Rubén Baraja

Rubén Baraja Vegas (Spanish pronunciation: ; born 11 July 1975) is a Spanish retired footballer, currently manager of Valencia.

Rubén Baraja
Rubén Baraja
Baraja as Elche manager in 2016
Personal information
Full name Rubén Baraja Vegas
Date of birth (1975-07-11) 11 July 1975 (age 48)
Place of birth Valladolid, Spain
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Central midfielder
Team information
Current team
Valencia (manager)
Youth career
Valladolid
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1993–1995 Valladolid B 46 (11)
1993–1996 Valladolid 41 (2)
1996–1999 Atlético Madrid B 79 (20)
1999–2000 Atlético Madrid 34 (4)
2000–2010 Valencia 263 (41)
Total 463 (78)
International career
1993 Spain U18 3 (1)
2000–2005 Spain 43 (7)
Managerial career
2011 Atlético Madrid (assistant)
2013–2015 Valencia (youth)
2013 Valencia B (interim)
2015–2016 Elche
2016–2017 Rayo Vallecano
2017–2018 Sporting Gijón
2019–2020 Tenerife
2020 Zaragoza
2023– Valencia
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

A complete central midfielder with good tackling, technique, and offensive qualities, together with accurate passing and goalscoring ability, he played mostly for Valencia during a 17-year professional career, being an essential figure in five of the club's major titles, which included two La Liga championships.

Baraja was also a consistent part of the Spain national team for five years, appearing in one World Cup and one European Championship and winning 43 caps. He began work as a head coach in 2015 and was hired by Valencia eight years later.

Playing career

Club

Born in Valladolid, Castile and León, Baraja started his career at local Real Valladolid before moving to Atlético Madrid, where he would spend two and a half seasons with the reserves, first appearing with the first team on 7 February 1999, playing the second half of a 2–1 away defeat against Salamanca. In 1998–99, with the B's in the Segunda División, he scored a career-best eleven goals.

When Atlético was relegated at the end of 1999–2000, Baraja left the club in a 2,000 million pesetas transfer to that year's UEFA Champions League finalists Valencia, who were looking to strengthen their central midfield following the sale of first-team players Gerard and Javier Farinós. In his first season, he was a key element in the Che's Champions League run, as they were beaten in the final for the second year running, this time losing in a penalty shootout to FC Bayern Munich, with the player scoring on his attempt.

2001–02 would see Baraja's first trophy win, where his goals late in the campaign helped Valencia to their first La Liga title in 31 years – he finished as team top scorer in the league, netting seven in only 17 league games after recovering from a knee injury. 2003–04 was another big year, winning both the domestic championship (with eight league goals from him) as well as the UEFA Cup, beating Olympique de Marseille 2–0 in the final.

In 2006–07, Baraja only made 14 league appearances, as Valencia finished fourth, and continued to be constantly bothered by physical problems in the following years. After two respectable seasons, often partnering longtime central midfield partner David Albelda, he was again greatly troubled by injuries in the 2009–10 campaign, featuring in only 18 matches (two complete).

Baraja closed his chapter at the Mestalla after one full decade on 16 May 2010, receiving homages before and after the 1–0 home win over Tenerife, and being replaced to a standing ovation in the 89th minute. The 35-year-old announced his retirement shortly after, having appeared in 338 top-flight games over 15 seasons and scored 47 goals.

International

Baraja made his debut for Spain on 7 October 2000, in the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification 2–0 defeat of Israel. Consequently, he was picked for the final stages, where the team reached the quarter-finals before being sent out by co-hosts South Korea on penalties, though the player, as the year before with Valencia, once again scored on his attempt; he scored from a header during regulation time, but saw his goal disallowed for alleged shirt pulling and pushing in the Korean penalty area.

Baraja also took part in the disappointing UEFA Euro 2004 tournament, where Spain was eliminated in the group stage by eventual finalists Portugal and Greece. He was left out of the 2006 World Cup squad, as his club presence was also diminished due to recurrent injuries.

Coaching career

Early years

In June 2011, Baraja returned to former team Atlético Madrid as part of newly appointed manager Gregorio Manzano's staff. In the summer of 2013, he returned to main club Valencia, first coaching the youths.

On 22 December 2013, Baraja took interim charge of the reserves in the Segunda División B, as Nico Estévez was doing the same for the first team, and achieved a 2–1 win at Sant Andreu.

Segunda División

Baraja was appointed manager of Elche, newly relegated to the second tier, on 12 July 2015. On 6 June of the following year, he resigned after failing to agree new terms.

On 8 November 2016, Baraja took the reins at fellow second-division Rayo Vallecano. After only three wins from 13 games, he was sacked on 20 February 2017, as they sat a point above the relegation places.

Baraja was appointed at Sporting de Gijón on 12 December 2017. Towards the end of the season, he received a four-match ban and a €3,005 fine for preventing Barcelona B's Sergi Palencia from taking a throw-in; this included the first game of the play-offs, in which eventual champions Valladolid eliminated the Asturians 5–2 on aggregate in the semi-finals.

On 18 November 2018, Baraja was dismissed after losing the Asturian derby against Real Oviedo, leaving the team in 14th position with a streak of only one win from 11 matches. In December of the following year, he became coach of Tenerife in the same league, managing to avoid relegation, but still left on 20 July 2020.

Baraja replaced Víctor Fernández at the helm of Real Zaragoza on 20 August 2020. He was relieved of his duties on 9 November, after a poor start to the season.

Valencia

On 14 February 2023, Baraja returned to his former club Valencia as head coach, taking over a team that had slipped from 14th to 18th since the dismissal of Gennaro Gattuso; long-time teammate Carlos Marchena was part of his coaching team. His first top-flight game as a manager came six days later, in a 1–0 loss at Getafe, and a 1–1 draw at Real Betis secured survival by a two-point margin on the final day. He then renewed his contract for two more years.

Personal life

Baraja's younger brother, Javier, was also a professional footballer. A defender, he too graduated at Valladolid, and went on to spend most of his senior career there.

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League Cup Continental Other Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Valladolid B 1993–94 Segunda División B 20 8 20 8
1994–95 Segunda División B 26 3 26 3
Total 46 11 46 11
Valladolid 1993–94 La Liga 5 1 5 1
1994–95 La Liga 9 0 9 0
1995–96 La Liga 27 1 27 1
Total 41 2 41 2
Atlético Madrid B 1996–97 Segunda División 22 1 22 1
1997–98 Segunda División 32 8 32 8
1998–99 Segunda División 25 11 25 11
Total 79 20 79 20
Atlético Madrid 1998–99 La Liga 8 1 4 0 2 0 14 1
1999–2000 La Liga 26 3 5 2 6 2 37 7
Total 34 4 9 2 8 2 51 8
Valencia 2000–01 La Liga 35 4 2 1 15 2 52 7
2001–02 La Liga 17 7 1 0 18 7
2002–03 La Liga 35 5 1 0 12 4 2 0 50 9
2003–04 La Liga 35 8 6 2 11 2 52 12
2004–05 La Liga 25 7 2 0 8 1 3 1 38 9
2005–06 La Liga 31 4 2 0 1 0 34 4
2006–07 La Liga 14 1 1 0 3 0 18 1
2007–08 La Liga 25 2 8 1 3 0 36 3
2008–09 La Liga 28 3 4 1 4 1 2 0 38 5
2009–10 La Liga 18 0 2 0 8 0 28 0
Total 263 41 28 5 66 10 7 1 364 57
Career total 463 78 37 7 74 12 7 1 581 98
    Notes

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National team Year Apps Goals
Spain 2000 3 1
2001 5 1
2002 10 3
2003 10 0
2004 12 2
2005 3 0
Total 43 7
List of international goals scored by Rubén Baraja
No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 11 October 2000 Ernst Happel, Vienna, Austria Rubén Baraja  Austria 1–1 1–1 2002 World Cup qualification
2 25 April 2001 Nuevo Arcángel, Córdoba, Spain Rubén Baraja  Japan 1–0 1–0 Friendly
3 17 April 2002 Windsor Park, Belfast, Northern Ireland Rubén Baraja  Northern Ireland 2–0 5–0 Friendly
4 12 October 2002 Carlos Belmonte, Albacete, Spain Rubén Baraja  Northern Ireland 1–0 3–0 Euro 2004 qualification
5 3–0
6 18 February 2004 Lluís Companys, Barcelona, Spain Rubén Baraja  Peru 2–1 2–1 Friendly
7 5 June 2004 Alfonso Pérez, Getafe, Spain Rubén Baraja  Andorra 2–0 4–0 Friendly

Managerial statistics

    As of 20 April 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record Ref
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Valencia B (interim) Rubén Baraja  15 December 2013 22 December 2013 1 1 0 0 2 1 +1 100.00
Elche Rubén Baraja  12 July 2015 6 June 2016 43 13 19 11 43 49 −6 030.23
Rayo Vallecano Rubén Baraja  8 November 2016 20 February 2017 13 3 4 6 12 14 −2 023.08
Sporting Gijón Rubén Baraja  12 December 2017 18 November 2018 43 20 9 14 59 42 +17 046.51
Tenerife Rubén Baraja  2 December 2019 20 July 2020 28 12 9 7 38 27 +11 042.86
Zaragoza Rubén Baraja  20 August 2020 9 November 2020 10 2 4 4 9 9 +0 020.00
Valencia Rubén Baraja  14 February 2023 Present 53 22 12 19 57 57 +0 041.51
Total 191 73 57 61 220 199 +21 038.22

Honours

Valencia

Individual

References

Tags:

Rubén Baraja Playing careerRubén Baraja Coaching careerRubén Baraja Personal lifeRubén Baraja Career statisticsRubén Baraja Managerial statisticsRubén Baraja HonoursRubén Baraja

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