IFFHS World's Best Club Coach

The IFFHS World's Best Club Coach is an association football award given annually, since 1996, to the most outstanding club coach as voted by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS), an autonomous football federation working without the investment or support of FIFA or UEFA. It is awarded to support the players with their performances. The votes in 1996 were cast by IFFHS's editorial staff, as well as experts from 89 countries spanning six continents. Since then, the votes have been now awarded by 81 experts and selected editorial offices from all of the continents.[1] In 2020, an award for women's club coaches was introduced. The current men's recipient is Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti. The current women's recipient is Lyon coach Jean-Luc Vasseur.

IFFHS World's Best Man Club Coach
SportAssociation football
Awarded forBest performing man club coach of the calendar year
Presented byInternational Federation of Football History & Statistics
History
First award1996
Editions27
First winnerItaly Marcello Lippi
Most winsPortugal José Mourinho (4 awards)
Most recentItaly Carlo Ancelotti (3rd award)
Websitewww.iffhs.com
Marcello Lippi, 1996 Best Club Coach of the Year, first winner of the award

Public reception

The award is officially recognised by FIFA despite the IFFHS not being affiliated with them. However, as the award is usually awarded based on statistics rather than individual merits, it is not held in high regard by some football fans.[2] Four-time winner José Mourinho once jokingly stated that the IFFHS were slow in handing over the award claiming he had not received his award from 2010 in 2012.[3]

Men's winners

The award is awarded at the end of the year. The winning coach and the runner-up in the rankings are awarded a gold and silver trophy respectively at the World Football Gala.[4] Below is a list of the previous men's winners and runners-up since the first award in 1996.[5]

José Mourinho, 2012 Best Club Coach of the Year, and a record four-time winner of the award

List of winners

Year Rank Winning coach Club(s) Points
1996 1stItaly Marcello LippiItaly Juventus
2nd Argentina Ramón Díaz Argentina River Plate
3rd France Luis Fernandez France Paris Saint-Germain
1997 1stGermany Ottmar Hitzfeld[6]Germany Borussia Dortmund 146
2nd Scotland Alex Ferguson England Manchester United 110
3rd Italy Marcello Lippi Italy Juventus 87
1998 1stItaly Marcello LippiItaly Juventus 154
2nd Germany Jupp Heynckes Spain Real Madrid 134
3rd Scotland Alex Ferguson England Manchester United 88
1999 1stScotland Alex FergusonEngland Manchester United 225
2nd Sweden Sven-Göran Eriksson Italy Lazio 86
3rd Germany Ottmar Hitzfeld Germany Bayern Munich 69
2000 1stArgentina Carlos BianchiArgentina Boca Juniors 137
2nd Argentina Héctor Cúper Spain Valencia 124
3rd Spain Vicente del Bosque Spain Real Madrid 116
2001 1stGermany Ottmar Hitzfeld[6]Germany Bayern Munich 228
2nd France Gérard Houllier England Liverpool 125
3rd Argentina Carlos Bianchi Argentina Boca Juniors 120
2002 1stSpain Vicente del BosqueSpain Real Madrid 224
2nd France Arsène Wenger England Arsenal 136
3rd Scotland Alex Ferguson
Germany Klaus Toppmöller
England Manchester United
Germany Bayer Leverkusen
69
2003 1stArgentina Carlos BianchiArgentina Boca Juniors 173
2nd Italy Carlo Ancelotti Italy Milan 117
3rd Italy Marcello Lippi Italy Juventus 70
2004 1stPortugal José MourinhoPortugal Porto 271
2nd France Arsène Wenger England Arsenal 86
3rd France Didier Deschamps France Monaco 72
2005 1stPortugal José MourinhoEngland Chelsea 275
2nd France Arsène Wenger England Arsenal 89
3rd Spain Rafael Benítez England Liverpool 66
2006 1stNetherlands Frank RijkaardSpain Barcelona 236
2nd Portugal José Mourinho England Chelsea 113
3rd Spain Juande Ramos Spain Sevilla 92
2007 1stItaly Carlo AncelottiItaly Milan 193
2nd Scotland Alex Ferguson England Manchester United 134
3rd Spain Juande Ramos Spain Sevilla 104
2008 1stScotland Alex FergusonEngland Manchester United 264
2nd Netherlands Dick Advocaat Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg 144
3rd Argentina Edgardo Bauza Ecuador LDU Quito 64
2009 1stSpain Pep GuardiolaSpain Barcelona 300
2nd Scotland Alex Ferguson England Manchester United 137
3rd Portugal José Mourinho Italy Inter Milan 66
2010 1stPortugal José MourinhoItaly Inter Milan
Spain Real Madrid
294
2nd Spain Pep Guardiola Spain Barcelona 188
3rd Netherlands Louis van Gaal Germany Bayern Munich 75
2011 1stSpain Pep GuardiolaSpain Barcelona 201
2nd Portugal José Mourinho Spain Real Madrid 112
3rd Scotland Alex Ferguson England Manchester United 107
2012 1stPortugal José MourinhoSpain Real Madrid 101
2nd Italy Roberto Di Matteo England Chelsea 99
3rd Argentina Diego Simeone Spain Atlético Madrid 97
2013 1stGermany Jupp Heynckes[7]Germany Bayern Munich 216
2nd Germany Jürgen Klopp Germany Borussia Dortmund 101
3rd Argentina Diego Simeone Spain Atlético Madrid 61
2014 1stItaly Carlo Ancelotti[8]Spain Real Madrid 169
2nd Argentina Diego Simeone Spain Atlético Madrid 139
3rd Spain Pep Guardiola Germany Bayern Munich 76
2015 1stSpain Luis Enrique[9]Spain Barcelona 165
2nd Spain Pep Guardiola Germany Bayern Munich 86
3rd Italy Massimiliano Allegri Italy Juventus 43
2016 1stArgentina Diego Simeone[10]Spain Atlético Madrid 113
2nd France Zinedine Zidane Spain Real Madrid 108
3rd Italy Claudio Ranieri England Leicester City 86
2017 1stFrance Zinedine Zidane[11]Spain Real Madrid 326
2nd Italy Massimiliano Allegri Italy Juventus 70
3rd Italy Antonio Conte England Chelsea 66
2018 1stFrance Zinedine Zidane[12]Spain Real Madrid 296
2nd Germany Jürgen Klopp England Liverpool 109
3rd Spain Pep Guardiola England Manchester City 105
2019 1stGermany Jürgen Klopp[13]England Liverpool 369
2nd Spain Pep Guardiola England Manchester City 100
3rd Netherlands Erik ten Hag Netherlands Ajax 82
2020 1stGermany Hansi Flick[14]Germany Bayern Munich 270
2nd Germany Jürgen Klopp England Liverpool 125
3rd Germany Julian Nagelsmann Germany RB Leipzig 5
2021 1st Germany Thomas Tuchel[15] England Chelsea 230
2nd Spain Pep Guardiola England Manchester City 55
3rd Germany Hansi Flick Germany Bayern Munich 25
2022 1st Italy Carlo Ancelotti[16] Spain Real Madrid 245
2nd Spain Pep Guardiola England Manchester City 45
3rd Morocco Walid Regragui Morocco Wydad AC 40

Statistics

Winners (1996–present)[17]
Coach Wins Years
Portugal José Mourinho 4 2004, 2005, 2010, 2012
Italy Carlo Ancelotti 3 2007, 2014, 2022
Italy Marcello Lippi 2 1996, 1998
Germany Ottmar Hitzfeld 1997, 2001
Argentina Carlos Bianchi 2000, 2003
Scotland Alex Ferguson 1999, 2008
Spain Pep Guardiola 2009, 2011
France Zinedine Zidane 2017, 2018
Spain Vicente del Bosque 1 2002
Netherlands Frank Rijkaard 2006
Germany Jupp Heynckes 2013
Spain Luis Enrique 2015
Argentina Diego Simeone 2016
Germany Jürgen Klopp 2019
Germany Hansi Flick 2020
Germany Thomas Tuchel 2021
Wins by club
Club Total Coaches
Spain Real Madrid 7 4
Spain Barcelona 4 3
Germany Bayern Munich 3 3
England Chelsea 2 2
Argentina Boca Juniors 2 1
Italy Juventus 2 1
England Manchester United 2 1
Spain Atlético Madrid 1 1
Germany Borussia Dortmund 1 1
Italy Inter Milan 1 1
England Liverpool 1 1
Italy Milan 1 1
Portugal Porto 1 1
Wins by nationality
Nationality Total Coaches
 Germany 6 5
 Italy 5 2
 Spain 4 3
 Portugal 4 1
 Argentina 3 2
 France 2 1
 Scotland 2 1
 Netherlands 1 1

Continental winners

Bold indicates the World's Best Man Club Coach winner.

Year Confederation Winner Club(s)
2021 UEFA Germany Thomas Tuchel[18] England Chelsea
CONMEBOL Brazil Renato Gaúcho[19] Brazil Flamengo
CONCACAF Mexico Javier Aguirre[20] Mexico Monterrey
CAF South Africa Pitso Mosimane[21] Egypt Al Ahly
AFC Portugal Leonardo Jardim[22] Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal
OFC England José Figueira[23] New Zealand Auckland City

All-time World's Best Man Coach ranking (since 1996)

As of 25 February 2021[24]
Top 10 coaches
Rank Coach Nationality Points
1 Alex Ferguson  Scotland 257
2 José Mourinho  Portugal 226
3 Arsène Wenger  France 211
4 Joachim Löw  Germany 200
5 Pep Guardiola  Spain 183
6 Vicente del Bosque  Spain 175
7 Carlo Ancelotti  Italy 169
8 Marcello Lippi  Italy 156
9 Diego Simeone  Argentina 152
10 Luiz Felipe Scolari  Brazil 151

The World's Best Man Coach of the Decade (2001–2010)

Arsenal's Arsène Wenger won the first World Coach of the Decade award

In 2011, the IFFHS awarded an additional award to coaches by combining the points awarded in the annual World's Best Club Coach awards, to the coach who had gained the most points collectively over the previous ten years to determine the best coach of the previous decade. This World Coach of the Decade award was awarded to Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger, despite the fact he had never won the annual World's Best Club Coach award.[25][26]

Top 10 coaches[27]
Rank Coach Nationality Points
1 Arsène Wenger  France 156
2 Alex Ferguson  Scotland 148
3 José Mourinho  Portugal 135
4 Fabio Capello  Italy 120
5 Guus Hiddink  Netherlands 112
6 Carlo Ancelotti  Italy 108
7 Luiz Felipe Scolari  Brazil 101
8 Marcelo Bielsa  Argentina 101
9 Rafael Benítez  Spain 97
10 Marcello Lippi  Italy 88

The World's Best Man Club Coach of the Decade (2011–2020)

In 2021, Atlético Madrid's manager Diego Simeone won the World's Best Man Club Coach of the Decade 2011–2020.[28]

Top 10 coaches[28]
Rank Coach Nationality Points
1 Diego Simeone  Argentina 152
2 Pep Guardiola  Spain 144
3 Jürgen Klopp  Germany 105
4 José Mourinho  Portugal 91
5 Massimiliano Allegri  Italy 77
6 Unai Emery  Spain 70
7 Zinedine Zidane  France 59
8 Carlo Ancelotti  Italy 57
9 Mauricio Pochettino  Argentina 56
10 Marcelo Gallardo  Argentina 56

Women's winners

IFFHS World's Best Woman Club Coach
SportAssociation football
Awarded forBest performing woman club coach of the calendar year
Presented byInternational Federation of Football History & Statistics
History
First award2020
Editions3
First winnerFrance Jean-Luc Vasseur
Most winsFrance Sonia Bompastor
Spain Lluís Cortés
France Jean-Luc Vasseur
(1 award each)
Most recentFrance Sonia Bompastor (1st award)
Websitewww.iffhs.com

The award is awarded at the end of the year. Below is a list of the previous women's winners and runners-up since the first award in 2020.

List of winners

Year Rank Coach Club(s) Points
2020 1stFrance Jean-Luc Vasseur[29]France Lyon 250
2nd England Emma Hayes England Chelsea 50
3rd Spain Lluís Cortés Spain Barcelona 20
2021 1st Spain Lluís Cortés[30] Spain Barcelona 185
2nd France Sonia Bompastor France Lyon 55
3rd England Emma Hayes England Chelsea 35
2022 1st France Sonia Bompastor[31] France Lyon 145
2nd Spain Jonatan Giráldez Spain Barcelona 55
3rd Brazil Hoffmann Túlio Brazil Palmeiras 25

Statistics

Winners (2020–present)
Coach Wins Years
France Jean-Luc Vasseur 1 2020
Spain Lluís Cortés 2021
France Sonia Bompastor 2022
Wins by club
Club Total Coaches
France Lyon 2 2
Spain Barcelona 1 1
Wins by nationality
Nationality Total Coaches
 France 2 2
 Spain 1 1

Continental winners

Bold indicates the World's Best Woman Club Coach winner.

Year Confederation Winner Club(s)
2021 UEFA Spain Lluís Cortés[32] Spain Barcelona
CONMEBOL Brazil Arthur Elias[33] Brazil Corinthians
CONCACAF Mexico Roberto Medina[34] Mexico Tigres UANL
CAF Ghana Yusif Basigi[35] Ghana Hasaacas
AFC Australia Ante Juric[36] Australia Sydney FC
OFC New Zealand Juan J. Chang[37] New Zealand Coastal Spirit

See also

References

  1. "Guardiola voted best coach in the world". ESPN. Archived from the original on 22 January 2013. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  2. "Guardiola voted IFFHS' World's Best Club Coach". Total Barca. 6 January 2012. Archived from the original on 8 January 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  3. "Jose Mourinho affirms Kaka will be staying at Real Madrid despite Paris Saint-Germain speculation". Goal.com. 6 January 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  4. "Pep Guardiola, for the second time, obtained recognition as the best coach in the world". NTN24. 6 January 2012. Archived from the original on 30 January 2013. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  5. Erik Garin (2 August 2007). "IFFHS' World's Best Coaches of the Year 1996-2006". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  6. Massimo Marzocchi (5 January 2002). "Hitzfeld honoured for success at Bayern". The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  7. "Josef "Jupp" Heynckes is the world's best club coach 2013". IFFHS. 10 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  8. "THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH 2014". IFFHS. 21 January 2015. Archived from the original on 21 January 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  9. "THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH 2015". IFFHS. 4 January 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  10. "THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH 2016 : Diego Simeone". IFFHS. 26 December 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  11. "THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH 2017: THE CROWN OF ZIDANE". IFFHS. 5 December 2017. Archived from the original on 8 December 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  12. "IFFHS AWARDS 2018 – THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH 2018 : ZIDANE'S SECOND COACH AWARD !". IFFHS. 29 November 2018. Archived from the original on 30 November 2018. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
  13. "IFFHS AWARDS 2019 – THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH : JÜRGEN KLOPP (GERMANY/FC LIVERPOOL)". IFFHS. 26 November 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  14. "THE WORLD'S BEST MAN CLUB COACH 2020 - HANS DIETER FLICK (GERMANY/FC BAYERN MÜNCHEN)". IFFHS. 7 December 2020. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
  15. "IFFHS MEN'S WORLD BEST CLUB COACH 2021 - THOMAS TUCHEL". IFFHS. 30 November 2021. Archived from the original on 30 November 2021. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  16. "IFFHS AWARDS 2022 - MEN'S WORLD BEST CLUB COACH". IFFHS. 9 January 2023. Retrieved 9 January 2023.
  17. "The World's Best Football Men Club Coach". IFFHS. Archived from the original on 14 April 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
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  20. "IFFHS MEN'S CONTINENTAL AWARDS 2021 - CONCACAF". IFFHS. 16 December 2021. Archived from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
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  23. "IFFHS MEN'S CONTINENTAL AWARDS 2021 - OFC". IFFHS. 20 December 2021. Archived from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  24. "IFFHS ALL TIME RANKING OF THE WORLD'S BEST COACH (1996-2020)". International Federation of Football History & Statistics. 19 February 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  25. "Wenger: World Coach of the Decade". ESPN. Archived from the original on 6 July 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  26. "Arsene Wenger coach of the decade". Soccer Magazine. Archived from the original on 10 January 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  27. "HISTORY - IFFFHS AWARDS - THE WORLD'S BEST COACH OF THE FIRST DECADE (2001-2010)". IFFHS. 6 May 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  28. "IFFHS World's Best Man Club Coach of the Decade 2011–2020". IFFHS. 11 January 2021.
  29. "THE WORLD'S BEST WOMAN CLUB COACH 2020 - JEAN LUC VASSEUR (FRANCE/OLYMPIQUE LYON)". IFFHS. 7 December 2020. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
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  35. "IFFHS WOMEN's CONTINENTAL AWARDS 2021 - CAF". IFFHS. 12 December 2021. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 12 December 2021.
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