Who should be Barça's next coach after Lucho?

Who should be Barça's next coach after Lucho?

  • Lucho should stay

    Votes: 8 5.2%
  • Unzue

    Votes: 1 0.6%
  • Eusebio

    Votes: 2 1.3%
  • Koeman

    Votes: 9 5.8%
  • Valverde

    Votes: 6 3.9%
  • Sampaoli

    Votes: 112 72.3%
  • Other(who?)

    Votes: 17 11.0%

  • Total voters
    155
Status
Not open for further replies.

Messi983

Senior Member
Who knows. We thought Lucho would give La Masia kids a chance and he even started to, but it didn't last very long and now the thought of Lucho giving a La Masia player a chance is laughable.

Well, Lucho did give a chance to kids (khm Gumbau khm), mostly just not the ones people wanted. :lol:
 

N612

New member
Well Muniain could be a good back up. Him and delofeu off the bench could shake up any sow pace game... Laporte? and this is from bilbao... as for other team i do not have any names in mind...

All i care about is having 2 more solid defenders and a midfielder that can open up games...
 

Raketa10

Senior Member
I am just wondering how the hell did Valverde earn to be No.1 candidate for Barca manager? We will again end up with an average manager, it's just pathetic...
 

gatsu

New member
Valverde is a good choice. He largely proved that he is a good tactician.

Under those circonstances(sampaoli being impossible) i dont see anyone better when I count other options.
 

behindbrowneyes

Well-known member
Has anyone a good read about Valverde as a coach? Tactics, how he could help us and so on.

That's all I've found so far:
skysports:
Could Ernesto Valverde be the right man to replace Luis Enrique at Barcelona? Making the case for the Athletic Bilbao coach...

Jorge Sampaoli of Sevilla is perhaps the coach who has the ideal style to replace Luis Enrique and he enjoys a very good relationship with Barcelona's famous front three.

But, does he have the profile the club is looking for?

They are looking for someone who knows the club and ideally a former player. Someone who is diplomatic, who defends good offensive football and who has shown he knows how to use all the weapons at his disposal. Someone who is strong enough to start the recycling of an ageing squad, especially the key players.

And that sounds like Athletic Bilbao coach Ernesto Valverde.

The 53-year-old is steeped in the Barcelona tradition having played two seasons for the club - he was part of the squad that won the European Cup Winners' Cup and the Copa del Rey.

Most importantly, he played under Johan Cruyff, the most important figure in the club's history and the man who helped to shape what we now know as Barcelona's identity.

As well as Gary Lineker, Valverde was also a team-mate of Ronald Koeman and Michael Laudrup in that Barcelona side. A certain Pep Guardiola was in the youth team.

Valverde played alongside one-time Barcelona sporting director Txiki Begiristain and the former Barca B coach Eusebio who is now doing so well at Real Sociedad too.

Every player who got to work under Cruyff tells a similar story - it is an experience that changes the way that they thought about the game.

Eusebio, Albert Ferrer, Sergi, Unzue, Lopetegui... they have all learnt from the Dutch master, they all learnt to think differently. Valverde comes from that culture.

But he also has the Basque influence on his career thanks to his long-time association with Athletic Bilbao - he spent six years there as a player and is now in his second spell as coach.

As a result, he has a wide variety of experiences. Not just with Athletic but also with Espanyol, Villarreal, Valencia and even abroad with Olympiakos.

It was in Greece that Valverde showed that his teams could play a more dominant style of football - an attacking, possession game at a club that is expected to win every week.

He delivered three titles at Olympiacos over two spells. As his successor and compatriot Michel once put it: "Ernesto is a god here."

But he is a popular man in Bilbao too. It was there that he memorably won the 2015 Super Cup thanks in part to a 4-0 win over, yes, Luis Enrique's Barcelona.

That victory showed the fortress that San Mames could become under Valverde. This season, with nine wins and one loss, they even have a better home record than Barcelona.

Valverde's Athletic can play that intense, pressing game. He has inherited and built on the fine work that Marcelo Bielsa did in Bilbao, but he has also added to it as well.

Valverde has the lightness of touch that the Argentine lacked. He has a relaxed side to him and that really allows players to express themselves.

But this former forward is also a great defensive coach.

He showed that at Espanyol, where he took the team to the UEFA Cup final in 2007. In fact, he has a proven track record of significantly improving the defensive organisation of his teams.

At Olympiakos, he took over a team that had conceded 27 goals in the previous season and won the league by conceding only 14 goals in his first year there.

At Athletic, a team that had conceded 65 goals in La Liga under Bielsa, let in only 39 under Valverde - going from 12th to fourth in the process.

A Barcelona defence that needs a bit of help could certainly benefit from that.

Anything else? Well, Valverde also has a life away from football - a useful quality given the scrutiny at Barcelona. He is also an acclaimed photographer.

The writer Bernardo Atxaga once said: "The photographs of Ernesto Valverde are at the same time delicate and hard, as made by two different hands."

In a sense, that is true of Valverde's coaching style too. He is a child of Bilbao and of Cruyff. He understands the culture at Athletic and at Barcelona.

So there is more to him than meets the eye. Sampaoli might be the popular choice, but it is Valverde who actually ticks the most boxes.

He has the history, the diplomacy skills, the ability to handle the media and the experience required. It is that overall picture that could lead Barcelona to turn to Ernesto Valverde.
http://www.skysports.com/football/n...o-barcelona-why-he-could-replace-luis-enrique
 

Cool

Senior Member
I honestly dont see the issue with Valvarde, his team despite being restricted to Bilbao born players has always been tough to face and I think his 4-2-3-1 suits Barca current squad.
 

Professor Chaos

New member
This is not a good choice. We need somebody from outside Barcelona like Sampaoli, Tuchel or Jardim with Barcelona "DNA" assistant. Another year wasted like Tata Martino's one is coming.
 

DonAK

President of FC Barcelona
Well, except the fact that Valverde has far more experience, better resume than Tuchel, Tata and even Lucho. Showed himself to be better and more balanced tactically.

Even led Asspanyol to an UEFA CUP final

Give him a chance.

Was never my first choice, but people don't know what they're talking about when they say he's a mediocre or a pathetic coach.
 
Last edited:

El Barcelona

Active member
I'm curious about his tactics and hope that Robert don't fucked up and give him the players that he wants. Unless it's Douglas quality :lol:
 

xXKonan

Senior Member
Well, except the fact that Valverde has far more experience, better resume than Tuchel, Tata and even Lucho. Showed himself to be better and more balanced tactically.

Even led Asspanyol to an UEFA CUP final

Give him a chance.

Was never my first choice, but people don't know what they're talking about when they say he's a mediocre or a pathetic coach.
Barca Twitter is a mess right now in regards to Valverde. a lot of cules on there are losing their minds thinking he's one of the worst managers out there. :lol:
 

KingMessi

SiempreBlaugrana
I wonder what they thought of Lucho and Tata then.

Valverde made Bilbao a formidable side despite their Basque only policy. I'm excited to see what he can do here.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Home of Barca Fans

Top