Diego Martínez (Spanish footballer, born 1980)

Diego Martínez Penas (born 16 December 1980) is a Spanish professional football manager and former footballer. He most recently managed Greek Super League club Olympiacos.

Diego Martínez
Personal information
Full nameDiego Martínez Penas
Date of birth (1980-12-16) 16 December 1980 (age 43)
Place of birthVigo, Spain
Position(s)Full back
Youth career
1990–1999Celta
1999–2000Cádiz
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
Imperio Albolote
Managerial career
Imperio Albolote (youth)
2004–2005Arenas Armilla (youth)
2005–2006Arenas Armilla (assistant)
2006–2007Arenas Armilla
2007–2009Motril
2010–2011Sevilla C
2011–2012Sevilla (youth)
2012–2014Sevilla (assistant)
2014–2017Sevilla B
2017–2018Osasuna
2018–2021Granada
2022–2023Espanyol
2023Olympiacos
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

After starting his career in the lower divisions, he held several jobs at Sevilla, including as assistant and reserve team manager. He later managed Osasuna, Granada and Espanyol, achieving promotion to La Liga with the second club.

Playing career

Born in Vigo, Pontevedra, Galicia, Martínez was a full back capable of playing on either side.[1] He spent his youth career at Celta and Cádiz, representing the former for nine years.[2]

Managerial career

Early career

Martínez retired from professional football at the age of 20,[3] and started his coaching career with Imperio de Albolote's youth categories, while also playing for their first team.[4] During this time he also studied for a degree.[3] In 2004, he moved to Arenas, being initially in charge of the youth setup.[5]

An assistant manager in the 2005–06 campaign, Martínez was appointed manager of the first team in July 2006, in Tercera División. The following year he was named Motril manager, and remained in charge for two years.[6]

Sevilla

In October 2009 Martínez moved to Sevilla, immediately joining the backroom staff.[7] He was in charge of the club's C-team the following season, and subsequently managed the Juvenil squad.[2]

On 22 May 2012, Martínez was named assistant at the first team, replacing Javi Navarro.[8] On 13 June 2014, he was appointed at the helm of the reserves in Segunda División B,[9] and managed to achieve promotion to Segunda División in 2016.[10]

After avoiding relegation with the reserve side, Martínez opted not to renew his contract, and was appointed in charge of Osasuna on 14 June 2017.[11] The following 7 June, he left the club after failing to qualify for the play-offs.[12]

Granada

On 14 June 2018, Martínez was named Granada manager,[13] and achieved promotion to La Liga at the end of the season. The youngest manager of the 2019–20 campaign, his side enjoyed their best-ever league start after achieving 20 points in ten matches, bringing the Nazaríes to the top of the tournament for two weeks.[14] As a result, he was rewarded with a one-year contract extension through 2021 on 14 November 2019.[15]

Martínez was awarded with the Miguel Muñoz Trophy (shared with José Bordalás) by Marca on 16 December 2019, for his efforts in the previous campaign.[16] With a seventh-place finish in his debut top-flight campaign, he qualified the team for the first time to the UEFA Europa League.[17] In that campaign, they reached the quarter-finals before being eliminated by Manchester United.[18]

On 27 May 2021, Martínez chose to allow his contract to expire.[19] He then spent a season in England, watching football matches and learning from coaches including Pep Guardiola, Rafael Benítez, Frank Lampard and Xisco Muñoz.[3]

Espanyol

On 31 May 2022, Martínez was named manager of Espanyol also in the top tier, on a two-year contract.[20] The following 3 April, after four consecutive defeats, he left the club.[21]

Olympiacos

On 20 June 2023, Martínez was appointed as head coach of Super League Greece club Olympiacos.[22] On 5 December 2023, with the club sitting fourth in the league table and eliminated from the UEFA Europa League, Martínez was sacked.[23]

Managerial statistics

As of match played 3 December 2023
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamNatFromToRecordRef
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Arenas Armilla 1 July 200630 June 200738206125626+30052.63[24]
Motril 1 July 200730 June 200980392021134103+31048.75[25]
Sevilla C 1 July 201030 June 2011381215114240+2031.58[26]
Sevilla B 13 June 201414 June 2017124434734146124+22034.68[27]
Osasuna 14 June 20177 June 2018441716114737+10038.64[28]
Granada 14 June 201827 May 2021146693047202167+35047.26[29]
Espanyol 31 May 20223 April 20233199134046−6029.03[30]
Olympiacos 20 June 20235 December 20232113444723+24061.90[31]
Total522222147153714566+148042.53

Honours

Manager

Individual

References