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   » » Wiki: Lucas Alcaraz
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Luis Lucas Alcaraz González (born 21 June 1966) is a Spanish football manager.

In a managerial career of over two decades, he competed in ten seasons at the helm of Recreativo (with whom he reached the 2003 Copa del Rey final), Racing de Santander, and . He was also in charge of eight clubs in the Segunda División, winning promotion with Recreativo and , and had a brief spell in international selection with Algeria.


Football career
Born in , , Alcaraz started coaching with in 1995 at the age of 29, achieving two top-four finishes in the Segunda División B in his three-year spell but failing to promote in the playoffs. In the following two seasons he managed in the same tier and region, with Almería CF and Dos Hermanas CF, suffering relegation with the former.

In June 2000, the 34-year-old Alcaraz signed for Recreativo de Huelva, helping the oldest club in Spain return to after an absence of 23 years in 2002 behind champions Atlético Madrid and Racing de Santander. Even though Recre returned to the second division immediately, they also managed to reach the final of the Copa del Rey, losing 3–0 to .

Alcaraz then moved to Racing Santander, being sacked midway through the 2004–05 campaign due to bad results. He spent the following two seasons in the Segunda División, helping to promote in 2007 but being immediately relegated afterwards – he was fired on 6 March 2008 – and meeting the same fate with his following club, Recreativo.

In the summer of 2009, Alcaraz signed with another team in his native Andalusia, Córdoba CF (division two), helping the side finish tenth in his first season. In late June 2011, he re-joined Almería – now called Unión Deportiva – recently relegated from the top flight.

On 3 April 2012, after only four points in six games and no wins, Alcaraz was relieved of his duties. On 30 January of the following year, after a very short spell in with Aris Thessaloniki FC, he returned to his country and Granada, with the club now in the top tier.

Alcaraz was appointed at on 21 October 2014, replacing fired José Luis Mendilibar after just eight rounds. On 25 October of the following year, following a 0–4 home defeat to , he was sacked.

On 11 June 2016, Alcaraz was announced as the new manager, only to refuse the job six days later. On 3 October, he began his third spell at Granada.

As the team stood second-bottom in the table, Alcaraz was relieved of his duties on 10 April 2017. Three days later, he was appointed at the helm of the Algeria national side, but was fired in October after failing to qualify to the 2018 FIFA World Cup, receiving a €345,000 payout.

Alcaraz returned to Almería on 16 November 2017, replacing Luis Miguel Ramis. He resigned the following 24 April, after an eight-match winless run.

On 22 October 2018, Alcaraz was appointed manager in the place of sacked . On 17 December, he was himself dismissed.

Alcaraz was named manager of Albacete Balompié on 3 February 2020, still in the second division, He was relieved of his duties on 13 October, just five matches into the new season.

On 29 December 2021, Alcaraz moved to Cyprus with Olympiakos Nicosia, but left after collecting no wins in eight games. In November 2022, he became 's third manager of the second-tier campaign.

On 6 June 2023, after the relegation of the side, Alcaraz left. On 24 December, he signed for F.C. Nassaji Mazandaran in the Persian Gulf Pro League, leaving his post the following February.


Personal life
Alcaraz's father, , was a and a , being a longtime secretary-general of the Communist Party of Andalusia. His grandfather was Manuel González, and his namesake his uncle.


Managerial statistics
>+ Managerial record by team and tenure
16 October 199522 February 1998



Almería 22 May 19988 November 1998

Dos Hermanas 2 July 199916 May 2000

Recreativo 10 June 200030 June 2003



Racing Santander 31 July 20039 February 2005


26 June 200518 June 2006

20 June 20066 March 2008


Recreativo 7 October 200815 June 2009

Córdoba 25 June 20098 June 2011


Almería 26 June 20114 April 2012

Aris 3 December 201229 January 2013

30 January 201319 May 2014


21 October 201425 October 2015


3 October 201610 April 2017

Algeria 13 April 201711 October 2017

Almería 16 November 201724 April 2018

22 October 201817 December 2018

Albacete 3 February 202013 October 2020


Olympiakos Nicosia 29 December 202116 February 2022

28 November 20226 June 2023

Nassaji Mazandaran 24 December 202325 February 2024


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