José Ramón Sandoval

José Ramón Sandoval Huertas (born 2 May 1968) is a Spanish football manager.

José Ramón Sandoval
Sandoval as Rayo Vallecano manager in 2011
Personal information
Full nameJosé Ramón Sandoval Huertas
Date of birth (1968-05-02) 2 May 1968 (age 56)
Place of birthMadrid, Spain
Position(s)Forward
Youth career
YearsTeam
Real Madrid
Humanes
Ciempozuelos
Managerial career
1996–1999Humanes
1999–2001Parla
2001–2003Humanes
2003–2004Atlético Pinto
2006–2007Getafe B
2007–2010Rayo Vallecano B
2010–2012Rayo Vallecano
2012–2014Sporting Gijón
2015–2016Granada
2016Rayo Vallecano
2018Córdoba
2018Córdoba
2020–2021Fuenlabrada
2022Fuenlabrada
2024Granada

Career

Early career

Madrid-born Sandoval played in the youth sides of Real Madrid for a short period, but had to join CD Humanes as his parents could not take him to trainings.[1] He later represented CD Ciempozuelos, but had to retire at the age of 18 due to a knee injury.[1]

After retiring, Sandoval worked as a cook in his family business while studying to become a manager,[2] and later moved to another family business while coaching his former side Humanes.[1] He subsequently led AD Parla to a promotion to Tercera División before returning to Humanes in 2001.

In the 2003–04 season, Sandoval was in charge of CA Pinto in the fourth tier, and qualified the club to the play-offs for the first time in their history.[3] He was signed by the Madrid Football Federation shortly after, being named manager of the Madrid amateur team and leading the side in the Spanish stage of the UEFA Regions' Cup in 2005.[4]

Sandoval took over Getafe CF B in 2006,[5] and led the side to the play-offs before departing after having discrepancies with the president.[1] He joined Rayo Vallecano B in December 2007, taking the club to runner-up honours in the Copa Federación de España the following year[6] and achieving promotion to Segunda División B for the first time in its history in 2010.[7]

Rayo Vallecano

For the 2010–11 season, Sandoval was appointed manager of the first team in Segunda División.[8] He helped them return to La Liga after an absence of eight years, and was awarded the Miguel Muñoz Trophy as best manager in the category in the process.[9]

On 25 May 2012, despite managing to narrowly avoid relegation with Rayo in the last round, Sandoval left the club as his contract was not renewed.[10]

Sporting Gijón

Sandoval returned to the second division on 18 October 2012 after being appointed at Sporting de Gijón, replacing fired Manolo Sánchez.[11] He was sacked on 4 May 2014, with the team in seventh position.[12]

Granada

On 1 May 2015, Sandoval took charge of Granada CF until the end of the campaign.[13] He managed to collect ten points in only four games, helping the side finally avoid relegation as 17th.[14]

On 22 February 2016, Sandoval was dismissed after losing 1–2 at home to Valencia the day before, and was replaced by José González.[15][16]

Córdoba

On 13 February 2018, after more than a year without a club, Sandoval was appointed manager of Córdoba CF.[17] Having managed to avoid relegation, he left the club on 12 June, as his contract expired.[18]

On 3 August 2018, however, Sandoval replaced departing Francisco at the helm of the very same club.[19] He left the Estadio Nuevo Arcángel on 18 November, this time as the board's decision following a 3–1 home loss to Andalusian neighbours Cádiz CF.[20]

Fuenlabrada

On 11 March 2020, following another lengthy period of inactivity, Sandoval took over for the fired Mere at second-tier newcomers CF Fuenlabrada.[21] On 2 February 2021, he was relieved of his duties.[22]

Sandoval returned to Fuenla on 7 March 2022, replacing the dismissed Sergio Pellicer.[23] Unable to avoid relegation from the second division, he left after the season ended.[24]

Granada return

On 19 March 2024, after almost two years without a club, Sandoval returned to Granada for a second spell, becoming their third manager of the campaign after Paco López and Alexander Medina.[25][26] He left the club on 26 May, after failing to avoid relegation.[27]

Managerial statistics

As of match played 24 May 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamNatFromToRecordRef
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Humanes 30 June 19961 July 1999102482133187148+39047.06[28]
Parla 1 July 199930 June 20017243121714076+64059.72[29]
Humanes 30 June 20011 July 200368311720140118+22045.59[30]
Atlético Pinto 1 July 200330 June 200440191297236+36047.50[31]
Getafe B 1 July 20061 July 200742207155643+13047.62[32]
Rayo Vallecano B 1 July 200720 June 201013260462617798+79045.45[33]
Rayo Vallecano 20 June 201022 June 201284381432136130+6045.24[34]
Sporting Gijón 18 October 20124 May 20147327232310991+18036.99[35]
Granada 1 May 201522 February 20163396183561−26027.27[36]
Rayo Vallecano 27 June 20166 November 2016155461818+0033.33[37]
Córdoba 13 February 201812 June 20181610242716+11062.50[38]
Córdoba 3 August 201818 November 2018174582333−10023.53[39]
Fuenlabrada 11 March 20202 February 202137131684234+8035.14[40]
Fuenlabrada 7 March 202228 May 2022122191527−12016.67[41]
Granada 19 March 202426 May 202410217821−13020.00[42]
Total7533311872351,185950+235043.96

References

External links