Manuel Machado (football manager)

Manuel António Marques Machado (born 4 December 1955) is a Portuguese football manager, currently in charge of Berço Sport Clube.

Manuel Machado
Machado in 2012
Personal information
Full name Manuel António Marques Machado
Date of birth (1955-12-04) 4 December 1955
Place of birth Oliveira, Portugal
Club information
Current team
Berço (manager)
Teams managed
Years Team
1992–1993 Vitória Guimarães (youth)
1993–1994 Vila Real
1995–1996 Vitória Guimarães (youth)
1998–2000 Fafe
2000–2004 Moreirense
2004–2005 Vitória Guimarães
2005–2006 Nacional
2006–2007 Académica
2007–2008 Braga
2008–2010 Nacional
2010–2011 Vitória Guimarães
2012 Aris
2012–2016 Nacional
2017 Arouca
2017 Moreirense
2020– Berço

Football career

Born in the village of Oliveira, in Guimarães, Machado started his career with his local Vitória de Guimarães' youth sides, having a head coach spell with lowly SC Vila Real in between. After two years with another modest club in the north, AD Fafe, he moved to another side in his region, Moreirense FC, helping to promotion from the third division to the Primeira Liga in just two years.[1]

Machado then coached Moreirense to a comfortable 12th position in their debut season, finishing ninth in the following campaign, after which he returned to Guimarães. Subsequently he signed with C.D. Nacional, helping the Madeirans finish a best-ever fifth, with qualification to the UEFA Cup. After almost two years at Académica de Coimbra he joined S.C. Braga, where he did not meet the expectations of a UEFA Cup place, thus resigning in April 2008.[2]

Machado rejoined Nacional for 2008–09,[3] bettering the club's best-ever finish as fourth. However, on 13 December 2009, he announced he would leave the benches for a period, after surgery-related complications; he was replaced by assistant Predrag Jokanović,[4] and eventually left his post at the end of the campaign, replaced by precisely the Serbian.

On 2 June 2010, Machado returned to Vitória Guimarães, taking the Minho team to the final of the Taça de Portugal in his first season.[5] On 26 August 2011, he left the Estádio D. Afonso Henriques after Europa League elimination at the hands of Atlético Madrid (6–0 on aggregate, 4–0 home loss in the second game).[6]

Machado signed with Nacional for a third spell on 13 October 2012, replacing the fired Pedro Caixinha.[7] A contract termination by mutual consent was reached on 28 December 2016, as the team ranked third from bottom in the league and tied for points with the first side inside the relegation zone, having also been ousted from the Portuguese Cup;[8] he was also relieved of his duties at F.C. Arouca on 21 March 2017,[9] becoming the first manager to be fired by two teams in the season,[10] as both eventually dropped down a level.

On 27 May 2017, Machado signed a one-year contract with former club Moreirense.[11] On 29 October, as they were placed second from the bottom in the top division, he was dismissed.[12]

Managerial statistics

As of 19 March 2017
Team From To Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Vitória Guimarães (caretaker) 3 January 1993 10 January 1993 1 0 0 1 0 1 −1 000.00
Vila Real June 1993 21 November 1993 13 4 5 4 15 11 +4 030.77
Vitória Guimarães (caretaker) December 1995 13 January 1996 5 2 1 2 7 5 +2 040.00
Fafe May 1998 June 2000 78 35 24 19 138 93 +45 044.87
Moreirense 2 June 2000 5 June 2004 155 73 38 44 230 168 +62 047.10
Vitória Guimarães June 2004 June 2005 37 17 9 11 43 33 +10 045.95
Nacional June 2005 June 2006 37 15 12 10 43 33 +10 040.54
Académica June 2006 7 November 2007 44 10 13 21 41 63 −22 022.73
Braga 12 November 2007 21 April 2008 24 6 10 8 24 30 −6 025.00
Nacional 21 May 2008 13 December 2009 63 28 17 18 97 81 +16 044.44
Vitória Guimarães 2 June 2010 26 August 2011 46 19 9 18 55 59 −4 041.30
Aris 13 January 2012 22 April 2012 13 6 4 3 17 16 +1 046.15
Nacional 13 October 2012 28 December 2016 168 57 42 69 222 234 −12 033.93
Arouca 11 February 2017 21 March 2017 5 0 0 5 3 14 −11 000.00
Moreirense 27 May 2017 29 October 2017 0 0 0 0 0 0 +0 !
Career totals 689 272 184 233 935 841 +94 039.48

Source: [13][14]

Honours

Moreirense

Vitória Guimarães

References

  1. Bernardino, Augusto (5 February 2017). "O Moreirense podia ser mais um Serzedelo" [Moreirense could be yet another Serzedelo]. Público (in Portuguese). Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  2. "Manuel Machado deixa Braga" [Manuel Machado leaves Braga] (in Portuguese). UEFA. 22 April 2008. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  3. Apresentado o novo treinador principal para a época 2008/2009 (New head coach for the 2008/2009 season presented) Archived 18 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine; CD Nacional, 21 May 2008 (in Portuguese)
  4. Futebol profissional: Jokanovic assume comando técnico do plantel nacionalista (Professional football: Jokanovic takes charge of nacionalistas) Archived 18 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine; CD Nacional, 13 December 2009 (in Portuguese)
  5. Escobar de Lima, Filipe (22 May 2011). "Também o Jamor é o destino do FC Porto" [Jamor is FC Porto's destiny as well]. Público (in Portuguese). Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  6. Machado renunció al Vitória Guimaraes (Machado quit at Vitória Guimaraes); ESPN Deportes, 26 August 2011 (in Spanish)
  7. "Manuel Machado confirmado" [Manuel Machado confirmed]. Record (in Portuguese). 13 October 2012. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  8. "Oficial. Manuel Machado sai do Nacional" [Official. Manuel Machado leaves Nacional] (in Portuguese). Rádio Renascença. 28 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  9. "Oficial: Manuel Machado rescinde com o Arouca" [Official: Manuel Machado terminated at Arouca]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 21 March 2017. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  10. "Manuel Machado é o 1.º treinador 'chicoteado' duas vezes na I Liga 2016/17" [Manuel Machado is 1st manager to be 'given the boot' twice in 2016/17 I League] (in Portuguese). SAPO. 21 March 2017. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  11. "Moreirense confirma Manuel Machado" [Moreirense confirm Manuel Machado]. Jornal de Notícias (in Portuguese). 27 May 2017. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  12. Lucas Simões, Sandra (29 October 2017). "Manuel Machado deixa Moreirense" [Manuel Machado leaves Moreirense]. Record (in Portuguese). Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  13. "Manuel Machado". Zerozero. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  14. Manuel Machado coach profile at Soccerway
  15. Kundert, Tom (7 August 2011). "Rolando double fires Porto to Super Cup triumph". PortuGOAL. Archived from the original on 2 July 2013. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
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