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Barcelona. Women's football. Primera División. Atlético Madrid. Copa de la Reina. Real Sociedad. ← 2017–18. 2019–20 →. The 2018–19 season was the 117th season of competitive association football in Spain.
- 2018–19
- Osasuna
2018–19 Spain: Ernesto Valverde (2) Barcelona: 2019–20 France: Zinedine Zidane (2) Real Madrid: 2020–21 Argentina: Diego Simeone (2) Atlético Madrid: 2021–22 Italy: Carlo Ancelotti: Real Madrid: 2022–23 Spain: Xavi : Barcelona: 2023–24 Italy: Carlo Ancelotti (2) Real Madrid
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The 2018–19 La Liga season, also known as LaLiga Santander for sponsorship reasons, [2] was the 88th since its establishment. The season began on 17 August 2018 and finished on 19 May 2019. [3] Fixtures for the 2018–19 season were announced on 24 July 2018. [4] This was the first La Liga season to use the VAR.
ManagerNationDate Of BirthClub17 September 197811 January 197823 November 19851 June 1980Premier League 16 October 2018: 5 years, 218 days Mikel Arteta Spain: 26 March 1982: Arsenal: Premier League 22 December 2019: 4 years, 151 days Ian Evatt England: 19 November 1981: Bolton Wanderers: League One 1 July 2020: 3 years, 325 days Nigel Clough England: 19 March 1966: Mansfield Town: League Two 6 November 2020: 3 years, 197 days Jon Brady
ManagerNationDate Of BirthClub17 September 197811 January 197823 November 19851 June 1980Deportivo Alavés at UEFA Europa League; List of coaches; List of players; Futbolme team profile (in English and Spanish) Club profile at BDfutbol (match reports in each season) Deportivo Alavés at YouTube; Deportivo Alavés on Instagram; Deportivo Alavés on Twitter; Club history at El Correo (in Spanish) Glorioso, unofficial website (in ...
Stats for football managers from the Premier League, Championship, La Liga, and many more leagues. 18,000+ football coaches are covered by FootyStats. World's most in-depth Football Stats / Soccer Stats site.
5. Luis Aragonés. Tiki-taka was a celebrated term given to the style of play adopted by the Spanish national team as they won consecutive European Championships in 2008 and 2012, and the World Cup in 2010. The man behind the first victory, and the implementation of the style, was Luis Aragonés.