Lico had several brief spells as manager of Elche in each of the top three divisions of the Spanish football league system, spanning 15 years.
Playing career
Born in Rafal in the Province of Alicante, Lico played in the youth ranks of nearby Elche. When he was considering emigrating to work in Germany, he was promoted to the first team by manager Otto Bumbel, who gave him his professional debut in La Liga on 19 December 1965 in a 2–0 home win over Pontevedra.[1]
Lico was assistant manager to László Kubala – who had given him his international debut – at Elche.[5] At the end of March 1989, the Hungarian left the Franjiverdes by mutual consent, and Lico was put in temporary charge alongside reserve team manager Juan Carlos Lezcano.[6] On 2 April, Lico lost on his debut 3–1 away to Atlético Madrid,[7] and Lezcano took over once his paperwork was complete, for the rest of the season that ended in relegation.[8]
In April 1990, Lico was hired as Elche's third manager of the second-tier campaign, after the sacking of Evaristo Carrió. The team were one point above the relegation zone with seven games to play.[9] He kept the team in the league, but was fired at the end of November and replaced by Argentine Gustavo Silva.[10]
On 21 December 2003, Lico oversaw Elche's 2–1 loss at Alavés between the tenures of Carlos García Cantarero and Oscar Ruggeri.[11] The Argentine was sacked in May with the club in a relegation fight, and Lico took over for the last five games.[12] He kept the side in the division, managing to ensure that the last game was a dead rubber.[13]
^"Kubala, en la cuerda floja" [Kubala, hanging by a thread]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). 28 March 1989. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
^Romero, Juan Carlos (1 April 1989). "Kubala: Crónica de una marcha anunciada" [Kubala: Timeline of an anticipated departure]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
^Alcaide, Jesús (3 April 1989). "3-1: El "Atléti", sin grandes alardes" [3-1: "Atléti", without putting on a show]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 September 2024.
^Hernández, Monserrate (19 June 2004). "El Elche perdona y el Salamanca gana" [Elche pardon and Salamanca win]. Diario AS (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 September 2024.