José Ramón Fuertes Roces (born 22 September 1943) is a Spanish former football player and manager.
A forward, he achieved La Liga totals of 155 games and 14 goals for Real Valladolid, Pontevedra and Valencia, winning the title with the last of those clubs in 1970–71.
As a manager, Fuertes worked mainly in the lower leagues, apart from a brief La Liga spell with Real Murcia and three clubs in the Segunda División.
Managerial career
editFuertes won promotion for Caudal from the Tercera División to the Segunda División B and also managed Logroñés before arriving at Tenerife. With the club from the Canary Islands, he won promotion to the Segunda División in 1982–83.[1] He was fired due to poor results in February 1984.[2]
In 1987–88, Fuertes won Alzira's first promotion to the second tier.[3] He began the following season at Recreativo de Huelva in the same competition, leaving in April 1989 for top-flight Real Murcia.[4]
Fuertes's debut as a La Liga manager on 31 April 1989 was a 2–1 defeat at his former club Real Valladolid, and he said after the game that the opponents must have visited Sanctuary of Fátima weekly to account for their luck.[5] He won once in nine games as the season ended in relegation, though that came in a 2–0 home victory over Barcelona on 25 May, a result that contributed to Real Madrid winning the title over Johan Cruyff's team.[6] He left the Estadio de La Condomina by mutual consent in October 1989, after a poor start to the new season. He waivered 2 million Spanish pesetas from his contract, thereby being paid out with 8 million.[7]
Fuertes returned in 1991 to Recreativo, back in the third division, as their fourth manager of the season. His team reached the playoff but were beaten to promotion by Real Madrid Castilla.[8]
From the mid-1990s, Fuertes changed career to a scout and technical advisor at Valencia. He signed fellow Mieres native Miguel Ángel Angulo from Sporting de Gijón youth on a free transfer, proposing a pay rise from 30,000 to 500,000 pesetas a month while the player's father was unemployed. He persuaded another Asturian, Juan Mata, to leave Real Madrid Castilla for Valencia, who sold him years later to Chelsea for €30 million.[3]
References
edit- ^ Felipe, José Antonio (7 December 2016). "El asturiano enamorado de Tenerife" [The Asturian in love with Tenerife]. Diario de Avisos (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ Labrador, A. (22 February 1984). "Fuertes, cesado del Tenerife" [Fuertes, fired from Tenerife]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ a b Alonso Sanjulián, Celso (25 November 2014). "Fuertes se los lleva al Valencia" [Fuertes brings them to Valencia]. La Nueva España (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ Montesinos, Antonio (22 April 1989). "Murcia: Fuertes, nuevo entrenador" [Murcia: Fuertes, new manager]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ Roma, Fernando (1 May 1989). "La suerte se alió con los Pucelanos" [Luck aligned with the Pucelanos]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ "Fuertes". Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). 26 May 1989. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ Abellán, Benjamín (25 October 1989). "Fin a "la era Fuertes"" [End of "the Fuertes era"]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ "Un gran equipo del Recre se queda en las puertas del regreso a la Segunda División en 1991" [A great Recre team stayed at the gates of return to the Segunda División in 1991] (in Spanish). Huelva Buenas Noticias. 7 May 2020. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
External links
edit- José Ramón Fuertes at BDFutbol
- José Ramón Fuertes manager profile at BDFutbol
- José Ramón Fuertes at CiberChe