Jump to content

List of Copa Libertadores winning managers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of Copa Libertadores winning football managers. Uruguayan manager Roberto Scarone led Peñarol to success in the inaugural Copa Libertadores finals in 1960 and repeated the feat the following season. Argentine clubs and managers dominated the competition in the late 1960s and 1970s, winning 12 out of 15 tournaments from 1964 to 1978. In the 1990s Brazilian clubs and managers dominated the competition with six wins from 1992 to 1999, after which the second period of Argentine dominance began, with seven wins in the period from 2000 to 2009.

As of the most recent 2024 final, Argentine managers have been the most successful, winning 27 out of 65 tournaments held, followed by Brazilians with 20 wins and Uruguayans with 10 titles. On only nine occasions the tournament was won by foreign managers: then-Yugoslav coach Mirko Jozić led Chilean side Colo-Colo to victory in 1991, and Argentine Edgardo Bauza won the tournament with Ecuadorian club LDU Quito. All three wins by Paraguayan side Olimpia came under foreign managers: Uruguayan Luis Cubilla led them to victory in 1979 and 1990, and Argentine Nery Pumpido in 2002. Portuguese managers Jorge Jesus, Abel Ferreira, and Artur Jorge won the title with Brazilian sides Flamengo, Palmeiras, and Botafogo respectively. Jesus won it in 2019, Ferreira in 2020 and 2021, and Artur Jorge in 2024. Jozić, Jesus, Ferreira, and Artur Jorge are also the only managers from outside South America to have won the competition.

The most successful individual manager is Argentine Carlos Bianchi who won the tournament on four occasions, leading Vélez Sársfield to success in 1994, and then again Boca Juniors in 2000, 2001 and 2003. He is followed by fellow Argentine Osvaldo Zubeldía with three consecutive wins in 1968, 1969 and 1970 (all with Estudiantes), while twelve other managers won the tournament twice.

Along with Carlos Bianchi, only three other managers have won the title with more than one club: Brazilians Paulo Autuori (with Cruzeiro in 1997 and São Paulo in 2005), Luiz Felipe Scolari (with Grêmio in 1995 and Palmeiras in 1999), and Argentine Edgardo Bauza (with LDU Quito in 2008 and San Lorenzo in 2014). Bauza is also the only manager to have won the competition with two clubs from different countries.

The data below does not include the 1948 South American Championship of Champions, as it is not listed by CONMEBOL either as a Copa Libertadores edition or as an official competition. However, at least in the years 1996 and 1997, CONMEBOL entitled equal status to both Copa Libertadores and the 1948 tournament, in that the 1948 champion club (CR Vasco da Gama) was allowed to participate in Supercopa Libertadores, a CONMEBOL official competition that allowed participation for former Libertadores champions only (for example, not admitting participation for champions of other CONMEBOL official competitions, such as Copa CONMEBOL).

By year

[edit]
Osvaldo Zubeldía, winning manager in 1968, 1969 and 1970
Telê Santana, winning manager in 1992 and 1993
Luiz Felipe Scolari, winning manager in 1995 and 1999
Alejandro Sabella, winning manager in 2009
Finals Nationality Winning manager Country Club Ref
1960  URU Roberto Scarone  URU Peñarol [1]
1961  URU Roberto Scarone (2)  URU Peñarol (2) [1]
1962  BRA Lula  BRA Santos [1]
1963  BRA Lula (2)  BRA Santos (2) [1]
1964  ARG Manuel Giúdice  ARG Independiente [1]
1965  ARG Manuel Giúdice (2)  ARG Independiente (2) [1]
1966  URU Roque Máspoli  URU Peñarol (3) [1]
1967  ARG Juan José Pizzuti  ARG Racing [1]
1968  ARG Osvaldo Zubeldía  ARG Estudiantes [1]
1969  ARG Osvaldo Zubeldía (2)  ARG Estudiantes (2) [1]
1970  ARG Osvaldo Zubeldía (3)  ARG Estudiantes (3) [1]
1971  URU Washington Etchamendi  URU Nacional [1]
1972  ARG Pedro Dellacha  ARG Independiente (3) [1]
1973  ARG Humberto Maschio  ARG Independiente (4) [1]
1974  ARG Roberto Ferreiro  ARG Independiente (5) [1]
1975  ARG Pedro Dellacha (2)  ARG Independiente (6) [1]
1976  BRA Zezé Moreira  BRA Cruzeiro [1]
1977  ARG Juan Carlos Lorenzo  ARG Boca Juniors [1]
1978  ARG Juan Carlos Lorenzo (2)  ARG Boca Juniors (2) [1]
1979  URU Luis Cubilla  PAR Olimpia [1]
1980  URU Juan Mujica  URU Nacional (2) [1]
1981  BRA Paulo César Carpegiani  BRA Flamengo [1]
1982  URU Hugo Bagnulo  URU Peñarol (4) [1]
1983  BRA Valdir Espinosa  BRA Grêmio [1]
1984  ARG José Pastoriza  ARG Independiente (7) [1]
1985  ARG José Yudica  ARG Argentinos Juniors [1]
1986  ARG Héctor Veira  ARG River Plate [1]
1987  URU Oscar Tabárez  URU Peñarol (5) [1]
1988  URU Roberto Fleitas  URU Nacional (3) [1]
1989  COL Francisco Maturana  COL Atlético Nacional [1]
1990  URU Luis Cubilla (2)  PAR Olimpia (2) [1]
1991  YUG Mirko Jozić  CHI Colo-Colo [1]
1992  BRA Telê Santana  BRA São Paulo [1]
1993  BRA Telê Santana (2)  BRA São Paulo (2) [1]
1994  ARG Carlos Bianchi  ARG Vélez Sársfield [1]
1995  BRA Luiz Felipe Scolari  BRA Grêmio (2) [1]
1996  ARG Ramón Díaz  ARG River Plate (2) [1]
1997  BRA Paulo Autuori  BRA Cruzeiro (2) [1]
1998  BRA Antônio Lopes  BRA Vasco da Gama [1]
1999  BRA Luiz Felipe Scolari (2)  BRA Palmeiras [1]
2000  ARG Carlos Bianchi (2)  ARG Boca Juniors (3) [1]
2001  ARG Carlos Bianchi (3)  ARG Boca Juniors (4) [1]
2002  ARG Nery Pumpido  PAR Olimpia (3) [1]
2003  ARG Carlos Bianchi (4)  ARG Boca Juniors (5) [1]
2004  COL Luis Fernando Montoya  COL Once Caldas [1]
2005  BRA Paulo Autuori (2)  BRA São Paulo (3) [2]
2006  BRA Abel Braga  BRA Internacional
2007  ARG Miguel Ángel Russo  ARG Boca Juniors (6) [3]
2008  ARG Edgardo Bauza  ECU LDU Quito [4]
2009  ARG Alejandro Sabella  ARG Estudiantes (4) [5]
2010  BRA Celso Roth  BRA Internacional (2)
2011  BRA Muricy Ramalho  BRA Santos (3)
2012  BRA Tite  BRA Corinthians
2013  BRA Cuca  BRA Atlético Mineiro
2014  ARG Edgardo Bauza (2)  ARG San Lorenzo
2015  ARG Marcelo Gallardo  ARG River Plate (3)
2016  COL Reinaldo Rueda  COL Atlético Nacional (2)
2017  BRA Renato Gaúcho  BRA Grêmio (3)
2018  ARG Marcelo Gallardo (2)  ARG River Plate (4)
2019  POR Jorge Jesus  BRA Flamengo (2)
2020  POR Abel Ferreira  BRA Palmeiras (2)
2021  POR Abel Ferreira (2)  BRA Palmeiras (3)
2022  BRA Dorival Júnior  BRA Flamengo (3)
2023  BRA Fernando Diniz  BRA Fluminense
2024  POR Artur Jorge  BRA Botafogo

Managers with multiple titles

[edit]
Rank Nation Manager Won Runner-up Years won Years runner-up Clubs won
1 Argentina Carlos Bianchi 4 1 1994, 2000, 2001, 2003 2004 Vélez Sarsfield, Boca Juniors
2 Argentina Osvaldo Zubeldía 3 1968, 1969, 1970 Estudiantes
3 Uruguay Luis Cubilla 2 2 1979, 1990 1989, 1991 Olimpia
Brazil Luiz Felipe Scolari 2 2 1995, 1999 2000, 2022 Grêmio, Palmeiras
5 Uruguay Roberto Scarone 2 1 1960, 1961 1972 Peñarol
Argentina Juan Carlos Lorenzo 2 1 1977, 1978 1979 Boca Juniors
Brazil Telê Santana 2 1 1992, 1993 1994 São Paulo
Argentina Marcelo Gallardo 2 1 2015, 2018 2019 River Plate
9 Brazil Lula 2 1962, 1963 Santos
Argentina Manuel Giúdice 2 1964, 1965 Independiente
Argentina Pedro Dellacha 2 1972, 1975 Independiente
Brazil Paulo Autuori 2 1997, 2005 Cruzeiro, São Paulo
Argentina Edgardo Bauza 2 2008, 2014 LDU Quito, San Lorenzo
Portugal Abel Ferreira 2 2020, 2021 Palmeiras
Bold = Still active as manager

By nationality

[edit]

This table lists the total number of titles won by managers of each nationality.

Nationality Number
of wins
 Argentina 27
 Brazil 20
 Uruguay 10
 Portugal 4
 Colombia 3
 Yugoslavia 1

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
General
  • "Copa Libertadores de América". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. RSSSF. 2009-07-16. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
  • "Copa Libertadores - Winning Coaches". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. RSSSF. 2004-07-10. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
Specific
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as Andrés, Juan Pablo (10 July 2004). "Copa Libertadores - Winning Coaches". RSSSF. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  2. ^ Homewood, Brian (10 September 2013). "Sao Paulo fire Autuori after 13 games". Reuters. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  3. ^ "Russo ready for Japanese challenge". FIFA. 2007-11-16. Archived from the original on March 27, 2008. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
  4. ^ "Edgardo Bauza, Quito's redeemer". FIFA. 2008-07-08. Archived from the original on October 12, 2010. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
  5. ^ "Así llegó Estudiantes de La Plata a su cuarto título de América" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL. 2009-07-16. Retrieved 2010-01-06.