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The Premier League and the English Football League (EFL) are the only fully professional football leagues in England. The Premier League is the top tier, and consists of 20 clubs at the top of the English football league system, while the remaining 72 clubs are split into three 24 team divisions of the EFL: the Championship, League One and ...
The league was formed in 1992 as a replacement for the original Football League First Division. To date, there have been 296 managers in charge of the 51 clubs which have played in the Premier League. 262 of those are permanent appointments, and 116 of them in a caretaker/interim capacity. Arsène Wenger holds the record for most games managed ...
The Premier League with its 10% of English managers is an outlier in Europe's top leagues. In Serie A 16 of the 20 managers are Italian (80%), with La Liga having 14/20 Spaniards (70%).
This category is for people who have managed at least one first-team league match in the Premier League (including caretakers and joint managers). See also: List of English Football League managers Contents
The last English manager to win the championship was Howard Wilkinson, who led Leeds United to victory in the 1991–92 season. [9] Arsène Wenger became the first manager from outside the British Isles to win the championship when he guided Arsenal to the 1997–98 Premier League title. [10]
Thirteen managers have been sacked thus far in the 2022-23 English Premier League season. Heres who they are and what teams they led. Tracking English Premier League managers sacked in 2022-23
In 2008–09, Ferguson guided United to another Premier League title, making Manchester United the only club and him the only manager to have won the English league title three times in a row twice. His 12th title, in the 2010–11 season, was United's 19th overall, overtaking Liverpool 's record of 18.
The first manager under whom Chelsea won a major trophy was Ted Drake, who guided the club to the league championship in the 1954–55 season, while Dave Sexton managed the club to their first European honour, a UEFA Cup Winners' Cup triumph in 1971, and Gianluca Vialli guided Chelsea to win the 1998 UEFA Super Cup.