Premier League

Is Julen Lopetegui a good appointment for Wolves?

Julen Lopetegui

Wolves have made Julen Lopetegui their newest head coach, appointing the Spaniard as a permanent successor to Bruno Lage and taking over from interim boss Steve Davis.

Lopetegui initially turned down the Wolves job in October, having been approached once he was relieved of his duties at Sevilla. He cited a desire to spend time with his elderly father, who he said he hadn’t been able to see for a ‘long time’.

After Wolves searched for other candidates, including QPR’s Michael Beale, 90min revealed that they decided to make another approach for Lopetegui, who responded favourably the second time around. Part of the appeal was the promise of a substantial fund to rebuild.

Wolves chairman Jeff Shi confirmed that a major reason the club wanted Lopetegui is his ‘excellent experience at an elite level of the game’, which is impossible to deny.

The 56-year-old was deemed by Real Madrid the man to succeed Zinedine Zidane in 2018, poaching him from his role as head coach of the Spain national team on the eve of the last World Cup.

Before that, Lopetegui had coached Porto in the Champions League. After leaving Real Madrid just a few months into his contract at the Bernabeu – his tenure in the Spanish capital came in a difficult moment of transition for Los Blancos following the departure of Cristiano Ronaldo – he then quickly restored his reputation by winning the Europa League with Sevilla.

Julen Lopetegui

Lopetegui’s reign as Spain manager courted controversy / PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU/GettyImages

Sevilla also beat Bayern Munich in the 2020 UEFA Super Cup and automatically qualified for the Champions League by finishing in La Liga’s top four in each of Lopetegui’s three full seasons in charge. They were even in the title race until the latter stages of both 2020/21 and 2021/22.

Lopetegui has never worked in England before, but he described himself in a 2016 interview with The Guardian as ‘passionate about English football’ and was actually very close to being appointed by Wolves that same year. Instead, he ended up with the Spain job.

Wolves were a Championship club at that time, newly under the ownership of Fosun – who have finally got their man six years later, but he said the project at Molineux back then was ‘especially attractive’.

Long before he held some of the biggest jobs in world football, Lopetegui cut his coaching teeth working within the Spanish federation with the country’s junior national teams. He was first an assistant with the Under-17…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at 90min EN…