List of FIFA World Cup winning managers

Source From Wikipedia English.

The FIFA World Cup is considered the most prestigious association football tournament in the world. The twenty-two World Cup tournaments have been won by eight national teams. Brazil have won five times, followed by Germany and Italy with four titles each; Argentina with three titles, France and Uruguay, with two titles each; and England and Spain, with one title each. The role of the manager is to select the squad for the World Cup and develop the tactics of the team. Pressure is attached to the role due to the significance of winning a World Cup and the lack of day-to-day contact with players during the regular club season aside from international breaks.

List of FIFA World Cup winning managers - Wikidata
Vittorio Pozzo is the only manager to have won the World Cup twice.

Alberto Suppici led the Uruguay national team to victory in the inaugural tournament in 1930. Vittorio Pozzo is the only person who has won the World Cup twice as a manager, in 1934 and 1938 with Italy. Twenty-one different managers have won the World Cup and all winning managers led their own country's national team. Five other managers finished as winners once and runners-up once; both Helmut Schön (winner in 1974, runner-up in 1966) and Franz Beckenbauer (winner in 1990, runner-up in 1986) for West Germany, Carlos Bilardo (winner in 1986, runner-up in 1990) for Argentina, Mário Zagallo (winner in 1970, runner-up in 1998) for Brazil, and Didier Deschamps (winner in 2018, runner-up in 2022) for France.

Carlos Alberto Parreira holds the record for managing at the most FIFA World Cup final tournaments with six appearances while managing five different national teams. Schön, who led West Germany to victory in the 1974 World Cup, has managed the most matches in the tournament at 25, and won a record 16 matches during his spell as West Germany manager from 1966 to the 1978 FIFA World Cup. Suppici is the youngest manager to win the World Cup, being 31 in 1930. Zagallo and César Luis Menotti were also in their 30s when they won the World Cup. Zagallo was 38 years old in 1970 and Menotti was 39 years old in 1978. Vicente del Bosque is the oldest coach to win the World Cup at 59 in 2010.

Three men have won the tournament both as a player and as a manager; Zagallo (as a player in 1958 and 1962, as a manager in 1970), Beckenbauer (as a player in 1974, as a manager in 1990) and Didier Deschamps (as a player in 1998, as a manager in 2018). Both Beckenbauer and Deschamps were also the captain of their respective teams while winning the World Cup as a player.

Winning managers

Mário Zagallo of Brazil (left), Franz Beckenbauer of Germany (middle) and Didier Deschamps of France (right), have won the World Cup as a player and a manager for their respective countries.
FIFA World Cup-winning managers
Tournament Winning manager Nationality Winning national team
1930 Alberto Suppici   Uruguay   Uruguay
1934 Vittorio Pozzo   Italy   Italy
1938 Vittorio Pozzo   Italy   Italy
1950 Juan López Fontana   Uruguay   Uruguay
1954 Sepp Herberger   West Germany   West Germany
1958 Vicente Feola   Brazil   Brazil
1962 Aymoré Moreira   Brazil   Brazil
1966 Alf Ramsey   England   England
1970 Mário Zagallo   Brazil   Brazil
1974 Helmut Schön   West Germany   West Germany
1978 César Luis Menotti   Argentina   Argentina
1982 Enzo Bearzot   Italy   Italy
1986 Carlos Bilardo   Argentina   Argentina
1990 Franz Beckenbauer   West Germany   West Germany
1994 Carlos Alberto Parreira   Brazil   Brazil
1998 Aimé Jacquet   France   France
2002 Luiz Felipe Scolari   Brazil   Brazil
2006 Marcello Lippi   Italy   Italy
2010 Vicente del Bosque   Spain   Spain
2014 Joachim Löw   Germany   Germany
2018 Didier Deschamps   France   France
2022 Lionel Scaloni   Argentina   Argentina

By nationality

Nationality Manager(s) Number of
wins
  Brazil 5 5
  Italy 3 4
  Germany 4 4
  Argentina 3 3
  Uruguay 2 2
  France 2 2
  England 1 1
  Spain 1 1

See also

Notes

Bibliography

  • Lisi, Clemente A. (2022). The FIFA World Cup: A History of the Planet's Biggest Sporting Event. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-5381-5643-8.
  • Marshall, Anne (1997). Guinness Book of Knowledge. Guinness Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85112-046-1.
  • McColl, Graham (2010). How to Win the World Cup. Transworld Publishers. ISBN 978-0-593-06622-5.
  • Radnedge, Keir (2022). World Soccer Records. Welbeck Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-80279-356-7.

References

External links