List of Paris Saint-Germain F.C. managers

Paris Saint-Germain Football Club have had 30 managers, of whom 16 have won at least one trophy.[1][2] Argentinian coach Mauricio Pochettino is the current manager.[3] The former PSG player and captain has been in charge since January 2021.[1][4] Pierre Phelipon, for his part, became the club's first manager ever in 1970. He was also the first of two player-managers in their history, the other being Jean-Michel Larqué.[5][6] In 1971, Phelipon guided the Parisians to Ligue 1 as well as winning their maiden trophy, the Ligue 2 title.[5] Former Serbian player Velibor Vasović was the first foreign manager to coach PSG in 1976.[1]

Georges Peyroche coached PSG during three years and eight months, being their longest-serving manager and, so far, the only one to hold the position for more than three seasons.[1][2] He led Paris to consecutive French Cup victories in 1982 and 1983, the club's first major titles. In 1986, Gérard Houllier became the first manager to make PSG champions of France. Artur Jorge claimed their second Ligue 1 title in 1994, winning one French Cup as well. The capital side had to wait 19 years for their third crown, clinched under Carlo Ancelotti in 2013. Laurent Blanc, Unai Emery and Thomas Tuchel have since added further league titles.[7] Ancelotti, Blanc (twice) and Emery, are the only PSG managers to have won the Ligue 1 Manager of the Season award.[8]

Laurent Blanc is the club's most successful manager in terms of trophies won, with eleven. In his three campaigns on the bench, Paris won the league and league cup double once and the domestic quadruple twice, which translates into three Ligue 1 titles, two French Cups, three French League Cups and three French Super Cups. Next is Unai Emery with one domestic quadruple, one domestic cup double and another super cup, for a total of seven trophies.[7] Thomas Tuchel completes the podium, with six trophies. He clinched the domestic quadruple once in addition to separate league and super cup titles. Most notably, he steered PSG to their first UEFA Champions League final in 2020, narrowly losing to Bayern Munich.[2][9]

PSG legendary players Luis Fernández and Ricardo were also successful managers.[7] In fact, Fernández won five trophies during two separate spells at the Parc des Princes, being only behind Blanc, Emery and Tuchel. He led the Red and Blues to their two European titles, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1996 and the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 2001, as well as the domestic cup double and the French Super Cup in 1995.[10] He also holds the club record for most games managed, with 244.[7] Ricardo, who succeeded Fernández, lost two European finals, the 1996 UEFA Super Cup and the 1997 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Final, but guided PSG to the domestic cup double in 1998.[7][11]

Managers

As of 3 February 2021.[1][2]
No. Manager From To G W D L GF GA GD Win %
1 Pierre Phelipon [upper-alpha 1] August 1970 May 1972 74 30 22 22 112 97 +15 40.54
2 Robert Vicot August 1972 August 1975 131 65 33 33 265 180 +85 49.62
3 Just Fontaine September 1975 June 1976 41 15 12 14 66 58 +8 36.59
4 Velibor Vasović [upper-alpha 2] August 1976 May 1977 73 31 14 28 128 120 +8 42.47
November 1978 October 1979
5 Ilija Pantelić May 1977 June 1977 4 2 2 0 7 2 +5 50.00
6 Jean-Michel Larqué [upper-alpha 3] August 1977 August 1978 48 17 11 20 88 81 +7 35.42
7 Pierre Alonzo August 1978 November 1978 10 3 3 4 16 15 +1 30.00
No Manager [upper-alpha 4] 4 November 1978 1 0 0 1 1 2 −1 00.00
8 Camille Choquier October 1979 3 2 0 1 5 3 +2 66.67
9 Georges Peyroche November 1979 June 1983 211 100 46 65 350 273 +77 47.39
April 1984 March 1985
10 Lucien Leduc July 1983 March 1984 38 17 12 9 56 39 +17 44.74
11 Christian Coste April 1985 June 1985 16 6 3 7 21 25 −4 37.50
12 Gérard Houllier [upper-alpha 5] July 1985 September 1987 123 55 34 34 146 107 +39 44.72
February 1988 June 1988
13 Erick Mombaerts October 1987 December 1987 8 1 3 4 6 12 −6 12.50
14 Tomislav Ivić July 1988 May 1990 86 41 21 24 111 88 +23 47.67
15 Henri Michel July 1990 May 1991 41 15 12 14 42 44 −2 36.59
16 Artur Jorge July 1991 May 1994 167 84 53 30 236 118 +118 50.30
October 1998 March 1999
17 Luis Fernández July 1994 May 1996 244 125 61 58 361 209 +152 51.23
December 2000 May 2003
18 Ricardo August 1996 May 1998 106 54 24 28 164 106 +58 50.94
19 Alain Giresse July 1998 October 1998 11 4 2 5 10 11 −1 36.36
20 Philippe Bergeroo March 1999 December 2000 75 35 16 24 127 101 +26 46.67
21 Vahid Halilhodžić August 2003 February 2005 80 36 27 17 100 75 +25 45.00
22 Laurent Fournier February 2005 December 2005 36 17 7 12 47 38 +9 47.22
23 Guy Lacombe January 2006 January 2007 54 18 20 16 70 57 +13 33.33
24 Paul Le Guen January 2007 May 2009 132 62 30 40 167 127 +40 46.97
25 Antoine Kombouaré August 2009 December 2011 134 61 39 34 205 138 +67 45.52
26 Carlo Ancelotti January 2012 May 2013 77 49 19 9 153 64 +89 63.64
27 Laurent Blanc August 2013 May 2016 173 126 31 16 391 126 +265 72.83
28 Unai Emery August 2016 May 2018 114 87 15 12 312 92 +220 76.32
29 Thomas Tuchel August 2018 December 2020 127 95 13 19 337 103 +234 74.80
30 Mauricio Pochettino January 2021 Present 7 5 1 1 16 5 +11 71.43

Honours

As of the 2020 Trophée des Champions.[2]
Rank Manager L1 L2 CdF CdL TdC UCL UCWC UEL USC UIC FCWC Total
1 Laurent Blanc 3 2 3 3 11
2 Unai Emery 1 2 2 2 7
3 Thomas Tuchel 2 1 1 2 6
4 Luis Fernández 1 1 1 1 1 5
5 Artur Jorge 1 1 2
6 Georges Peyroche 2 2
7 Ricardo 1 1 2
8 Gérard Houllier 1 1
9 Carlo Ancelotti 1 1
10 Vahid Halilhodžić 1 1
11 Guy Lacombe 1 1
12 Antoine Kombouaré 1 1
13 Paul Le Guen 1 1
14 Alain Giresse 1 1
15 Pierre Phelipon 1 1
16 Mauricio Pochettino 1 1

Footnotes

  1. Pierre Phelipon acted as player-manager during his first season in charge.[5]
  2. Former Serbian player Velibor Vasović was the first foreign manager to coach PSG.[1]
  3. Jean-Michel Larqué acted as player-manager during his entire tenure.[6]
  4. On November 4, 1978, Paris Saint-Germain visited Monaco for a league match of the 1978–79 season. Pierre Alonzo had surprisingly resigned and his replacement, Velibor Vasović, had not yet arrived. Hence, club president Francis Borelli named the starting lineup that day. This is the only time that PSG have played an official game without a manager on the bench. Monaco won the match (2–1).[2][12]
  5. Gérard Houllier was sacked during the first half of the 1987–88 season. Houllier returned in February 1988 for the second half. He left the club in June 1988 following the end of the campaign.[1]

References

  1. "Mauricio Pochettino 30e entraîneur du Paris Saint-Germain". PSG.FR. 2 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  2. "Listes des saisons". Histoire du PSG. 23 October 2013. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  3. "Mauricio Pochettino devient l'entraîneur du Paris Saint-Germain". PSG.FR. 2 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  4. "Mauricio Pochettino, de retour à Paris !". PSG.FR. 2 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  5. "Interview de Pierre Phelipon". PSG70. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  6. "Jean-Michel Larqué entraîneur-joueur au PSG - L'interview". France Bleu. 28 August 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  7. "Thomas Tuchel, le nouvel homme fort du PSG !". Histoire du PSG. 14 May 2018. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  8. "Le Palmarès du PSG". Histoire du PSG. 9 May 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  9. "Départ de Thomas Tuchel du Paris Saint-Germain". PSG.FR. 29 December 2020. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  10. "PSG director pissed off with Ronaldinho". Onefootball. 25 April 2018. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  11. "Youngest UEFA club competition-winning coaches". UEFA.com. 13 May 2011. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  12. "Quand le PSG affrontait Monaco sans entraîneur". PSG Canal Supporters. 11 November 2018. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
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