José Ródenas Carcelén (born 29 April 1955) is a Spanish retired goalkeeper[1] who later worked as a manager.[2] As a player, he represented his hometown club, Albacete Balompié,[1] and later began his managerial career with them in 1988.[2] He spent two decades working as assistant manager to José Antonio Camacho, including spells with Espanyol (who Carcelén also managed in his own right),[3]Benfica, Real Madrid and the national teams of Spain and China.
Espanyol were eliminated from the UEFA Cup by Dutch side Feyenoord on 29th October,[7] and a 1–0 away loss to Logroñés at Estadio Las Gaunas on 12th January left them 16th in the table after 19 matches, only one point clear of the relegation places.[8] Carcelén left the club,[6] and was replaced by Vicente Miera. Miera lasted only nine matches, and was himself replaced by Paco Flores before the end of the season.[9]
Carcelén was reunited with Camacho in September 1998, when the latter was appointed as head coach of the Spanish national team. The pair led the team to UEFA Euro 2000 and the 2002 FIFA World Cup, resigning after losing to South Korea in the quarterfinals of the latter tournament. They then moved abroad, with Camacho taking over at Portuguese club Benfica in December after the sacking of Jesualdo Ferreira.[10] They spent two years at the club, winning the Taça de Portugal and finishing as Primeira Liga runners-up in 2003–04.[11]
Camacho then resigned[11] to take over at Real Madrid, replacing the sacked Carlos Queiroz,[12] and Carcelén followed. After leaving Real the following year, the pair returned to Benfica in August 2007, with Camacho replacing Fernando Santos as manager.[13] However, they resigned in March after a humiliating home draw with U.D. Leiria.[14]
Carcelén joined up with Camacho once again in 2009 at Osasuna, with the pair ultimately being fired in February 2011 after a 1–0 away loss to Real Sociedad which left the club in the La Liga relegation zone.[15] The pair returned to international management in August 2011 when Camacho took over as head coach of China,[16] with this spell also ending in dismissal, after a shock 5–1 friendly defeat at the hands of Thailand in June 2013.[17]