Fuenlabrada's José Ramón Sandoval: 'My First Task Was to Win the Players Over From Home'

 Fuenlabrada coach José Ramón Sandoval in his club mask. Photograph: CF Fuenlabrada
Fuenlabrada coach José Ramón Sandoval in his club mask. Photograph: CF Fuenlabrada
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Fuenlabrada's José Ramón Sandoval: 'My First Task Was to Win the Players Over From Home'

 Fuenlabrada coach José Ramón Sandoval in his club mask. Photograph: CF Fuenlabrada
Fuenlabrada coach José Ramón Sandoval in his club mask. Photograph: CF Fuenlabrada

José Ramón Sandoval has been Fuenlabrada’s manager for 11 weeks but hasn’t taken charge of a single game. He has led only two full training sessions at the Segunda División club, has barely met his players and never even got presented to the media, let alone the fans. He has suffered coronavirus and his timing could hardly have been worse, but he’s wearing a huge grin. Not that you can see it under the Fuenlabrada face mask he ordered himself. “This period has been a like doing a master’s,” he says.

Sandoval had just overcome a hernia operation when Fuenlabrada, based on the outskirts of Madrid, called him. He had been out of work for 16 months, since the second of two short-lived spells with Córdoba. His appointment was announced on 11 March and there was a brief session that evening, his first contact with the entire squad. The following morning, 15 hours into the job, he had his second. And, it turned out, his last. That day, Spain’s football teams were sent home and told not to come back. His presentation was cancelled: this was not the time, the club decided. A state of alarm was declared two days later, the country locked down. “I’m a tsunami, taking everything with it, but after a day the tsunami was stopped,” says the 52-year-old, who made his way into management via amateur clubs starting in the mid-90s, having made little impression as a player.

Fuenlabrada’s players didn’t come back until 11 May, two months on, and even then it was for individual sessions, arriving and leaving in their kits, not allowed to loiter or gather together. La Liga hopes the Segunda División can return on 12 June but full training won’t begin until this coming week. Competition will get under way without Sandoval seeing them play a game. They return in 13th, just four points above the relegation zone (though also just seven off the play-offs). Yet one thing is clear: the enthusiasm.

“I don’t think this has happened to anyone, ever,” he says. “My first task was to win them over from home, empathise. “I asked for a video of the good moments this season, edited it and put it to music. They went into lockdown having not won in 13 and I didn’t want that lingering. I wanted positivity. We’ve been working towards that idea for nine weeks.

“We had a programme to maintain strength and avoid injuries and created a daily structure so their biorhythms didn’t change: up at nine, breakfast, connect. They had to send a photo of their scales: by 9.15 every day, I had everyone’s weight. The idea wasn’t to police them, but show we’re with them, they’re not alone. We had group sessions every morning, then the two fitness coaches rang half each in the afternoon, reporting back every night. I called them all individually: long chats, asking how they’re getting on, their families. You don’t have that relationship managers have built with players but you get to know them.”

In fact, Sandoval says, he might know them even better than under normal circumstances. “You’re talking every day, you chat before each session: jokes, what politicians are up to now. Some managers wouldn’t need all that but I’d only just arrived. I watched them work. You see things: how they position the camera, how they interact. You do a Zoom call and the same guy always connects first. Some exercise with their kids clambering on their backs. A cat walks past the camera. Someone’s doing press-ups and the dog licks his face. That tells you about personalities, sensibilities, and gives you ways of reaching them which are helpful.

“We wanted them to have a dose of reality too. I asked the doctor, who works in a hospital and is close to them, to connect after being in ICU. Show them there are people on the front line, this isn’t a story. Every day people are dying, as if two or three planes are falling out the sky. That helps motivate them: ‘We’re stuck at home, sure, but that’s as bad as it’ll be.’ And it works in reverse too: when things improved, I rang the doctor: ‘Tell them the truth, there’s light at the end of the tunnel. Don’t give up, nearly there. It’s been worth it.’

“They returned in good shape, physically and mentally and the last two weeks have been so enriching.” There’s a laugh. “They’re exactly as I thought. Take the player who was always last to log in. I’d be sending him a text message: ‘Champ, we’re waiting for you.’ ‘Sorry boss, connection problems.’ He’s there with the face of a man who’s just woken up. It’s the same face now, the same people. I know them: you can see some of that through a screen.

He has plenty of qualifications and experience – he won promotion to the top flight with Rayo Vallecano in 2011 and kept them there the following season – but adds: “This has been a master’s, especially in designing drills. We’re allowed small groups of 10 at most, but we have 24 players, including goalkeepers, and it doesn’t divide up right. At 8am, seven come in. At 10.30, the next group has eight, so that drill’s no good. Then the forwards come in, six of them. You have to have the same idea, but it’s not the same. Nutella for everyone, but one’s spreading it on bread, another on biscuits, another on toast. You’re changing drills: for five players, six, seven, eight. How do you build a model like that?

“There’s been no 11-a-side work, not even 10, and no friendlies. I’ve had them playing the inflatables and I’m running around bringing the ‘opposition’ to life. We’ll spend the whole of next week on full-sided games, see if they can do it against real people. But you know what? I hear managers complaining: ‘You can’t work like this.’ But I’m the opposite. I’m happy. It’s the journey you enjoy. And others have it far, far worse. There are medical staff, supermarket staff unprotected, at risk.”

Sandoval caught the virus. “My mother-in-law had just had a prosthetic knee fitted and then broke her hip. I took her to A&E but that same day they were closing hospitals, giving them over to coronavirus. I had to take her somewhere else, they couldn’t operate for three days. We went back and forth and I caught it. I didn’t have a fever, just this brutal pain in my head that wouldn’t go away. Three, four days, I was desperate. I couldn’t get up.

“I thought it was high blood pressure. But when we did the tests for La Liga, the doctor called me. ‘I’ve got a surprise for you: you had corona, eight weeks ago.’ ‘No way.’ He says: ‘There are people waiting for a miracle, a vaccine, and you’ve got that many antibodies inside you it’s as if you’ve been given four of them. You could hand them out and still have enough.’” Sandoval starts laughing. “Now I feel even stronger, like I really am a tsunami.”

The Guardian Sport



Murray to Coach Djokovic Through Australian Open

FILE - Serbia's Novak Djokovic, left, and Britain's Andy Murray holds their trophy after their final match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Sunday, June 5, 2016 in Paris. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
FILE - Serbia's Novak Djokovic, left, and Britain's Andy Murray holds their trophy after their final match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Sunday, June 5, 2016 in Paris. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
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Murray to Coach Djokovic Through Australian Open

FILE - Serbia's Novak Djokovic, left, and Britain's Andy Murray holds their trophy after their final match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Sunday, June 5, 2016 in Paris. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
FILE - Serbia's Novak Djokovic, left, and Britain's Andy Murray holds their trophy after their final match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Sunday, June 5, 2016 in Paris. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)

The recently retired Andy Murray is going to team up with longtime rival Novak Djokovic as his coach, they both announced Saturday, with plans to prepare for — and work together through — the Australian Open in January.
It was a stunning bit of news as tennis moves toward its offseason, a pairing of two of the most successful and popular players in the sport, both of whom are sometimes referred to as members of a so-called Big Four that also included Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.
Djokovic is a 24-time Grand Slam champion who has spent more weeks at No. 1 than any other player in tennis history. Murray won three major trophies and two Olympic singles gold medals and finished 2016 atop the ATP rankings. He ended his playing career after the Paris Summer Games in August.
Both men are 37 and were born a week apart in May 1987. They started facing each other as juniors and wound up meeting 36 times as professionals, with Djokovic holding a 25-11 advantage.
“We played each other since we were boys — 25 years of being rivals, of pushing each other beyond our limits. We had some of the most epic battles in our sport. They called us game-changers, risk-takers, history-makers,” Djokovic posted on social media over photos and videos from some of their matches. “I thought our story may be over. Turns out, it has one final chapter. It’s time for one of my toughest opponents to step into my corner. Welcome on board, Coach — Andy Murray.”
Djokovic's 2024 season is over, and it was not up to his usual, high standards. He didn't win a Grand Slam trophy; his only title, though, was meaningful to him: a gold medal for Serbia in singles at the Summer Games.
Djokovic has been without a full-time coach since splitting in March from Goran Ivanisevic.
“I’m going to be joining Novak’s team in the offseason, helping him to prepare for the Australian Open," The Associated Press quoted Murray as saying in a statement released by his management team. "I’m really excited for it and looking forward to spending time on the same side of the net as Novak for a change, helping him to achieve his goals.”
Their head-to-head series on tour includes an 11-8 lead for Djokovic in finals, and 8-2 at Grand Slam tournaments.
Djokovic beat Murray four times in the Australian Open final alone — in 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2016.
Two of the most important victories of Murray's career came with Djokovic on the other side of the net. One was in the 2012 US Open final, when Murray claimed his first Grand Slam title. The other was in the 2013 Wimbledon final, when Murray became the first British man in 77 years to win the singles championship at the All England Club.
Next year's Australian Open starts on Jan. 12.