Meet Javi Gracia, the New Watford Manager who Stands up for his Players

Watford manager Javi Garcia. (Getty Images)
Watford manager Javi Garcia. (Getty Images)
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Meet Javi Gracia, the New Watford Manager who Stands up for his Players

Watford manager Javi Garcia. (Getty Images)
Watford manager Javi Garcia. (Getty Images)

Watford’s new manager walked away from his first senior job because he felt he had failed but everyone else disagreed. The club’s president wanted him to stay but Javi Gracia’s mind was made up. Pontevedra finished top in his first season and the runners-up in his second; the problem was that in Spain’s second division B that is not enough, and both times they were defeated in the play-offs. For Gracia, it was not good enough either so, despite his president’s protests, he left. The following year he took Cádiz up to the second division instead.

Three years later, Gracia took Almería to the top flight but he walked again, although this time he had been pushed too. As one squad member put it bluntly: “He went because he was loyal,” adding, “that’s hard to find in football. Leave for money? Yes. Give up a job in the Primera, for your players? No.”

Almería planned an overhaul, denying players the opportunity they had earned. By standing up for them, believing in them, Gracia denied himself that same opportunity. When he got it, with home club Osasuna, he was relegated. And yet it is equally hard to find anyone who blamed him.

“I came out of a meeting [with Almería] knowing I wouldn’t carry on,” Gracia said. It was the classic case: reach the first division and start over again, assume the players who got you there cannot keep you there. “Maybe teams have to value what they have more and give players protagonism, but sometimes they think it’s not enough,” Gracia said. “Sometimes there are delusions of grandeur.”

That is not an accusation ever leveled at him. Talk to him, listen to what he has to say, in a quiet, even voice, and it is impossible not to be impressed, though he says he is “nobody to hand out lessons” and there is not a trace of arrogance. Straightforward, sincere, rational – Alberto López talks about him being “normal … but in this sport where so much gets twisted, nothing is normal.” It is a recurring theme from those who know him and immediately apparent when you meet him.

Alberto, like Darko Kovacevic, played with Gracia at Real Sociedad. “We talked about football mucho, mucho, mucho: we would analyze it,” Alberto says. Kovacevic adds: “He was always talking, correcting, organizing. He understood the mechanisms, tactically he was sharp, a leader. Sometimes, like with Diego Simeone who I played with at Lazio, you know they have something. Javi had that. I have a lot of faith in his ability.”

Ricardo Sá Pinto, another former team-mate, agrees. “There is one thing that surprises me: he’s not someone who moans, who would seek conflict. There’s an educational element to coaching and you come across players who think they know it all, who you tell 30 times and eventually you have to be hard with them. I didn’t see that in him. But in a world that’s not logical, without balance, he was balanced and that can help.”

Marcelino Torrontegui laughs. “Torron” works with the medical staff at Málaga and is close to Gracia. “He doesn’t lose it in good times or bad,” he says, “but I can assure you he doesn’t hold back one little bit. I’m telling you. Not. One. Bit. He’s got character. When he has to turn the screw, he turns it.”

Besides, Sá Pinto insists: “He was always very competitive, he liked to train, to understand why we did things. He was sharp, attentive and had a huge passion for football – and that’s the most important thing because otherwise you won’t have the patience to deal with all the things this sport demands of coaches.”

Gracia says: “Football is my life and my passion.” He arrived at Málaga at a time of readjustment, assets sold off and players leaving, turning to young players. Relegation was a threat but he was calm, rational, and his team were a revelation, especially against bigger clubs. No one had a better record against Barcelona, something he explained with the clarity and conviction that characterizes him. “The key? Work, work, work,” Torron says. “He was methodical, incredible. Hours and hours and hours.”

“He had one thing above all: a plan,” says Estebán, his goalkeeper at Almería. “He was very clear tactically. You always knew here your team-mate was and he got the best from everyone. He focused less on the errors we made than on the solutions he could find. All my ‘clearances’ would reach Soriano. People watched and thought it was lucky but it wasn’t luck. I didn’t know Javi at all before and I was hugely impressed.”

Others have been too. There was a reason Málaga came to him immediately after he had been relegated with Osasuna and why Sevilla approached him following a disappointing ninth-place finish at Rubin Kazan. A reason too why Watford wanted him. Asked if he would coach in England one day, Gracia once replied: “Hopefully.” He already spoke some English, which he used in Russia, and his kids were in an English school. “The feeling towards football in England is lovely,” he said. “I’d like to experience that. It’s attractive.”

That feeling matters. “You need fans to identify with you, for there to be a synergy,” he said. “That fans feel like participants. That’s the ultimate aim of a football team. Winning in any [old] way, without a sense of conviction, is not a full happiness. You feel a little empty. Look, we’re professionals and above all we want to compete but that’s where satisfaction, true satisfaction, comes from. There has to be something more.”

The Guardian Sport



Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr Eyes Asian Glory amid Revitalized Saudi Pro League Campaign

Al-Nassr's Portuguese forward #7 Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Nassr and Al-Qadsia at Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh on November 22, 2024. (AFP)
Al-Nassr's Portuguese forward #7 Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Nassr and Al-Qadsia at Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh on November 22, 2024. (AFP)
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Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr Eyes Asian Glory amid Revitalized Saudi Pro League Campaign

Al-Nassr's Portuguese forward #7 Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Nassr and Al-Qadsia at Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh on November 22, 2024. (AFP)
Al-Nassr's Portuguese forward #7 Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Nassr and Al-Qadsia at Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh on November 22, 2024. (AFP)

Cristiano Ronaldo’s hopes of winning a first major trophy since arriving in Saudi Arabia in 2022 were given an unlikely domestic lifeline on Saturday and, on Monday, the Portuguese star can help Al-Nassr stay on course for a first Asian title.

Ronaldo scored his seventh goal of the season against Al-Qadsia on Friday in a battle against Spanish defender Nacho but his former Real Madrid teammate was celebrating at the final whistle.

“It was a different and difficult game against Ronaldo,” Nacho said. “He is my friend and I had the best part of my career playing with him but here we have a different experience and are playing for different teams. It was an honor to play against him.”

Al-Nassr looked to be slipping out of the Saudi Pro League (SPL) title race. Al-Hilal, unbeaten in 46 league games, would have gone nine points clear on Saturday with a win against Al-Khaleej but despite leading 2-0, Hilal fell to a shock 3-2 defeat, a first since May 2023.

“We knew that the victories would not continue because this is football,” said Hilal forward Marcos Leonardo. “We have to work and achieve victory in the next match in the AFC Champions League Elite.”

Saudi Arabian clubs have yet to lose in the western zone of the Asian competition — the 24 teams in the tournament are divided into two groups of 12 with eight from each progressing to the Round of 16 after playing eight matches — and occupy the top three spots.

Al-Nassr is third with ten points from four games and will be almost certain of a place in the next round if it defeats Al-Gharafa of Qatar.

Al-Hilal, a four-time champion and top of the group with four wins, also travels to Qatar to face 2011 winner Al-Sadd. Unlike SPL games, Neymar is eligible to play in Asian competitions but the Brazilian is still recovering from the injury sustained against Esteghlal of Iran earlier in November.

Al-Ahli of Jeddah is second with the maximum 12 points and faces defending champion Al-Ain of the United Arab Emirates. Al-Ain is bottom of the group and lost 5-4 to Hilal and then 5-1 to Nassr, defeats which cost Hernan Crespo his job as head coach earlier in November. The Argentine has been replaced by Leonardo Jardim, the Portuguese boss who led Al-Hilal to the 2021 continental title.

In the eastern zone, there is another former champion in 12th and last place. Ulsan HD, winner in 2012 and 2020, has lost all four games. Ulsan has just won a third successive South Korean title and needs to defeat newly-crowned Chinese champion Shanghai Port to keep chances of the second round alive.

Australia’s sole representative Central Coast Mariners is also in need of victory as it has just one point. The A-League team however has a daunting trip to Japan to face group leader Vissel Kobe.