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Aitor Larrazabal

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Place of birth
  
Bilbao, Spain

Name
  
Aitor Larrazabal

1982–1989
  
Role
  
Footballer


Years
  
Team

Height
  
1.72 m

1989–1991
  
Playing position
  
Defender

Aitor Larrazabal postal aitor larrazabal oficial athletic de bi Comprar

Full name
  
Aitor Larrazabal Bilbao

Date of birth
  
(1971-06-21) 21 June 1971 (age 44)

Salva ballesta y aitor larrazabal en el curso de entrenadores uefa pro


Aitor Larrazábal Bilbao (born 21 June 1971) is a Spanish retired footballer who played solely for Athletic Bilbao, and the current manager of Barakaldo CF.

Contents

Aitor Larrazabal Dura carta de despedida de Aitor Larrazabal Orgullo

A left back of offensive penchant, he appeared in 445 official games for his only club and was also a penalty kick specialist, scoring at least one La Liga goal in 13 of his 14 professional seasons.

Aitor Larrazabal Aitor Larrazabal Fotografas del Athletic Club de Bilbao

Aitor larrazabal tras eliminar al caravaca


Player

Aitor Larrazabal iimgurcomMQiHIjpg

Larrazábal was born in Bilbao, Biscay. Having joined Athletic Bilbao's youth ranks at 11, he started playing professionally with its reserves in Segunda División, and made his first-team debut on 2 September 1990 in a 0–1 away loss against CD Tenerife, finishing his first year in La Liga with 18 games.

Aitor Larrazabal ATHLETIC CLUB BILBAO Aitor Larrazabal Bilbao 28

From then onwards, Larrazábal was an undisputed starter for the Basques, scoring and assisting alike. In the 1997–98 season, as Bilbao finished runner-up, he scored a career-best seven league goals, being instrumental as his team qualified for the subsequent edition of the UEFA Champions League, where he featured, for instance, in both group stage draws against Juventus FC, although they eventually ranked last.

Aitor Larrazabal Aitor Larrazabal previa de la Copa Federacin YouTube

After the emergence of Asier del Horno (another Lezama youth graduate) in the 2002–03 campaign, Larrazábal still featured prominently in his last two seasons combined – 36 matches, three goals – but eventually retired from the game in May 2004 at the age of 33, after a two-decade link with a sole club.

Coach

Larrazábal subsequently became a coach: after starting in amateur football, he joined lowly SD Lemona (Basque Country) from Segunda División B in 2009, leading the side to the sixth position in his first year and narrowly missing out on play-off qualification. After a second season in Lemoa in which the team reached the final of the Copa Federación de España, he returned to Athletic Bilbao to take up a position as sporting director, following the election of former teammate Josu Urrutia as president in July 2011.

In 2013, a reorganisation of functions at the club saw Larrazábal take over responsibility for its youth system, with José María Amorrortu (the director of football) focusing on the senior team. The former resigned from the position in summer 2015, citing professional differences and a desire to return to mangerial roles.

In April 2016, Larrazábal became manager of third-tier Marbella FC for a short spell, and although they only collected two points from his three games in charge, it was enough to successfully steer them away from the relegation zone by the end of the campaign. For the following season he moved back to the Basque Country, taking control of fellow league side SD Amorebieta; they escaped relegation by a single point.

In June 2017, Larrazábal was appointed at Barakaldo CF in the same division.

Managerial statistics

As of 17 September 2017

Personal life

Larrazábal's son, Gaizka, was also a footballer. A right winger by position, in summer 2017 he joined Athletic Bilbao (being assigned to the reserves) from SD Zamudio, having played against the Amorebieta team managed by his father during the preceding season.

References

Aitor Larrazábal Wikipedia


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