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Aitor Karanka

Spanish footballer (born 1973)

Aitor Karanka

Spanish footballer (born 1973)

FieldValue
nameAitor Karanka
imageAitor Karanka.jpg
captionKaranka in 2009
fullnameAitor Karanka de la Hoz
birth_date
birth_placeVitoria, Spain
height1.81m
positionDefender
youthclubs1Corazonistas
youthclubs2Alavés
youthyears31991–1992
youthclubs3Athletic Bilbao
years11992–1994
clubs1Athletic Club B
caps153
goals12
years21993–1997
clubs2Athletic Bilbao
caps2118
goals22
years31997–2002
clubs3Real Madrid
caps393
goals30
years42002–2006
clubs4Athletic Bilbao
caps464
goals42
years52006
clubs5Colorado Rapids
caps528
goals50
totalcaps356
totalgoals6
nationalyears11993–1996
nationalteam1Spain U21
nationalcaps114
nationalgoals10
nationalyears21996
nationalteam2Spain U23
nationalcaps24
nationalgoals20
nationalyears31995
nationalteam3Spain
nationalcaps31
nationalgoals30
nationalyears41994–2004
nationalteam4Basque Country
nationalcaps46
nationalgoals40
manageryears12008–2010
managerclubs1Spain U16
manageryears22010–2013
managerclubs2Real Madrid (assistant)
manageryears32013–2017
managerclubs3Middlesbrough
manageryears42018–2019
managerclubs4Nottingham Forest
manageryears52020–2021
managerclubs5Birmingham City
manageryears62022
managerclubs6Granada
manageryears72023
managerclubs7Maccabi Tel Aviv

Aitor Karanka de la Hoz (Basque and ; born 18 September 1973) is a Spanish football manager and former player.

Save for a brief spell in the United States at age 32, Karanka played solely in Spain for Athletic Bilbao and Real Madrid, appearing in 275 La Liga matches over 13 seasons and winning six honours with the latter. He earned one cap for Spain, in 1995.

Karanka started his managerial career in the late 2000s, working as assistant manager at Real Madrid during José Mourinho's tenure as manager from 2010 to 2013. He was appointed manager of EFL Championship club Middlesbrough in 2013, guiding them to promotion to the Premier League in 2016 before being dismissed the following year. He then managed Nottingham Forest and Birmingham City in the Championship, before brief top-flight spells at Granada in Spain and Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Israeli Premier League.

Playing career

Club

Athletic / Real Madrid

Born in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Álava, Karanka played as a youth with hometown club Alavés and finished his formation with Basque neighbours Athletic Bilbao. He made his senior debut with the reserves of the latter in 1992, competing in the Segunda División.

Karanka was promoted to the main squad by Jupp Heynckes in 1993 following the departure of Rafael Alkorta. He made his La Liga debut on 7 November in a 1–1 away draw against Celta Vigo (90 minutes played), going on to feature in exactly 100 league matches in his three full seasons before joining the German coach at Real Madrid in 1997 (replacing Alkorta, who had just rejoined Athletic Bilbao).

Karanka was used mostly as a backup with the capital-based team but appeared in 33 UEFA Champions League matches for them, including the final of the 1999–2000 edition against Valencia (3–0 win). He missed the vast majority of the 1998–99 campaign due to a heart condition.

Athletic return / United States

Karanka training with Athletic in December 2003.

For 2002–03, Karanka returned to Athletic Bilbao on a three-year contract with a €40 million buyout clause. He helped the Lions qualify for the UEFA Cup in his second year after finishing in fifth place in the league.

In 2006, Karanka joined Major League Soccer (MLS) club Colorado Rapids in the United States. In his only season in MLS, he helped Colorado to the Western Conference play-off final, despite having his attempt saved by Darío Sala in the penalty shootout victory over FC Dallas in the semi-finals.

International

Karanka only played once for Spain at senior level, on 26 April 1995 against Armenia in Yerevan (2–0 win) for the UEFA Euro 1996 qualifiers. He made 14 appearances for the under-21s and was a member of the team that finished runners-up at the 1996 European Championship in a final lost to Italy.

Karanka also represented the nation in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, playing in four matches in an eventual quarter-final exit.

Coaching career

Early career

Having first worked in a development role with the Royal Spanish Football Federation, Karanka became the head coach of the Spanish under-16s national team in August 2008.

In June 2010, Karanka was appointed assistant manager at former side Real Madrid by newly appointed manager José Mourinho. Karanka had been recommended to Mourinho by his former Real Madrid teammates Luís Figo, Clarence Seedorf and Predrag Mijatović. During their time at Madrid, the club won the 2010–11 Copa del Rey, the 2011–12 La Liga and the 2012 Supercopa de España.

In July 2013, Karanka left the club following the arrival of Carlo Ancelotti, who brought his own coaching staff after succeeding Mourinho. Mourinho offered him the opportunity to follow him to Chelsea to act as his assistant manager once again; Karanka declined his offer in order to fulfil his ambition to pursue his own venture in management.

Middlesbrough

On 13 November 2013, Karanka was appointed manager of Championship club Middlesbrough, replacing Tony Mowbray. His first match in charge ended in a 1–2 away defeat against Leeds United, ten days later.

On 25 April 2015, in the club's penultimate game of the season away to Fulham, Karanka sent goalkeeper Dimitrios Konstantopoulos forward for an added-time corner kick with the score 3–3. With the goalkeeper out of position, the opponents scored a winner through Ross McCormack, which sent Watford into the Premier League and jeopardised Middlesbrough's own chances of promotion. He did qualify his team to the play-off final after a 5–1 aggregate win over Brentford, but they lost the decisive match 0–2 to Norwich City at Wembley Stadium.

On 7 August 2015, Karanka signed a new four-year contract. Boro were consistently in high positions during the campaign, but on 11 March 2016 he unexpectedly left the training ground after an argument and considered his future at the club. Responsibilities for the subsequent match, at Charlton Athletic, were handed to his assistant Steve Agnew, but the Spaniard returned to lead the team to the top division after a seven-year absence, as league runners-up.

In 2016–17, Karanka led Middlesbrough to the last eight of the FA Cup, where they were eliminated by Manchester City. He was sacked on 16 March 2017 with the team three points from top-flight safety and without a league win in the new year (while their defence was the fifth best in the division, their attack was the worst with just 19 goals from 27 matches, and he had disagreements with players, fans and the board). Club and manager parted ways by mutual consent, as the latter believed he could take the team no further.

Nottingham Forest

On 8 January 2018, Karanka returned to the Championship after being appointed as manager of Nottingham Forest. He replaced Gary Brazil, who had been acting as caretaker manager following the dismissal of Mark Warburton on 31 December 2017, who had in turn left the side sitting 14th in the league. His first match in charge saw Forest suffer a 1–0 defeat to Aston Villa, just days after his appointment. Karanka met his former club Middlesbrough for the first time on 7 April, where Forest were defeated 2–0.

During his first summer transfer window in charge, prior to his first full season as manager, Forest signed João Carvalho from Benfica for £13.2 million, the club's most expensive transfer acquisition. Forest began the season very well, which originally saw them establish a five-match undefeated run. They continued their positive form up until December, where they only won one out of six matches during the final month of the year, which would ultimately cost Karanka his position. On 11 January 2019, he departed the City Ground after requesting to be released from his contract. He left the team in seventh position, four points behind the play-off places. A key reason behind Karanka's departure was the breakdown in relationship between him and Forest's Chief Executive, Ioannis Vrentzos. Forest's ambitious board were dissatisfied with Forest's play-off challenge and felt that the club should have been challenging for the automatic promotion places.

Birmingham City

On 31 July 2020, after 18 months away from management, Karanka was appointed head coach of EFL Championship club Birmingham City on a three-year contract. On 16 March 2021, the club confirmed that he had stepped down from his role after a run of just three wins in 19 matches left the team just outside the relegation zone. Former Charlton Athletic manager Lee Bowyer was announced as his successor shortly afterwards.

Granada

Following a 4–1 defeat at home to Levante on 17 April 2022, Granada dismissed interim head coach Rubén Torrecilla and appointed Karanka as his replacement, tasked with using the remaining six matches to avoid relegation from La Liga. He made his debut on 20 April, securing a goalless draw at reigning champions Atlético Madrid, and won two of the remaining fixtures, but a final-day draw against Espanyol was not enough to secure safety.

Karanka was confirmed as the club's head coach for the coming season, but was sacked on 8 November 2022, after one win in five matches.

Maccabi Tel Aviv

On 4 January 2023, Karanka signed an 18-month deal at Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Israeli Premier League. He left by mutual accord on 25 June, having finished third in the league and reached the semi-finals of the State Cup.

Other work

In May 2021, Karanka organised an online coaching conference in association with the Royal Spanish Football Federation, under the name AK Coaches' World. The event focused on women's football, and participants included Ronaldo, Julen Lopetegui, Monchi, Iraia Iturregi, Jorge Vilda and Mila Martínez.

Personal life

Karanka's younger brother, David, is also a former footballer. A striker, he also appeared for Athletic Bilbao's first team but with much less impact, going on to spend the vast majority of his professional career in the second level or the lower leagues.

Career statistics

Club

ClubSeasonLeagueNational cupContinentalOtherTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsTotal532532Total118280401302Total930150330801490Total642503000722Career total35563004001104366
Athletic Club B1993–94Segunda División382382
1993–94150150
Athletic Bilbao1993–94La Liga1801000190
1994–953212040381
1995–963103000340
1996–973712000391
Real Madrid1997–98La Liga180205020270
1998–994030000070
1999–20002203011030400
2000–013500011010480
2001–02140706020270
Athletic Bilbao2002–03La Liga24210252
2003–0434010350
2004–05603030120
2005–0600000000
Colorado Rapids2006Major League Soccer2702030320

International

National teamYearAppsGoalsTotal10
Spain199510

Managerial

TeamFromToRecordRef.PWDLWin %Total
Middlesbrough13 November 201316 March 2017
Nottingham Forest8 January 201811 January 2019
Birmingham City31 July 202016 March 2021
Granada18 April 20228 November 2022
Maccabi Tel Aviv4 January 202325 June 2023

Honours

Player

Real Madrid

Spain U21

  • UEFA European Under-21 Championship runner-up: 1996; third place: 1994

Manager

Middlesbrough

  • Football League Championship runner-up (promotion): 2015–16

Individual

References

References

  1. "Aitor KARANKA de la Hoz". [[El Mundo (Spain).
  2. (7 June 2010). "Butragueño: "Karanka representa los valores de la casa"". [[Marca (newspaper).
  3. (22 April 2012). "Cristiano Ronaldo is the best in the world, says Real Madrid assistant coach Aitor Karanka, after Barcelona win". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  4. Delaney, Miguel. (23 November 2012). "Karanka demanding focus from Real". [[ESPN FC]].
  5. (7 November 1993). "Heynckes lleva a cabo la revolución que anunció". [[Mundo Deportivo]].
  6. Galaz, Mábel. (13 August 1997). "Karanka, defensa central del Athletic, acepta la oferta para fichar por el Madrid". [[El País]].
  7. Carbajosa, Carlos E.. (14 August 1997). "Llegó el central". Mundo Deportivo.
  8. Pla Díaz, Emilio. "Aitor Karanka de la Hoz – Matches in European Cups".
  9. (24 May 2000). "Real Madrid 3–0 Valencia". [[The Guardian]].
  10. Carbajosa, Carlos E.. (4 March 1998). "Karanka y su corazón dicen hasta pronto". El Mundo.
  11. Cuenca, Nika. (29 May 2002). "El mejor refuerzo". Mundo Deportivo.
  12. (24 July 2011). "Real Madrid got real test from Union, says Kaká". Philadelphia Union.
  13. Forbes, Brian. (29 October 2006). "Shootout repeats history". [[The Denver Post]].
  14. Gallego, Jesús. (27 April 1995). "Amavisca se estrena". Mundo Deportivo.
  15. (18 June 2013). "Italia ya ganó un Europeo a España en el 1996". Orgullo Bianconero.
  16. {{FIFA player. 176650
  17. Colino, Carmen. (6 June 2010). "Karanka será el segundo entrenador que pidió Mourinho". [[Diario AS]].
  18. (17 October 2014). "Aitor Karanka is starting to make the difference for Middlesbrough". The Guardian.
  19. "Madrid clinch Copa del Rey". Sky Sports.
  20. "Liga – Real Madrid win Liga title in Bilbao". Yahoo!.
  21. (31 August 2012). "Mourinho is the only coach who has won the Super Cup in four different European countries". Real Madrid CF.
  22. Collins, Paul. (16 July 2013). "Aitor Karanka and Real Madrid part ways". Real Madrid News.
  23. (14 November 2013). "Aitor Karanka: Middlesbrough pin hopes on Jose Mourinho protege". BBC Sport.
  24. (6 December 2013). "Karanka rejected Mourinho and Chelsea". FourFourTwo.
  25. (13 November 2013). "Aitor Karanka: Middlesbrough name ex-Real Madrid man as boss". [[BBC Sport]].
  26. (23 November 2013). "Leeds United 2–1 Middlesbrough". BBC Sport.
  27. (25 April 2015). "Aitor Karanka: Middlesbrough risk dents Premier League dream". BBC Sport.
  28. (15 May 2015). "Middlesbrough 3–0 Brentford". BBC Sport.
  29. Shepka, Phil. (25 May 2015). "Middlesbrough 0–2 Norwich". BBC Sport.
  30. (7 August 2015). "Aitor Karanka: Middlesbrough head coach signs new deal". BBC Sport.
  31. (12 March 2016). "Aitor Karanka: Middlesbrough head coach considering future at Riverside". BBC Sport.
  32. (7 May 2016). "Middlesbrough strike it rich with Premier League promotion". [[The Express Tribune]].
  33. (16 March 2017). "Aitor Karanka: Middlesbrough sack manager after three and a half years". BBC Sport.
  34. (17 March 2017). "Middlesbrough chairman Steve Gibson says tired Aitor Karanka 'sacrificed himself'". [[Sky Sports]].
  35. (8 January 2018). "Nottingham Forest sign new manager". Nottingham Forest F.C..
  36. (31 December 2017). "Mark Warburton: Nottingham Forest sack manager after nine months in charge". BBC Sport.
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  38. (7 April 2018). "Middlesbrough vs Nottingham Forest on 07 Apr 18 - Match Centre - Nottingham Forest".
  39. (14 June 2018). "João Carvalho transferred to Nottingham Forest". [[S.L. Benfica]].
  40. (14 June 2018). "Forest agree double signing". Nottingham Forest Football Club.
  41. "Forest 2–2 Birmingham". Nottingham Forest Website.
  42. (1 December 2018). "Forest 2–0 Ipswich". Nottingham Forest Website.
  43. "Millwall 1–0 Forest - Nottingham Forest Website".
  44. (11 January 2019). "Aitor Karanka: Nottingham Forest manager leaves Championship club". BBC Sport.
  45. Taylor, Daniel. (6 May 2021). "Nottingham Forest chief executive Ioannis Vrentzos considering his role within the club".
  46. (31 July 2020). "Aitor Karanka appointed Birmingham City head coach". Sky Sports.
  47. (16 March 2021). "Club Statement: Aitor Karanka".
  48. (14 March 2021). "Karanka and Birmingham part ways".
  49. (16 March 2021). "Lee Bowyer: Birmingham City appoint former Charlton boss as replacement for Aitor Karanka".
  50. Azcoytia, Jorge. (18 April 2022). "Granada announce Aitor Karanka as new head coach".
  51. (20 April 2022). "Atletico Madrid fail to strengthen top-four bid after goalless draw". The 42.
  52. (22 May 2022). "Granada relegated in Spain after missed penalty".
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  54. (8 November 2022). "Comunicado Oficial Aitor Karanka". Granada CF.
  55. Johns, Craig. (9 November 2022). "Former Middlesbrough manager Aitor Karanka sacked by Granada after seven months in the job".
  56. (4 January 2023). "Karanka, nuevo entrenador del Maccabi Tel Aviv". Marca.
  57. (25 June 2023). "Aitor Karanka no continuará como entrenador del Maccabi Tel Aviv". [[Cadena COPE]].
  58. Rubio, Alberto. (14 May 2021). "Aitor Karanka launches AK Coaches' World".
  59. (14 May 2021). "Women's football set to take centre stage at AK Coaches' World".
  60. (20 May 2002). "David Karanka desvela que Aitor puede volver a Bilbao". Diario AS.
  61. Ripalda, Pallarés. (4 October 2011). "33 años no son nada". [[La Verdad (Murcia).
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  63. (30 December 2016). "Karanka: Club matches". HeimSpiel Medien.
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  65. "Karanka Matches: 2021–22, 2022–23: Granada".
  66. "Aitor Karanka manager".
  67. "Central sobrio y con un palmarés espectacular". Real Madrid.
  68. (28 January 2015). "Karanka: "Tras tres años con Mourinho, pienso como él"". [[20 minutos]].
  69. Ortego, Enrique. (29 May 1996). "2–1: Iván colmó un Montjuic casi vacío". [[ABC (newspaper).
  70. Aguilar, Francesc. (16 April 1994). "España pierde la inocencia". Mundo Deportivo.
  71. Newsum, Matt. (7 May 2016). "Middlesbrough 1–1 Brighton & Hove Albion". BBC Sport.
  72. (6 February 2015). "Aitor Karanka named Sky Bet Championship Manager of the Month". [[The Football League]].
  73. (9 October 2015). "Aitor Karanka named Sky Bet Championship Manager of the Month". Middlesbrough F.C..
  74. (9 January 2016). "Aitor Karanka named Sky Bet Championship Manager of the Month". The Football League.
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