Arsenio Iglesias Pardo (24 December 1930 – 5 May 2023) was a Spanish football player and manager.
Nicknamed O Bruxo de Arteixo ("The Wizard of Arteixo"), he had a five-decade professional career closely associated to Deportivo as both a player and manager.[1]
Iglesias netted seven goals in three separate seasons for the Galicians, adding a career-best eight in 1956–57, which nonetheless ended in relegation.[4] In six of the following eight years he also played in the top division, representing Sevilla FC, Granada CF and Real Oviedo; he amassed competition totals of 238 games and 50 goals, and retired at 35 after a spell in the lower leagues with Albacete Balompié.[5]
Coaching career
Iglesias started coaching one year after retiring, his first appointment being at Deportivo's reserves, which he accumulated with assistant duties in the main squad. Midway through the 1970–71 campaign he was named the first team's manager, leading them to a top-flight promotion[6] and being relegated in 1973.[7]
Iglesias worked in the top tier in two of the next three seasons, leading Burgos CF to the 13th position in 1978–79[10][11] and being fired by AD Almería midway through the 1980–81 campaign amid several internal disputes.[12][13] In 1982 he returned to Deportivo, with the club in division two.[7]
In 1987–88, Iglesias was one of three coaches as Depor nearly suffered relegation to Segunda División B, being saved by a last-minute goal against Racing de Santander.[14] He was again reinstated as first-team manager, finally attaining promotion to the first division in 1991 after ranking second.[7]
Iglesias replaced the dismissed Marco Antonio Boronat at the club's helm late in 1991–92, as Deportivo had to play a relegation playoff against Real Betis, eventually winning 2–1 on aggregate.[15] In the following seasons, however, Super Depor came to fruition, with several team players winning individual accolades and being called to the Spain national team as the side finished three consecutive campaigns in the top three;[16] during this timeframe, he was named Manager of the Year three times, twice by Don Balón and once by El País.[17]
In 2016, Iglesias was bestowed with the highest recognition of Deportivo, a special insignia, and was declared "Blue and White Legend". The event took place at halftime of the last game of the 2015–16 season, at the Estadio Riazor.[22]
Death
Iglesias died in A Coruña on 5 May 2023, at age 92.[23]
^Miranda, Carlos (19 April 2017). "Y con Arsenio empezó todo" [The beginning of it all was with Arsenio]. La Opinión A Coruña (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 January 2022.