with Basque Country giants Athletic Bilbao. After a poor first season in La Liga – 12 games, no goals – he became a very important first-team unit, helping them to the 1956 national championship and three Copa del Rey trophies in four years.[1]


In 1963, after amassing official totals of and 235 matches and 42 goals, 29-year-old Maguregui left Athletic, retiring after spells with Sevilla FC (two years), RCD Español and Recreativo de Huelva. He earned seven caps for Spain in slightly less than two years, scoring in his debut on 19 June 1955, a 3–0 friendly win in Switzerland.[2]



International goals


















#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.19 June 1955
Charmilles, Geneva, Switzerland
  Switzerland0–3
0–3
Friendly[2]


Coaching career


After managing his hometown club in amateur football, Maguregui moved to Sestao Sport, also in his native region. In 1972 he was appointed at Racing de Santander, achieving two top flight promotions with the Cantabrians and remaining five years with the team.[3]


Maguregui then managed to lead two more teams to division one promotions, Celta de Vigo in 1978[4] and lowly AD Almería in 1979,[5] overachieving with the latter in the following season (ninth-place finish),[6] which prompted his signing with a club he had represented as a player, Español.[7]


After three average seasons in Catalonia, ranking between positions 9–13,[8] Maguregui returned to Racing, helping it to top flight promotion in his first year and going on to remain with the club a total of nine years, being the manager with more games at its service.[3] He worked with Celta in the 1987–88 season, also in the first division, being dismissed in round 30 due to the surmounting pressure after his agreement with Atlético Madrid for the following campaign.[9]


Maguregui was fired by the Colchoneros in early October 1988 in spite of two consecutive home wins, 3–0 against Cádiz CF for the league and 2–1 over FC Groningen in the UEFA Cup (away goals rule elimination), being one of four coaches used by the club during the season (elusive Jesús Gil was the chairman) which saw the team finish in fourth place.[10] He concluded the campaign with fellow league club Real Murcia,[11] which suffered relegation.[12]


Maguregui's last job at the professional level was with Celta, with the coach arriving in Galicia late into 1989–90 – which ended in top flight relegation – and leaving 18 games into the following season.[4]



Death


Maguregui died on 30 December 2013 at the age of 79 in Bilbao, after a long battle with illness. In his last public appearance, in June, he attended the inauguration of the new San Mamés.[1][13]



Honours



Player


Athletic Bilbao

  • La Liga: 1955–56


  • Copa del Generalísimo: 1955, 1956, 1958[1]

Spain U18

  • UEFA European Under-18 Championship: 1952[14]


Manager


Almería

  • Segunda División: 1978–79[15]


References




  1. ^ abc Fallece Maguregui, exjugador y exentrenador del Athletic (Maguregui, former Athletic player and manager, dies); Marca, 30 December 2013 (in Spanish)


  2. ^ ab Suiza, 0 – España, 3 (Switzerland, 0 – Spain, 3); Mundo Deportivo, 20 June 1955 (in Spanish)


  3. ^ ab Maguregui y Aitor Aguirre, ex racinguistas con el corazón dividido (Maguregui and Aitor Aguirre, former racinguistas with torn heart); El Diario Montañés, 24 January 2008 (in Spanish)


  4. ^ ab José María Maguregui; Yo Entrené al Celta, 2 December 2010 (in Spanish)


  5. ^ "Maguregui ha sido lo más grande que ha tenido el fútbol de Almería" ("Maguregui was the greatest thing that ever happened to football in Almería") Archived 1 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine.; La Voz de Almería, 30 December 2013 (in Spanish)


  6. ^ Maguregui: "Debimos aprovechar la ausencia de Migueli" (Maguregui: "We should have taken advantage of Migueli's absence"); Mundo Deportivo, 19 May 1980 (in Spanish)


  7. ^ Contactos a "go-go" (Contacts a "go-go"); Mundo Deportivo, 19 July 1980 (in Spanish)


  8. ^ Cuando el telón ha caído (When the curtain calls); Mundo Deportivo, 11 June 1983 (in Spanish)


  9. ^ Gil echa a Ufarte del Atlético de Madrid por no aceptar las decisiones de Maguregui (Gil sacks Ufarte from Atlético de Madrid for not complying with Maguregui's decisions); El País, 13 April 1988 (in Spanish)


  10. ^ Maguregui presentó la dimisión (Maguregui presented resignation); Mundo Deportivo, 7 October 1988 (in Spanish)


  11. ^ El Murcia cesa a Dunai y le sustituye Maguregui (Murcia fires Dunai and replaces him with Maguregui); Mundo Deportivo, 26 October 1988 (in Spanish)


  12. ^ El Zaragoza vence, y Maguregui, destituido (Zaragoza wins, and Maguregui, fired); Mundo Deportivo, 17 April 1989 (in Spanish)


  13. ^ Gracias, viejo (Thanks, old man); El País, 5 June 2013 (in Spanish)


  14. ^ La Cantera del Talento, cuarenta programas descubriendo a los más jóvenes (La Cantera del Talento, forty shows spotting the youngest); Royal Spanish Football Federation, 25 December 2011 (in Spanish)


  15. ^ 3–0: El Almería, campeón con todos los honores (3–0: Almería, champion with full honours); Mundo Deportivo, 11 June 1979 (in Spanish)



External links



  • José María Maguregui at BDFutbol


  • José María Maguregui manager profile at BDFutbol


  • José María Maguregui at Athletic Bilbao


  • José María Maguregui at National-Football-Teams.com


  • José María Maguregui – FIFA competition record (archive)

  • Spain stats at Eu-Football








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