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Chelsea's first ever manager was Scottish wing-half John Tait Robertson, who continued to play for the club until he resigned a year later. David Calderhead is Chelsea's longest-serving manager, holding the position from 1907 to 1933, spanning 966 matches. Chelsea's shortest reigning permanent manager is Graham Potter, who was in charge for 31 ...
First foreign (non-UK) manager: Ruud Gullit (Netherlands), from 10 May 1996 to 12 February 1998 [96] Longest-serving manager: David Calderhead – 25 years, 280 days (1 August 1907 to 8 May 1933) [96] [97] Most successful manager: José Mourinho (won eight trophies in two spells as manager, 2004–2007 and 2013–2015) [98]
Simon Weaver is currently the longest-serving manager in the top four divisions, [2] having managed Harrogate Town since May 2009, though eleven of those years were outside the EFL. [ N 1 ] Following Jürgen Klopp 's exit from Liverpool in May 2024, Pep Guardiola of Manchester City is the longest-serving current manager in the Premier League ...
Chelsea supporters will appreciate the passion being shown by Mauricio Pochettino and having a manager who fights for them, according to The Athletic's Simon Johnson. Pochettino was shown a yellow ...
Chelsea: 11 June 1991: 15 February 1993: 615 1992–1993 [49] David Webb ‡ Chelsea: 15 February 1993: 11 May 1993: 85 1993 [50] Glenn Hoddle: Chelsea: 4 June 1993: 10 May 1996: 1071 1993–1996 [51] Ruud Gullit: Chelsea: 10 May 1996: 12 February 1998: 643 1996–1998 [52] Gianluca Vialli: Chelsea: 12 February 1998: 12 September 2000: 943 1998 ...
Chelsea women's team manager Sonia Bompastor on Tuesday condemned the homophobic abuse that striker Sam Kerr and U.S. midfielder Kristie Mewis faced after they announced they are expecting a baby.
The longest managerial reign in association football belongs to Englishman Jimmy Davies who was manager of Waterloo Dock for 50 years. Second to this, Fred Everiss was manager of Football League team West Bromwich Albion for over 45 years, starting his reign in 1902 and ending when he retired in 1948.
Gradi had a 24-year first spell as manager of Crewe between 1983 and 2007. He stepped down from his managerial role in 2007, handing first-team responsibilities to Steve Holland, and became technical director. At that time, Gradi was the longest-serving manager of an English football league club. [1]