Pablo Longoria

Spanish football executive (born 1986) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pablo Fernández Longoria (born 9 June 1986)[1] is a Spanish football executive. He served as the president of Olympique de Marseille, succeeding Jacques-Henri Eyraud.

Succeeded byAlban Juster
BornPablo Fernández Longoria
(1986-06-09) 9 June 1986 (age 39)
Oviedo, Spain
OccupationFootball executive
Quick facts President of Olympique de Marseille, Preceded by ...
Pablo Longoria
Longoria in 2024
President of Olympique de Marseille
In office
26 February 2021  1 March 2026
Preceded byJacques-Henri Eyraud
Succeeded byAlban Juster
Personal details
BornPablo Fernández Longoria
(1986-06-09) 9 June 1986 (age 39)
Oviedo, Spain
OccupationFootball executive
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Early life and career

Born in Oviedo, Pablo Longoria began at 12 to watch football matches every day as a hobby.[2] A supporter of Sporting Gijón,[3] he enjoys video games such as FIFA 2000 and Football Manager and gained from them a deep knowledge of players and tactical aspects of football.[4] In 2005, he gained work experience with the agent Eugenio Botas who works most notably with the Spanish manager Marcelino. Marcelino, as manager of Recreativo (from 2005 to 2007) then of Racing Santander (from 2007 to 2008), relied on the analysis of the young Longoria while building his team.[5][4]

Career

Longoria began his career as a media consultant with Radio Marca after having been spotted by the journalist Axel Torres on the forum Soccerole.com, which he led.[6] At the same time, he began a career as a scout at the English club Newcastle United in November 2007.[7] He didn't stay there very long however, before becoming head scout at Recreativo in February 2009. He later revealed that he wished to hire the Portuguese manager André Villas-Boas as head coach at the club. Villas-Boas signed instead with Académica de Coimbra.[8]

In December 2010, he became a scout at Atalanta, then in the Italian Serie B. After three years at the club, he joined Sassuolo in July 2013 as head scout, before joining Juventus in August 2015. Notably, he was responsible for the decision to sign the Uruguayan midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur.[9][5]

Longoria, who can speak six languages (Spanish, French, English, Italian, Portuguese and German), became sporting director of Valencia in February 2018. Famous for his work, he has said that he watches seven or eight matches of football most days.[10]

Marseille

Longoria was named sporting director of French club Olympique Marseille (OM) on 26 July 2020, succeeding his compatriot Andoni Zubizarreta.[9][11] He initially declared his intention to work for the club for five years, with the objective of stabilizing Marseille as one of the 20 best European clubs.[12][13] Later, however, he stated that he wanted to stay at Marseille for a long time, making it his “last great adventure”.[14] During his time at the club, he invested in youth, bringing in players such as the Brazilian Luis Henrique, and heightening the clubs scouting reach in Africa.[citation needed]

On 26 February 2021, he was named president of Marseille with responsibility for the financial and sporting sectors of the club.[15] Longoria became the youngest president of the club since 1909.[16] He brought in Jorge Sampaoli to succeed Nasser Larguet, the interim manager following the departure of André Villas-Boas.[17] In July 2022, Sampaoli left the club by mutual consent, and was replaced by Igor Tudor.[18] Tudor would go on to stay only one season at OM,[19] and was succeeded by Longoria's former colleague Marcelino, who himself only lasted three months before resigning. Marcelino quit due to fans' groups reportedly "threatening" the club's hierarchy during a meeting with club staff.[20] In an interview with La Provence, Longoria stated that "it is not normal for a football director to be threatened". Accused by supporters of lining his pockets with the club's money, Longoria asked owner Frank McCourt's group McCourt Global to conduct an investigation to prove his innocence.[21] On 22 September, Longoria confirmed his intention to remain as the president of OM.[22]

During the 2025–26 season, tensions within Olympique de Marseille intensified amid poor results and internal disagreements over the club’s sporting direction. The crisis escalated following the departure of head coach Roberto De Zerbi and growing dissatisfaction among sections of the club’s supporter base. In February 2026, graffiti targeting president Pablo Longoria appeared at the club’s training centre, calling for his resignation as the atmosphere around the club deteriorated.

At the same time, the club’s sporting director Medhi Benatia briefly announced his resignation before being convinced by owner Frank McCourt to remain in his position and take greater control over sporting decisions. The decision effectively reduced Longoria’s influence within the club’s hierarchy and left him responsible primarily for institutional matters. According to reports in French media, Longoria felt personally betrayed by Benatia, whom he had previously promoted within the club’s leadership structure. Following the governance changes and his diminished authority, Longoria informed ownership of his intention to step down as president, with negotiations beginning over the terms of his departure.

References

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