Ángel Royo
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Ángel Royo Areste | ||
Date of birth | (1966-08-12) 12 August 1966 (age 58) | ||
Place of birth | Sariñena, Spain | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Almudévar (coach) | ||
Youth career | |||
Years | Team | ||
Sariñena | |||
Managerial career | |||
1992–1996 | Sariñena (youth) | ||
1997–1999 | Lalueza | ||
1999 | Peralta | ||
2000–2002 | Lanaja | ||
2002–2004 | Almudévar | ||
2004–2009 | San Lorenzo | ||
2009–2010 | Barbastro | ||
2010 | Atlético Monzón | ||
2010–2011 | Huesca (assistant) | ||
2011 | Huesca | ||
2012 | Huesca (interim) | ||
2016– | Almudévar |
Ángel Royo Areste (born 12 August 1966) is a Spanish football manager, currently in charge of AD Almudévar.
Managerial career
Born in Sariñena, Huesca, Aragon, Royo suffered a serious injury while playing for CD Sariñena's youth setup, which subsequently ended his career as a footballer.[1] He started working as a manager with the club's youth setup, and subsequently coached teams in his native region, his longest spell being with UD San Lorenzo.[2]
In May 2010 Royo was appointed Atlético Monzón manager,[3] but left the club two months later, being named assistant at SD Huesca.[4]
On 8 June 2011 Royo was appointed manager of Huesca, replacing Onésimo Sánchez.[5] On 3 October, after winning two of six matches, he was relieved from his duties and joined the club's board.[6]
On 10 December 2012 Royo was named interim manager of the azulgranas, in the place of fired Antonio Calderón.[7] On the 26th, after two losses, he returned to his previous role, being replaced by Jorge D'Alessandro.[8]
References
- ^ Los técnicos piropean a Royo (Managers compliment Royo); Heraldo, 11 June 2011 (in Spanish)
- ^ Un entrenador de Huesca (A manager from Huesca); El Periódico de Aragón, 10 June 2011 (in Spanish)
- ^ Ángel Royo nuevo entrenador del Atlético Monzón (Ángel Royo new manager of Atlético Monzón); Radio Huesca, 24 May 2010 (in Spanish)
- ^ Ángel Royo deja el At. Monzón por la SD Huesca (Ángel Royo leaves At. Monzón for SD Huesca); Radio Huesca, 20 July 2010 (in Spanish)
- ^ Ángel Royo será el nuevo entrenador del Huesca (Ángel Royo will be the new manager of Huesca); Diario AS, 8 June 2011 (in Spanish)
- ^ Quique Hernández toma el relevo de Ángel Royo en el Huesca (Quique Hernández replaces Ángel Royo at Huesca); El Periódico de Aragón, 3 October 2011 (in Spanish)
- ^ El Huesca fulmina a Calderón (Huesca fulminates Calderón); Marca, 10 December 2012 (in Spanish)
- ^ Jorge D'Alessandro es el nuevo entrenador del Huesca (Jorge D'Alessandro is the new manager of Huesca); Diario AS, 26 December 2012 (in Spanish)
External links
- Ángel Royo manager profile at BDFutbol
- Soccerway profile
- v
- t
- e
- Martín (1962–63)
- García Traid (1969–70)
- Cerezo (1970–71)
- Lelé (1971–73)
- Aróstegui (1974–75)
- Lelé (1975)
- Lasheras (1975–77)
- Costa (1977–78)
- Lasa (1978–80)
- Ausaberi (1980)
- Teresa (1980–81)
- Ausaberi (1981–82)
- Rojas (1982–84)
- Ausaberi (1984–85)
- P. Polo (1985–86)
- Gabasa (1986–87)
- Trallero (1987–88)
- Alastuey (1988–89)
- Tosao (1989–90)
- De Simone (1990)
- Cambra (1990–91)
- Villanova (1991–92)
- Ausaberi (1992–94)
- Gardec (1994)
- Peralta (1994–95)
- Garde (1995)
- P. Polo (1995)
- Juanjo (1995–96)
- García Calderón (1996–97)
- Garde (1997)
- P. Polo (1997)
- I. Polo (1997–98)
- Correas (1998)
- Garde (1998–99)
- Villanovac (1999)
- Llena (1999)
- Arilla (1999–2000)
- Beltrán (2000–01)
- Arjol (2001)
- Díaz (2001–02)
- Berna (2002)
- Arribas (2002–03)
- Arnedilloc (2003)
- Txuma (2003–04)
- Chamarro (2004–05)
- Fabri (2005)
- Anquela (2005)
- Sola (2005–06)
- Villanova (2006–08)
- Onésimo (2008)
- Calderón (2008–10)
- Onésimo (2010–11)
- Royo (2011)
- Hernández (2011–12)
- Fabri (2012)
- Calderón (2012)
- Royo (2012)
- D'Alessandro (2013)
- Alfaro (2013)
- Amaral (2013–14)
- Navarro (2014)
- Tevenet (2014–15)
- Anquela (2015–17)
- Rubi (2017–18)
- Franco (2018)
- Francisco (2018–19)
- Míchel (2019–21)
- Pacheta (2021)
- Ambríz (2021)
- Xisco (2021–22)
- Ziganda (2022–23)
- Hidalgo (2023–)