Spanish clubs manager in 1995–96 In his first season in charge at Atlético Madrid, Aragonés led Atlético to success over two legs in the
1974 Intercontinental Cup, where the team beat
Copa Libertadores winners
Independiente of
Argentina 2–1 on aggregate. Atlético went on to claim the Copa del Generalísimo and La Liga title in
1976 and
1977 respectively. Aragonés took over at
Real Betis in 1981. His time in
Andalusia, however, was brief and he returned to the
Vicente Calderón in 1982. In his fourth spell at the club, his Atlético side came close to achieving a historic
double during the
1984–85 season, winning the
Copa del Rey and finishing runner-up in La Liga. The following season, the team reached the final of the
European Cup Winners' Cup, where it was beaten 3–0 by
Dynamo Kyiv. Aragonés' success saw him appointed as manager of
Barcelona in 1987, where he spent one season, winning the
Copa del Rey. He then spent a season at fellow Barcelona based club
Espanyol before rejoining Atlético for a fifth spell, where he won the sixth Copa del Rey of his career in
1992. After leaving the club for a fifth time in 1993, he went on to coach
Sevilla,
Valencia, Real Betis,
Real Oviedo and
Mallorca. His biggest success during this period was in the
1995–96 season coming within four points of winning the
La Liga title with Valencia. In
2001, with the club in the
Segunda División, Aragonés took over at Atlético for a sixth time and led the team to promotion back to the Primera División as champions in the
2001–02 season. He left the club for the seventh and final time in 2003 and remains its most successful manager with eight trophies won. He steered the club to 11th by the end of the season. On 1 July 2004, he took the job of
Spain national team after
Iñaki Sáez resigned due to public disapproval for failing to qualify the team from the group stage at
UEFA Euro 2004.
Spain national football team under Aragonés On taking over the national team following the UEFA Euro 2004 humiliation, Aragonés made changes to the team, dropping experienced players such as
Míchel Salgado and
Raúl and revamped with some new blood. Spain were unbeaten in qualification for the
2006 FIFA World Cup under Aragonés, but finished as group runner-up to
Serbia and Montenegro, and thus required a play-off against
Slovakia to secure their place. Spain won the play-off 6–2 on aggregate, with
Luis García scoring a hat-trick in the first-leg 5–1 win. At the finals, Spain won all three group games before facing France in the Second Round. After taking the lead through
David Villa, they lost 3–1 following goals from
Franck Ribéry,
Patrick Vieira and
Zinedine Zidane. Realizing the physical weakness of Spanish players, he employed
tiki-taka, a system of short passing which subsequently would also be identified with the playing style of Barcelona, and became the biggest football revolution in the history of Spanish football. Aragonés stayed on as manager and presided over the following qualifications for the European Championship. The initial phase of the qualifiers started on a poor note with a 3–2 defeat to
Northern Ireland and a 2–0 defeat to
Sweden both away from home, a pair of results that put tremendous pressure on Aragonés' position. Spain recovered strongly to seal a ticket as group winners ahead of Sweden that also qualified directly to the tournament, while
Denmark missed out. Aragonés then presided over Spain's victorious campaign at
Euro 2008, beating
Germany 1–0 in the final with a goal from
Fernando Torres for their first international honour since
1964. Aragonés had a superstitious fear of the colour yellow, and referred to Spain's change kit for the semi-final match against
Russia as "mustard" and not "yellow". His
tiki-taka style of play was retained by his successor,
Vicente del Bosque, who led Spain to further tournament victories. Aragonés replaced
Zico as manager of Turkish
Süper Lig club
Fenerbahçe on 5 July 2008. He signed a two-year deal and declared his intention to win the league title in his first season. The club, however, finished in fourth, and he was dismissed on 2 June 2009 after the season had ended. ==Managerial statistics==