Cristóbal Parralo

(Redirected from Cristobal Parralo)

Cristóbal Parralo Aguilera (born 21 August 1967), known simply as Cristóbal as a player, is a Spanish retired professional footballer, currently manager of Racing de Ferrol.

Cristóbal
Personal information
Full nameCristóbal Parralo Aguilera
Date of birth (1967-08-21) 21 August 1967 (age 56)
Place of birthPriego de Córdoba, Spain
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s)Right-back
Team information
Current team
Racing Ferrol (manager)
Youth career
Damm
Barcelona
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1986–1987Barcelona B41(0)
1987–1989Barcelona20(2)
1988–1989Oviedo (loan)28(3)
1989–1991Logroñés72(5)
1991–1992Barcelona11(0)
1992–1995Oviedo109(2)
1995–2001Espanyol214(2)
2001–2003Paris Saint-Germain63(0)
Total558(14)
International career
1985–1986Spain U185(0)
1985–1990Spain U218(0)
1991–1993Spain6(1)
Managerial career
2008Benfica (assistant)
2009Peña Deportiva
2009Girona
2012–2016Damm (youth)
2016–2017Deportivo B
2017–2018Deportivo La Coruña
2018–2019Alcorcón
2019–2020Racing Santander
2021–Racing Ferrol
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He played mainly as a right-back, but could also appear as a central defender.

Playing career

Club

A product of FC Barcelona's youth ranks, Cristóbal was born in Priego de Córdoba, Andalusia, and he made his professional debut in 1987–88, being regularly used as the Catalans lifted that season's Copa del Rey. Subsequently, he represented Real Oviedo and CD Logroñés, where solid displays earned him a return to the Camp Nou.[1]

Cristóbal was scarcely played in his second stint, and returned to Oviedo: in the subsequent nine campaigns (three plus six at Barça neighbours RCD Espanyol) he rarely missed a game, and left Spain in 2001 with 454 La Liga appearances to his credit.[2][3] Aged 34, he still moved to Paris Saint-Germain FC, having two respectable Ligue 1 seasons before retiring at the end of 2002–03.[1]

International

Cristóbal earned six caps for Spain, the first in a friendly in Oviedo with Uruguay on 4 September 1991.[4]

International goals

#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.24 February 1993Benito Villamarín, Seville, Spain  Lithuania1–05–01994 World Cup qualification[5]

Coaching career

After a brief spell with former club Espanyol as director of football,[6] Parralo joined countryman Quique Sánchez Flores at S.L. Benfica's coaching staff, for 2008–09. In early February 2009 he returned to his country and signed with lowly SCR Peña Deportiva in the Segunda División B,[7] being one of two managers in a relegation-ending season.[8]

Parralo signed a one-year contract with Segunda División club Girona FC in June 2009.[9] He was sacked on 26 October, with the team ranking penultimate with just seven points in nine matches.[10]

On 24 October 2017, after Deportivo de La Coruña first-team manager Pepe Mel was fired due to poor results, Parralo moved from the reserve side and was appointed caretaker until the following 30 June.[11] After only three months in charge, and after conceding 14 goals in the last three matches (which included 7–1 and 5–0 away drubbings against Real Madrid and Real Sociedad, respectively), he was relieved of his duties.[12]

On 19 June 2018, Parralo was named coach of second division side AD Alcorcón.[13] He extended his contract in October to last until the end of the 2019–20 campaign, but was ousted a year early when Fran Fernández was named in his place.[14]

Parralo returned to the same league on 11 November 2019, replacing Iván Ania at a Racing de Santander side that had won one of 15 matches all season.[15] He left by mutual consent the following 4 February, having won once in 11 games for the last-placed team.[16]

On 10 February 2021, Parralo replaced the dismissed Emilio Larraz at the helm of third-tier Racing de Ferrol.[17]

Managerial statistics

As of match played 19 May 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamNatFromToRecordRef
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Peña Deportiva 11 February 200925 June 2009143381222−10021.43[18]
Girona 25 June 200926 October 2009112451017−7018.18[19]
Deportivo B 27 June 201624 October 20175034889836+62068.00[20]
Deportivo La Coruña 24 October 20174 February 2018153391839−21020.00[21]
Alcorcón 19 June 20181 July 2019441510193743−6034.09[22]
Racing Santander 11 November 20194 February 2020121651014−4008.33[23]
Racing Ferrol 10 February 2021Present136683434176121+55050.00[24]
Career total2821266888361292+69044.68

Honours

Player

Barcelona

Espanyol

Paris Saint-Germain

See also

References

External links