var teamInfo={"6B02481E401D41DD8A44F7EAE1BDE140":"Getafe","03A7D9C89753B0D1D7F7ED990952C548":"193400000.00","892B81E13FEE84C5":"sevillafc@sevillafc.es","EB91D699086F1F17846A1216AD2083C3":"42,714","1CD1A53514962B6A":"1","8165D0EC38D769BD27A209A15276D0CF":"Player
<\/EM>Valencia:
<\/STRONG>Segunda División: 1986–87
Real Madrid:
<\/STRONG>La Liga: 1994–95

Manager
<\/EM>Benfica:
<\/STRONG>Taça da Liga: 2008–09
Atlético Madrid:
<\/STRONG>UEFA Europa League: 2009–10
UEFA Super Cup: 2010
Copa del Rey: Runner-up 2009–10 ","23A207CDBA5674BBB1C9F6E64605564A":"Quique Sanchez Flores","2EC2CE09DA225C510B8476426035EFA9":"

Domestic

<\/U>La Liga<\/STRONG>
Winners (1): 1945–46
Runners-up (4): 1939–40, 1942–43, 1950–51, 1956–57

Segunda Division<\/STRONG>
Winners (4): 1929, 1933–34, 1968–69, 2000–01

Copa del Rey<\/STRONG>
Winners (5): 1935, 1939, 1947–48, 2006–07, 2009–10
Runners-up (4): 1955, 1961–62, 2015–16, 2017–18

Supercopa de Espana:<\/STRONG>
Winners (1): 2007
Runners-up (3): 2010, 2016, 2018

Copa Andalucia<\/STRONG>
Winners (18): 1916–17, 1918–19, 1919–20, 1920–21, 1921–22, 1922–23, 1923–24, 1924–25, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1928–29, 1929–30
1930–31, 1931–32, 1932–33, 1935–36, 1938–39, 1939–40

European

<\/U>UEFA Europa League
<\/STRONG>Winners (5) – record: 2005–06, 2006–07, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16

UEFA Super Cup<\/STRONG>
Winners (1): 2006
Runners-up (4): 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016<\/P>","4852A99C0B1E8B281F768BF6F7769914":"Getafe,Watford,Shanghai Shenhua,Espanyol,Al Ain,Atletico Madrid,SL Benfica,Valencia CF,Real Madrid U17","56D1193A280251FE":"Sevilla","3FC9B61F2E659497C9CEBAE42D62ADEB":"Spain","41780118C08E58E3":"http:\/\/maps.google.com\/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Ramon+Sanchez+Pizjuan+Sevilla&sll=40.453609,-3.686128&sspn=0.008997,0.022659&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=16&iwloc=A","32EED5AE2B03C17AE9CE11F4F5F2936F":"Sevilla","F84B1B8AF3973AEE":"1","4215859A20E707AF2C0683BB3A054242":"32","0EB6A015033C3CEC56DA30D47F1CA55E":"

Playing career
<\/STRONG>During his playing career, Flores spent ten seasons with Valencia CF, starting in 1984–85. However, at first, he did not enjoy his time at the Estadio Mestalla as the club were relegated in his second season, and when they got back into La Liga, finished 14th in 1987–88. However, from that point until 1994, the team never finished lower than 7th, with Flores as an everpresent fixture.

In 1994, Flores moved to Real Madrid and stayed with the capital club for two seasons, winning the league title in the first one. Subsequently, he had a brief spell with Real Zaragoza, retiring from professional football at the age of 32, with Spanish top flight totals of 304 games and 16 goals; in his only season in Segunda División, as Valencia won the championship in 1987, he posted career-highs with 40 games and nine goals.

Flores made 15 appearances for the Spanish national team, and was selected to the 1990 FIFA World Cup squad. His debut came on 23 September 1987, in a 2–0 friendly win over Luxembourg, in Gijón.

Coaching career
<\/STRONG>Flores followed in the footsteps of one of his predecessors at Valencia, Rafael Benítez, by taking charge of Real Madrid's youth teams. After winning plaudits during his time there, he was approached about the manager's job at newly-promoted top flight club Getafe CF, also in Madrid.

At the end of the 2009–10 campaign, Flores led Atlético to the 9th position in the domestic competition, but also to two cup finals: the UEFA Europa League against Fulham (2–1 win) and the Spanish Cup, lost to Sevilla FC.

Frequently clashing with star striker Diego Forlán during 2010–11, Flores announced his departure from Atético Madrid before the season ended, with the team finally qualifying to the Europa League. In early May 2011, he was linked with a move to FC Spartak Moscow.<\/P>","3D3B712BD7BB3346233C27994E5E2815":"1965-2-2","A2993BAC4D9D88EC":"","A3B3C821F4815DD2":"49","CC02AD5B3CF69E6DCAD0426C64DE8022":"Spain","87C021F1E71FC6CD6E05BF0B3DD05793":"65kg","341115063FD1CD8D":"99576","03A7D9C89753B0D1380A64764519199FB9772FF9B422CB1E":"1","84FBAAA541406939DA36722337FBDFD18D691C310C47982D":"1890-1-25","D769ED524110EC21":"Quique Sanchez Flores","F4582884020ECEA691D8D46CC172E947":"174cm","9770E443802D7F63":"27.76","5232E2CC9B16F53977588D5F27A411B8":"

Sevilla Futbol Club is a Spanish professional football club that plays in the top-flight Spanish La Liga championship. The club was established on October 14, 1905, making it the oldest football club from Seville, and the second oldest from Andalusia. The club is the reigning holder of a major trophy: the Spanish Super Cup.

Sevilla is an unusual football club. The club is owned by the fans, with the stocks distributed across a few major holders and a large base of fans. The club supports one of the most renowned training academies in the country, which has produced many famous players.

Sevilla FC has also promoted innovations such as a school of sport psychologists, who provide support for the younger as well as the professional players, and also more recently sports nutrition and medicine. Another recent success for Sevilla FC has been the establishment of its own radio station, "Sevilla FC Radio" (the first of its kind in Spain), their own local tv channel, "SFC TV", as well as other official media.<\/P>","4DC924206DB9E0EB3B8818DC2C371A93":"Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan","7C314F98A46E5CCF80F8B8125BB0A065":"2023-12-18","34A0AE9CBA0644B6":"http:\/\/www.sevillafc.es","A71E2A228B763CFB":"Seville","90CF36599B563A1AA6EE0398DF07A98F":"C\/ Sevilla F\u00fatbol Club, s\/n 41005 Sevilla","37FE64B882E92ECB":"Sevilla","e_index":3};