Manuel José Explained

Manuel José
Full Name:Manuel José de Jesus Silva
Birth Date:1946 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Vila Real de Santo António, Portugal
Position:Midfielder
Youthyears1:1962–1964
Years1:1964–1965
Years2:1965–1969
Caps2:1
Goals2:0
Years3:1965–1966
Clubs3:Sporting Covilhã (loan)
Years4:1966–1967
Clubs4:Varzim (loan)
Years5:1967–1968
Clubs5:Belenenses (loan)
Years6:1969–1973
Caps6:111
Goals6:12
Years7:1973–1976
Caps7:82
Goals7:6
Years8:1976–1977
Caps8:28
Goals8:1
Years9:1977–1979
Caps9:27
Goals9:2
Manageryears1:1978–1982
Managerclubs1:Sporting Espinho
Manageryears2:1982–1983
Managerclubs2:Vitória Guimarães
Manageryears3:1983–1985
Managerclubs3:Portimonense
Manageryears4:1985–1986
Managerclubs4:Sporting CP
Manageryears5:1987–1989
Managerclubs5:Braga
Manageryears6:1990
Managerclubs6:Sporting CP
Manageryears7:1990–1991
Managerclubs7:Sporting Espinho
Manageryears8:1991–1996
Managerclubs8:Boavista
Manageryears9:1996
Managerclubs9:Marítimo
Manageryears10:1997
Managerclubs10:Benfica
Manageryears11:1999–2001
Managerclubs11:União Leiria
Manageryears12:2001–2002
Managerclubs12:Al Ahly
Manageryears13:2002–2003
Managerclubs13:Belenenses
Manageryears14:2003–2009
Managerclubs14:Al Ahly
Manageryears15:2009–2010
Managerclubs15:Angola
Manageryears16:2010
Managerclubs16:Al-Ittihad
Manageryears17:2011–2012
Managerclubs17:Al Ahly
Manageryears18:2012
Managerclubs18:Persepolis

Manuel José de Jesus Silva ComM (born 9 April 1946), simply known as Manuel José (pronounced as /pt/), is a Portuguese football manager.[1]

Some of the teams he has coached include Vitória de Guimarães, Sporting CP, Sporting de Braga, Boavista, Benfica, Al Ahly, Belenenses, and the Angola national team.[2] He is the living coach with most games in the Primeira Liga.[3] [4]

He is regarded as one of the most successful club coaches in CAF competitions, having won the main African club tournament, the CAF Champions League, a record of four times and guiding his team to four consecutive CAF Champions League finals between 2005 and 2008, winning three of those finals. He has also won the CAF Super Cup in 2002, 2006, 2007 and 2009 and was the first manager to take an African team to the medal positions in the FIFA Club World Cup in 2006.

Coaching career

Manuel José first started to manage S.C. Espinho in 1978, where he gained promotion to the 1979–80 Primeira Liga. His first notorious management spell was at Vitória de Guimarães, which he coached during 1982 and 1983, guiding them to their first UEFA Cup after a 4th-place finish. The following season, he moved to Portimonense and in his second season there, he took the team to their highest Primeira Liga place, 5th, qualifying them to the UEFA Cup. Moving to Sporting CP in 1985, he was sacked in his second season, after a 6-game winless spree.

He is credited for discovering Luís Figo while he was working with Sporting CP, a fact that he denies.[5] Some of his most famous matches in his Sporting CP career were a 7–1 win over arch rivals Benfica, the widest win in the Derby de Lisboa, and a 9–0 away win against Íþróttabandalag Akraness, from Iceland, in the 1986–87 UEFA Cup, a record that still remains as their biggest away win in UEFA competitions.[6] He moved to Sporting de Braga where he couldn't manage to find the success he had found in his former teams. Again at Sporting CP in 1990, he was sacked that same year after being eliminated 1–2 in their home stadium, for the Taça de Portugal, to Marítimo. After failing promotion to the 1991–92 Primeira Liga, with his first club, Sporting de Espinho, he moved to Boavista where he won the Taça de Portugal in his first season, and the Supertaça in his second one, also managing to lead them to the Taça de Portugal final in the same year. After five seasons with Boavista, he signed with Marítimo in 1996, although he replaced Paulo Autuori as Benfica manager in the middle of the 1996–97 season and finished in 3rd place. Despite his bad results, he remained for the next season until a humiliating 3–1 defeat to Rio Ave lead Benfica's direction to sack him.[7]

In 1999, Manuel José signed with União de Leiria and left in April, to be replaced by José Mourinho, on his second year with seven games left to be played, while the team was on the run for their highest ever place, to sign with Egyptian giants, Al Ahly, with the main goal being to win the Egyptian Premier League. He marked his first victory with Al Ahly in a friendly game victory 1–0 over Real Madrid.[8] He accomplished the biggest win against the rivals Zamalek by 6–1 before he was sacked after failing to win the league that year, but won his first African Champions League and African Super Cup with a squad consisting mostly of promising young stars like Hossam Ghaly. He returned to Portugal to coach Belenenses in 2002, but left to sign again with Al Ahly the following year.

Since returning to Al Ahly, Manuel José helped give the team a record-breaking unbeaten run of 55 matches.[9] He also managed to qualify them for the African Champions League Final four consecutive times, in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008, winning all but the 2007 final, the first coach to achieve such a feat and bringing his tally to four CAF Champions League titles, making him the most successful manager of the competition. Moreover, he also won the CAF Super Cup in 2006, 2007 and 2009, the Egyptian League five consecutive times, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08 and 2008–09, the Egypt Cup in 2005–06 and 2006–07 and the Egyptian Super Cup four consecutive times, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008.

Arguably his best period in Al-Ahly was the 2005–06 season when Manuel José accomplished the African treble winning the Cup, the League and the Champions League. Other successes that season include the triumphs in the National Super Cup, the African Super Cup and managing to take an African team to their first ever podium in the Club World Cup. Al-Ahly only conceded three defeats in 2006, with two of them coming in the CAF Champions League and the other in the FIFA Club World Cup, in the first half of the 2006–07 season, meaning the team went undefeated the whole 2005–06 season, these achievements enabled José to win the CAF Coach of the Year award in 2006, becoming the first non-African to win the award while managing a club. Although reports were surfacing that he would be on the brink of taking over the Portugal national team after Luiz Felipe Scolari's departure, the Portuguese Football Federation hired instead Carlos Queiroz.[10] Manuel José was honoured by the Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak with the Medal of Sport of First Class for his contributions to Ahly and Egyptian Football on December 24, 2006 and with the Ordem do Mérito in 2008, by Portuguese President Aníbal Cavaco Silva.[11] On May 13, 2009, José was officially appointed by the Angolan Football Federation as the national team's head coach with views on their participation in the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations, which Angola hosted. He penned a one-year contract and took over when he finished the season with Al-Ahly.[12]

Manuel José was awarded the Globos de Ouro Best Portuguese Manager award in 2009 by SIC television network, on his fourth consecutive nomination.[13] After Angola's defeat, against Ghana, in the quarter-finals of the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations, he apologized the entire Angolan people for their premature elimination and left his post by mutual agreement.[14] [15] On 31 May 2010 Al-Ittihad officials hired the Portuguese coach and former Angola manager as their new head coach.[16] In December 2010 José resigned after eight consecutive draws that cost Ittihad their leadership of the board, this marked the first time that José didn't complete a contract for the past 10 years.[17]

On 1 January 2011, Manuel José returned to Al Ahly signing a one-and-a-half-year contract.[18] Uppon his arrival to the Cairo International Airport from Portugal, he was greeted by about 3,000 Al Ahly fans.[19] He had been pointed out as a coach likely to succeed Hassan Shehata after he left the Egyptian managerial position in early June 2011.[20] However, Bob Bradley was chosen for the job. On 7 July 2011, José won his sixth Egyptian championship after recovering from a 6-point deficit to league leaders, rivals Zamalek, when his team was lying on the fourth place and finished ahead of Zamalek, the eventual runners-up, by 5 points.[21] During the Port Said Stadium disaster on 1 February 2012, he was punched and kicked but otherwise unhurt. He has stated that his relationship with the Egyptian people saved him from being killed.[22] [23] [24] Shortly after the clashes, Manuel José made a €47,000 donation to the Al-Ahly fund created to support the victims' families and attended the wake held in honour of the ones who had died, when he returned to Portugal he said he wanted to finish his career at the Egyptian club in remembrance of the lost souls.[25] He returned to Egypt a few days later, on 16 February.[26] He had lost against Espanyol, it was his last match with Al-Ahly, ending his career in coaching in Egypt. He had left after his contract has ended. He had held a press conference after the match stating that Al-Ahly department is trying to renew his contract but, he had refused as there is political unrest in Egypt and also for the stoppage of Football in the nation as he stated "Politics had corrupted football in Egypt" He is recognized as a football legend in Egypt by The Ultras fans either Zamlkawy or Ahlawy[27]

On 3 July 2012, Manuel José was named as Persepolis's head coach and signed a one-year contract with the club, replacing Mustafa Denizli, who resigned from his position in June 2012 for personal reasons. On 7 December 2012, it was announced that Manuel José was no longer the team's head coach for the upcoming fixtures. On 10 December 2012, he was officially sacked by the club and was replaced by Yahya Golmohammadi.

Statistics

TeamFromToRecord
GWDLWin %GFGA+/-
EspinhoJuly 1978July 1982 135137–2
VitóriaJuly 1982May 1983 3524+11
PortimonenseJune 1983July 198578780
Sporting CPJuly 1985October 19869142+49
BragaJanuary 1987May 19895466–12
Sporting CPMay 1990November 19901615+1
BoavistaMay 1991May 1996236169+67
MarítimoMay 1996December 19962520+5
BenficaJanuary 1997July 19972915+14
MarítimoMay 1999December 20003930+9
Al AhlyJuly 2001May 20026827+41
BelenensesJune 2002July 20034748–1
Al-AhlyJuly 2003June 200927997+182
AngolaMay 2009January 201065+1
Al-IttihadMay 2010December 20102816+12
Al AhlyJanuary 2011February 20122812+16
PersepolisJuly 2012December 20122017+3
Total846 420 221 204 49.64% 1214 819 +395

Honours

Player

Benfica

1968–69

Managerial

Sporting de Espinho

Boavista

1992

1991–92

Al-Ahly

2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2010–11

2005–06, 2006–07

2005, 2006, 2007, 2008

2001, 2005, 2006, 2008

2002, 2006, 2007, 2009

Third place 2006

Individual

2006

Special awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Manuel Jose set to Become Persepolis Boss . Kabir News . 2012-07-03.
  2. Web site: Manuel José de Jesus Silva Profile . zerozero.pt . 2011-01-25. pt.
  3. Web site: Cajuda: "Quero ser o treinador com mais jogos em Portugal" . . 2011-06-20 . 2011-06-21 . pt . https://web.archive.org/web/20120326135947/http://www.tvi24.iol.pt/geral/manuel-cajuda-manuel-jose-recorde-academica-malo-de-abreu-maisfutebol/1261421-1679.html . 26 March 2012 . dead .
  4. Web site: + 400 Jogos na I Liga - ANTF - Treinadores de Futebol.
  5. Web site: O Rei luso na Terra dos Faraós . bolanaarea.com . 2011-01-25 . pt . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111002095306/http://www.bolanaarea.com/coluna_renato-4.htm . 2 October 2011 . dmy-all .
  6. Web site: Recordes Europeus . European records. Sporting.pt . 8 July 2015. 22 June 2018.
  7. Book: Carlos Perdigão . 100 Anos de Lenda . 2004 . Diário de Noticias . 972-9335-52-4 . 55–56 . 1 . pt.
  8. Web site: 'Game of the century' Real loses to Al-Ahly; allegations under investigation . . 2001-08-05 . 2011-01-25.
  9. News: Manuel José pode sagrar-se melhor treinador . . 2005-12-09 . 2011-01-25 . pt . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120321100750/http://www.cmjornal.xl.pt/detalhe/noticias/sport/desporto/manuel-jose-pode-sagrar-se-melhor-treinador . 21 March 2012 . dmy-all .
  10. Web site: Manuel José e a sucessão a Scolari: "estava tudo montado" . sapo.cv . 2008-11-18 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  11. News: Manuel José deixa Al-Ahly no próximo ano . . 2009-04-13 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  12. Web site: Manuel José é o novo seleccionador de Angola . . 2009-05-13 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  13. Web site: Manuel José vence o globo de Melhor Treinador do Ano . aeiou.caras.pt . 2009-05-17 . 2011-01-25 . pt . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110127142751/http://aeiou.caras.pt/globos-de-ouro-2008-manuel-jose-vence-o-globo-de-melhor-treinador-do-ano=f21409 . 27 January 2011 . dmy-all .
  14. Web site: Manuel José pede desculpas aos angolanos pelo afastamento dos Palancas. opais.net. 2011-01-25. pt. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110123143807/http://www.opais.net/pt/dossier/?id=1782&det=9393&mid=. 23 January 2011. dmy-all.
  15. Web site: Manuel José já não é seleccionador de Angola . negociosdofutebol.blogspot.com . 2010-02-13 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  16. News: Manuel José assina pelo Al-Ittihad da Arábia Saudita . . 2010-05-28 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  17. Web site: Manuel José fora do Al Ittihad: "Cheguei no momento errado" . maisfutebol.iol.pt . 2010-12-23 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  18. Web site: Manuel José no Al-Ahly, pela terceira vez . maisfutebol.iol.pt . 2011-01-02 . 2011-01-25. pt.
  19. Web site: Thousands welcome José at Cairo Airport . . 2011-01-11 . 2011-01-25.
  20. News: Ahly coach Manuel Jose is a contender for Egypt job. . 2011-06-20 . 2011-06-21.
  21. Web site: Manuel José. Façam-lhe lá uma pirâmide . ionline.pt . 2011-07-09 . 2011-07-12. pt.
  22. News: Levei socos e pontapés mas agora estou bem . . 2012-02-01 . 2012-02-01 . pt . https://web.archive.org/web/20120206222310/http://www.abola.pt/nnh/ver.aspx?id=314021 . 6 February 2012 . dead .
  23. News: "Levei socos, mas também recebi muitos beijos. É por isso que estou aqui", diz Manuel José . . 2012-02-04 . 2012-02-08 . pt . https://web.archive.org/web/20120206222310/http://www.abola.pt/nnh/ver.aspx?id=314021 . 6 February 2012 . dead .
  24. News: Manuel José: "O povo egípcio gosta de mim e foi isso que me salvou" . . 2012-02-04 . 2012-02-08 . pt . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120207081057/http://www.cmjornal.xl.pt/detalhe/noticias/sport/desporto/manuel-jose-o-povo-egipcio-gosta-de-mim-e-foi-isso-que-me-salvou . 7 February 2012 . dmy-all .
  25. News: Manuel José fez doação de 47 mil euros . . 2012-02-03 . 2012-02-08. pt.
  26. Web site: Egito: Manuel José já aterrou no Cairo . futebol365.pt . 2012-02-16 . https://archive.today/20120802090747/http://www.futebol365.pt/noticias/artigo.asp?id=54532&CAT=Internacional . dead . 2012-08-02 . 2012-03-04 . pt .
  27. Web site: محدث .. جوزيه: السياسة أفسدت الرياضة .. وسأكمل مشوارى مع نادي أخر. "Mohammed Yousry. 2012-05-18. https://web.archive.org/web/20120520044703/http://www.yallakora.com/arabic/YK_News/Details.aspx?id=184632&Catid=1&region=&updated=1852012210. dead. 2012-05-20. 2012-05-19. pt.