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He will bring Portugal the first two major titles in its history with the Euro 2016 and the 2018–19 Nations League. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] He leaves his post on 15 December 2022. On 9 January 2023, the Spaniard Roberto Martínez was appointed coach, [ 4 ] he was the first Seleção coach to have a nationality other than Portuguese and Brazilian.
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 .
José Gomes (football manager) José Gomes (footballer, born 1976) Manuel Gomes (football manager) Paulo Gomes (footballer, born 31 March 1975) Paulo Gomes (footballer, born 4 March 1975) Pedro Gomes (footballer) Daniel Gonçalves; Filipe Gonçalves; Horácio Gonçalves; Luís Gonçalves (football manager) Pedro Gonçalves (football manager ...
English. Read; Edit; View history ... Portugal women's national football team managers ... Portuguese football managers (1 C, 450 P) N. Portugal national football ...
Lisbon Championship (2 titles), 1935–36 Campeonato de Portugal (*extinct) József Szabó: 7 March 1937 23 April 1944 234: 180: 19: 35: 975: 345: 76.92: Primeira Liga (2 titles: 1940–41, 1943–44), 1940–41 Taça de Portugal and 1937–38 Campeonato de Portugal (*extinct) Joaquim Ferreira: 1 September 1944 1 July 1945 35: 26: 4: 5: 104: 60 ...
Benfica's first manager ever was Manuel Gourlade, an employee at Fármacia Franco and the club's treasury manager. [4] He served for sixteen matches, from the team's first official match on 4 November 1906 until the end of their second season, in 1907–08, when eight players defected to Sporting CP.
This is a list of Taça de Portugal winning football managers. Albano Paulo led Académica to victory in the inaugural final . Otto Glória , José Maria Pedroto and Sérgio Conceição have won the competition on four occasions, while János Biri and Fernando Vaz guided their teams to the trophy on three occasions.
The national team is controlled by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF), the governing body for football in Portugal. Portugal's home games are played at the Estádio Nacional stadiums in Portugal, and its primary training ground and technical headquarters, Cidade do Futebol , is located in Oeiras .