Luis de la Fuente grew up in Haro, the heart of La Rioja’s wine country and home to the Batalla del Vino, where thousands clad in white drench one another in red wine each summer. After hanging up his boots in 1994, he spent fifteen years navigating the lower reaches of Spanish football, cycling through managerial posts, youth roles, and assistant positions.
A dismissal at Deportivo Alavés in 2011—where he had finished his playing career—left him eighteen months on the sidelines, drifting from the game. His return began with a leap of faith: he answered a newspaper advertisement for a youth coaching role with the Royal Spanish Football Federation. Former national team manager Iñaki Sáez vouched for him, securing a three-month contract to lead the Under-19s at the European Championship in Lithuania.
Though Spain fell to France in the semi-finals, De la Fuente had done enough to earn a extension. He guided a generation including Rodri, Unai Simón, and Mikel Merino to Under-19 glory, and the successes continued. By the time he assumed the senior role in 2022, he had coached the majority of the squad since adolescence, steering them through the Under-19, Under-21, and Olympic levels while collecting titles along the way.
He has known Dani Olmo, Martín Zubimendi, Pedri, Mikel Oyarzabal, and Marc Cucurella—and their families—for a decade. His method rests on cultivating a culture of respect for opponents, trust in the process, and the virtues of patience and composure. His professional and personal philosophy is built on sacrifice, humility, and collective responsibility—values he regards as sporting reflections of religious ones.
These principles manifest in small gestures. Half an hour before the Euro 2024 final, as the stadium filled, he was on the phone ensuring his family had arrived safely. During the World Cup, upon learning mid-match that the federation photographer’s mother had died, De la Fuente, then 65, pulled the photographer into a collective embrace with the squad. The depth of his character was also visible, painfully, before the semi-final against France, when a question about his late brother—who died three years earlier—broke him in the pre-match press conference.
For De la Fuente, family is the bedrock of everything. His son, Alberto, serves on Spain’s coaching staff, extending a legacy rooted in loyalty and quiet dedication.
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