COACH

Juan Manuel Lillo

1965 - Today

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Juan Manuel "Juanma" Lillo Díez (born 3 November 1965) is a Spanish football manager. Having started coaching before his 20s, he was the youngest manager in charge of a La Liga club, having taken over Salamanca at not yet 30 years of age. He also coached Oviedo, Tenerife, Zaragoza and Almería in the top-flight, and had spells in charge of clubs in Mexico, Colombia, Japan, China and Qatar. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Juan Manuel Lillo is the 216th most popular coach (down from 161st in 2019), the 1,545th most popular biography from Spain (down from 1,193rd in 2019) and the 18th most popular Spanish Coach.

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Among COACHES

Among coaches, Juan Manuel Lillo ranks 216 out of 471Before him are Baltasar Albéniz, Sef Vergoossen, Domènec Torrent, Ezio Pascutti, Mircea Rednic, and Faouzi Benzarti. After him are Ľubomír Moravčík, Claude Puel, George Raynor, Antoninho, Omar Borrás, and Karel Petrů.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1965, Juan Manuel Lillo ranks 241Before him are Alexander Siddig, Akina Nakamori, Sean Patrick Flanery, Beth Gibbons, Caio Júnior, and Valdir Benedito. After him are Miri Regev, Ľubomír Moravčík, José Morais, Brad Armstrong, Yasutoshi Miura, and Markus Grosskopf.

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In Spain

Among people born in Spain, Juan Manuel Lillo ranks 1,545 out of 3,355Before him are Esperanza Aguirre (1952), Enrique Morente (1942), Fernando Serena (1941), José María Ventura Casas (1817), Asunción Balaguer (1925), and José Antonio Zaldúa (1941). After him are Francesca Bonnemaison i Farriols (1872), Juan de Mena (1411), Ángel Atienza (1931), Luis Marín (1906), José Callejón (1987), and Gregorio Fuentes (1897).

Among COACHES In Spain

Among coaches born in Spain, Juan Manuel Lillo ranks 18Before him are Benito Floro (1952), Amadeo García (1887), Gregorio Manzano (1956), Juan Ramón López Caro (1963), Baltasar Albéniz (1905), and Domènec Torrent (1962). After him are Félix Sánchez Bas (1975), José Juncosa (1922), Pepe Mel (1963), Robert Moreno (1977), Valero Rivera López (1953), and Juan Carlos Garrido (1969).