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Brilliant, the Portuguese reached the final for the first time but lost to Greece, [1] the surprise team of the tournament. Two years later, Portugal presents itself as an expected outsider. Two years later, Portugal presents itself as an expected outsider.
Edgar Cardoso (football manager) Miguel Cardoso (football manager) Carlos André (footballer, born 1971) Carlos Manuel; Álvaro Carolino; Carlos Carvalhal; António Carvalho (footballer) Franclim Carvalho; Rui Casaca; Acácio Casimiro; Jorge Casquilha; Luís Castro (football manager, born 1980) Luís Castro (footballer, born 1961) Domiciano ...
Pages in category "Portugal national football team managers" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In 1939, Benfica changed manager again, hiring János Biri. In his first year, he won the club's last Lisbon Championship as well as their first Portuguese Cup. [17] Over the following six seasons, he managed the team in 272 games, winning three Primeira Liga titles and another two Portuguese Cups. [18]
Lists of football managers in Portugal by club (3 P) A. Académica de Coimbra (football) managers (43 P) Académico de Viseu F.C. managers (24 P) G.C. Alcobaça ...
Catullo Gadda (back row, second from left ) won the 1901 Italian championship with Milan (squad pictured) before becoming Porto's player and first manager.Following the club's rebirth in 1906, Catullo Gadda, who won the Italian title with Milan in 1901, [1] assumed the team's orientation as a player-coach and is historically considered Porto's first-ever manager.
Portuguese football managers (1 C, 450 P) N. Portugal national football team managers (25 P) This page was last edited on 17 January 2019, at 16:55 (UTC). Text is ...
There are 92 association football teams in the top four divisions of English football, all of which have a manager (sometimes given the title of head coach) unless the position is currently vacant or a caretaker manager is in place. The Premier League and the English Football League (EFL) are the only fully professional football leagues in England.