Guernsey Press

How British bosses have fared in Spain four years on from Gary Neville’s sacking

Neville was the latest in a number of British managers to try their hands at management in Spain.

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It is four years since Gary Neville was sacked as manager of Valencia.

Neville was the latest in a number of British managers to try their hands at management in Spain.

Here, the PA news agency looks at some of the other managerial hits and misses to leave these shores for Spain.

David Moyes

The West Ham manager took over at Real Sociedad in November 2014 looking to rebuild a reputation which blossomed at Everton but collapsed so spectacularly during his ill-fated nine-and-a-half-month reign at Manchester United. After a bright start at the Anoeta Stadium, Moyes soon became a target for fans of the Basque outfit and was sacked a day short of his one-year anniversary on November 9.

Chris Coleman

Chris Coleman went to Spain early in his managerial career
Chris Coleman went to Spain early in his managerial career (Yui Mok/PA)

Sir Bobby Robson

Successful spells at PSV Eindhoven and Porto gave Robson reason to believe he could shine in Spain, and so it proved as he won the Copa del Rey, Spanish Super Cup and European Cup Winners’ Cup with Barcelona between 1996 and 1997. The signing of Brazilian superstar Ronaldo was a masterstroke and the European Manager of the Year for 1996-97 also nurtured a young translator by the name of Jose Mourinho. Robson was appointed general manager at Barca after the arrival of Louis van Gaal as boss in 1997 and decided to leave the Nou Camp a year later.

John Toshack

Toshack went on to become Wales manager after several stints in Spain
Toshack went on to become Wales manager after several stints in Spain (Anthony Devlin/PA)


Toshack had three spells as boss of Sociedad but two stints at Real Madrid is where the Welshman is best remembered. The former Liverpool forward delivered a La Liga title for Real in 1990, won the Copa del Rey for Sociedad in 1987 and also managed Deportivo and Real Murcia in a nomadic managerial career in Spain.

Terry Venables

Venables managed Tottenham and England after his spell at the Nou Camp
Venables managed Tottenham and England after his spell at the Nou Camp (Tim Ockenden/PA)

Ron Atkinson

Atkinson spent time in the Spanish capital in the late 1980s
Atkinson spent a short time in the Spanish capital in the late 1980s (Rui Vieira/PA)


Atkinson’s spell as Atletico Madrid boss lasted just three months in 1988-1989 before his assistant from West Brom – Colin Addison – replaced him. Trigger-happy president Jesus Gil sacked former Manchester United manager Atkinson after just 93 days in charge at the Vicente Calderon Stadium.

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