
- De la Fuente credits team unity and βfamilyβ ethos for Spainβs recent success
- Playersβ long-term relationships with De la Fuente foster trust and understanding
- De la Fuente overcame early media scepticism to lead Spain to Nations League and Euro titles
MADRID, June 5 β Spainβs 64-year-old manager Luis de la Fuente looks like a man who has made peace with footballβs chaos.
Kind, warm, smiling and armed with the serene certainty of someone who has spent more than a decade building his team piece-by-piece, he heads to the World Cup with a side many regard as the one to beat.
De la Fuente, who spoke to Reuters before travelling to North America, said the secret of the European championsβ rise was more than a clear tactical path, a motivational speech or one manβs genius but something simpler and warmer.
βSome time ago, we began to emphasise a word that gave us a great deal of security, confidence and strength - familyβ. We want the Spanish national team to be a family,β he said.
βFrom the first player to the last, we all work with that idea in mind and that makes me feel very calm, very serene. It makes me work knowing that I am in good company and that gives me a great deal of confidence.β
De la Fuenteβs long and unusual route to the top
It has been a long and unusual route to the top for De la Fuente, once a hard-working full back who made his name in the Basque Country with Athletic Bilbao and built his coaching career largely away from club footballβs glare, spending a decade inside Spainβs youth system.
When he was appointed Spain manager over three years ago, parts of the media mocked him as βLuis de la Who?β He was seen by many as a low-key federation man, orderly and diligent, but lacking the glamour usually demanded of such a job.
His answer has been emphatic: Nations League glory in 2023, the European Championship in 2024 and a Spain side arriving at the World Cup carrying the confidence of a team that knows exactly what it is.
A practising Catholic who strives to live according to his faith, De la Fuente said he had no interest in settling old scores.
βTime proves you right and proves you wrong. Time puts everyone in their place. I knew what I had to do,β he said.
βIβm not vindictive and I believe everyone should reflect on what they may have said or done and weigh it up. I havenβt changed a bit since then. Iβm still the same person, believe me ... My life hasnβt changed.
βIβm still doing exactly the same things I was doing three and a half years ago. I go to the same places, I go to the same restaurants, the same cafes, I walk down the street calmly doing exactly the same things.β
De la Fuenteβs greatest advantage
If others needed convincing, his players did not. De la Fuenteβs greatest advantage was once treated as a weakness: he rose step-by-step and took many of this generation with him.
Mikel Merino played under him in back-to-back European Under-21 finals against Germany, losing in 2017 but winning two years later. Mikel Oyarzabal, Dani Olmo and Fabian Ruiz were also part of that 2019 success and became senior European champions.
Merinoβs first international title with De la Fuente came even earlier, in 2015, when he played alongside Rodri and goalkeeper Unai Simon in Spainβs 2-0 win over Russia in the European Under-19 Championship final in Greece.
From those older figures to Pedri, Martin Zubimendi and Marc Cucurella, players who were part of Spainβs Olympic silver-medal campaign in Tokyo, De la Fuente has a squad that often appears to understand him before he finishes a sentence.
βOur relationship goes beyond the purely professional,β he said.
βWith Rodri in particular, weβve known each other for more than 10 years; since 2015 weβve been through a lot.
βSo Iβm sure that in his life, and in the lives of many of the players who are with me today, there hasnβt been a single coach whoβs been able to tell them things the way Iβve told them. I guarantee it.β
For De la Fuente, that intimacy is not just sentimental but them an edge.
βThey know that what I tell them comes from honesty, from integrity, and always with their best interests at heart, because they know me,β he added.
βWhen someone speaks from a place of confidence, from that conviction, knowing that it will get through to you, touch your heart and convince you, well, I think weβve already won a great deal.
βThen, out on the pitch, put all your talent at the service of that idea. And at the service of your teammates - thatβs your job.β
Their job will be to first get past debutants Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia and Uruguay in Group H as they bid to win the countryβs second World Cup title after Spainβs 2010 triumph. β Reuters