Early years and Deportivo As a coach, Irureta started with lowly
Sestao Sport Club, narrowly missing out on promotion in
1986–87, and joined
Logroñés four years later, then led
Real Oviedo to a sixth-place finish in the
1990–91 season, with subsequent
qualification to the
UEFA Cup – he repeated the feat with
Celta Vigo (where he was awarded
Manager of the Year titles by both
Don Balón and
El País) in
1998. In
1994–95 he briefly returned to Athletic Bilbao, then coached neighbours
Real Sociedad. However, Irureta's greatest successes came with
Deportivo de La Coruña where he spent seven years, winning another
Don Balón coaching accolade in 2000. In
his second year he led
Depor to its first ever league title, adding runner-up finishes in
2001 and
2002 and third-places in the following two years while also reaching the
UEFA Champions League quarter-finals in
2001 and
2002 and the semi-finals
in 2004; in
2002 they also won the domestic cup, beating
Real Madrid at the
Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.
Betis Irureta was appointed at
Real Betis in June 2006 on a one-year contract, being sacked on 21 December after the team's poor start to
the campaign. He stated: "My contract has been rescinded by mutual agreement but I made the first move. We could have continued like this for much longer but it wasn't good".
Later career In October 2007, Irureta put his name forward to be the new coach of English club
Bolton Wanderers, but lost out in the running to
Gary Megson, and was also touted by December as possible replacement for Real Sociedad's
Chris Coleman. Eventually, he took over at
Real Zaragoza, after replacing
Víctor Fernández. However, on 3 March 2008, after merely one and a half months in charge, he resigned, arguing that never as a manager had he lost four games in a row, and that he did not feel up to the task of stopping the
Aragonese side's slump into the relegation zone (eventually, they
dropped down a tier). He was quickly replaced by former Zaragoza
goalkeeper Manolo Villanova, whom at the time was in charge of
Huesca. ==Managerial statistics==