FIFA World Coach of the Year

FIFA World Coach of the Year
First award2010
Final award2015
WebsiteFIFA.com
RelatedThe Best FIFA Football Coach

The FIFA World Coach of the Year[1] was an association football award given annually to the football coach who is considered to have performed the best in the previous 12 months. It was awarded based on votes from coaches and captains of international teams, as well as journalists from around the world.

The award started in 2010 after France Football's Ballon d'Or and the FIFA World Player of the Year award were merged. José Mourinho was the first winner of the men's FIFA World Coach of the Year award in 2010. The women's version of the award was won by head coach Silvia Neid in 2010. Starting in 2016 this award was replaced with the Best FIFA Football Coach Award.

Winners

FIFA World Coach of the Year for Men's Football

Year Rank Name Team(s) managed Votes
2010 1st José Mourinho Internazionale 35.92%
2nd Vicente del Bosque Spain 33.08%
3rd Pep Guardiola Barcelona 8.45%
2011 1st Pep Guardiola Barcelona 41.90%
2nd Alex Ferguson Manchester United 15.59%
3rd José Mourinho Real Madrid 12.43%
2012 1st Vicente del Bosque Spain 34.51%
2nd José Mourinho Real Madrid 20.49%
3rd Pep Guardiola Barcelona 12.91%
2013 1st Jupp Heynckes Bayern Munich 37.30%
2nd Jürgen Klopp Dortmund 15.77%
3rd Alex Ferguson Manchester United 14.55%
2014 1st Joachim Löw Germany 36.23%
2nd Carlo Ancelotti Real Madrid 22.06%
3rd Diego Simeone Atlético Madrid 19.02%
2015 1st Luis Enrique Barcelona 31.08%
2nd Pep Guardiola Bayern Munich 22.97%
3rd Jorge Sampaoli Chile 9.47%

FIFA World Coach of the Year for Women's Football

Year 1st 2nd 3rd
2010 Silvia Neid (Germany) Maren Meinert (Germany U20) Pia Sundhage (United States)
2011 Norio Sasaki (Japan) Pia Sundhage (United States) Bruno Bini (France)
2012 Pia Sundhage (United States) Norio Sasaki (Japan) Bruno Bini (France)
2013 Silvia Neid (Germany) Ralf Kellermann (Wolfsburg) Pia Sundhage (Sweden)
2014 Ralf Kellermann (Wolfsburg) Maren Meinert (Germany U20) Norio Sasaki (Japan)
2015 Jill Ellis (United States) Norio Sasaki (Japan) Mark Sampson (England)

Wins by manager

Manager First place Second place Third place Teams managed
1 Silvia Neid 2 0 0 Germany
2 Norio Sasaki 1 2 1 Japan
3 Pia Sundhage 1 1 2 United States,  Sweden
4 Ralf Kellermann 1 1 0 Wolfsburg
5 Jill Ellis 1 0 0 United States
6 Maren Meinert 0 2 0 Germany U20
7 Bruno Bini 0 0 2 France
8 Mark Sampson 0 0 1 England

See also

References

  1. ^ "Rules of allocation" (PDF). FIFA.com. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2012. Retrieved 15 January 2013.