The most successful Barcelona manager of all time

FC Barcelona_ Top 7 Barcelona Greatest Managers Of All Time

Pep Guardiola is the most successful Barcelona manager in terms of trophies ever. In terms of trophies won per year, Guardiola was also the most successful manager of all time. Barcelona became the first club in Spain to win the treble of La Liga, Copa del Rey, and Champions League in 2009, under Pep Guardiola’s first year in charge.

FC Barcelona is one of the greatest clubs in history, and they are on the verge of great success. And they’ve had some incredible leaders since their inception. The club was founded in 1899 and has been a force in world football ever since. FC Barcelona has seen many great managers come and go throughout its history.

Joan Gamper led a group of Swiss, English, German, and Catalan footballers who founded the team in 1899. Until 1910, the club competed in various regional amateur football tournaments. Pep Guardiola’s first season as manager of Barcelona was arguably the best in the club’s history. They became the first Spanish team to win the coveted treble of La Liga, Copa del Rey, and the UEFA Champions League. Let’s take a look at the top most successful Barcelona manager.

Watch out the top 7 the most successful Barcelona managers

FC Barcelona is well-known for its historically skilled and appealing brand of attacking football, which emphasizes flowing, open play. Barcelona is one of the best football clubs in the world. They are well-known for producing incredible players and the greatest managers with mind-blowing talent. In this list take a look at some of the best managers ever managed for this astonishing club.

This list includes the seven most successful managers in club history, chosen for their various abilities and the number of trophies they have won. Here’s a list of Barcelona’s most successful managers with the most trophies.

Who is the most successful Barcelona manager?
Image Credits: Wikipedia
RankManagerFromToHonours/TrophiesTotal Trophies
01Pep GuardiolaJune 2008June 20123 La Liga, 2 Copa del Rey, 3 Supercopa de Espana, 2 UEFA Champions League, 2 UEFA Super Cup, 2 FIFA Club World Cup14
02Joan Gamper190219173 Copa del Rey, 1 Copa Macaya, 1 Copa Barcelona, 7 Campionat de Catalunya12
03Johan CruyffMay 1988May 19961 Copa del Rey, 1 Cup Winners’ Cup,4 La Liga, 3 Supercopa de Espana, 1 European Cup, 1 European Super Cup11
04Luis EnriqueMay 2014May 20172 La Liga, 3 Copa del Rey, 1 Supercopa de Espana, 1 UEFA Champions League, 1 UEFA Super Cup, 1 FIFA Club World Cup9
05Ferdinand DaucikJune 1950July 19542 La Liga, 3 Copa del Rey, 2 Copa Eva Duarte, 1 Latin Cup8
06Jack Greenwell191719232 Copa del Rey, 4 Campionat de Catalunya6
07Frank RijkaardJune 2003June 20082 La Liga, 2 Supercopa de Espana, 1 UEFA Champions League5
Barcelona’s most successful managers

1. Pep Guardiola – 14 Trophies

Pep Guardiola – Most Successful Barcelona Manager With 14 Trophies
Image Credits: Twitter

On June 21, 2007, Pep Guardiola was named coach of Barcelona B, with Tito Vilanova as his assistant. Under his leadership, the team won their Tercera Division group and qualified for the 2008 Segunda Division B playoffs, which they won, resulting in a promotion. Guardiola briefly coached Barcelona B after retiring as a player, and with them, he won the Tercera División. In 2008, he was appointed manager of the first team. He led Barcelona to the treble of La Liga, Copa del Rey, and the UEFA Champions League in his first season as manager.

The International Federation of Football History and Statistics named him the world’s most successful manager for the second time in a row. Guardiola also received the FIFA Best Manager Award in 2011. He annihilated his competitors, Jose Mourinho, and Sir Alex Ferguson. He is regarded as one of the most successful football managers in history. Guardiola was appointed manager of Barcelona’s reserve team in 2008. Under his management Barcelona played 247 matches, winning 179, with 47 draws, and losing only 19.

Pep Guardiola trophies at Barcelona: Pep Guardiola has won 14 trophies with Barcelona in international competition, including three La Liga titles, two Copa del Reys, three Supercopa de Espana, two UEFA Champions Leagues, two UEFA Super Cups, and two FIFA Club World Cups.

On April 27, 2012, he announced his resignation as Barcelona’s coach at the end of the 2011-12 season. During his time as manager, he was on a rolling contract that was renewed annually.

Pep Guardiola Profile Overview

Born date & Place: 18 January 1971, Santpedor, Spain
Spouse Name: Cristina Serra (m. 2014)
Marriage location: Matadepera, Spain
Teams coached: Barcelona B, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, & Manchester City F.C. (Association football manager, since 2016)
Current Club: Manchester City F.C.
Children(s): Maria Guardiola, Valentina Guardiola, Marius Guardiola
Dates joined: 2005 (Dorados de Sinaloa)
Parent(s): Valenti Guardiola, Dolors Sala
Sibling(s): Pere Guardiola, Francesca Guardiola i Sala, Olga Guardiola
Award(s): Premier League Manager of the Season, Premier League Manager of the Month
Gold medal: Football at the 1992 Summer Olympics – Men’s tournament
Nominations: Premier League Manager of the Month, The Best FIFA Men’s Coach

2. Joan Gamper

Joan Gamper – Barcelona Greatest Managers
Image Source: Wikipedia

Joan Gamper was a versatile athlete and football executive from Switzerland. He established football clubs in Switzerland and Spain, including FC Barcelona and FC Zurich. Gamper was a co-founder of the club and its first captain. In the early days of Swiss football, it was permitted to play for an indefinite number of teams from other cities as a guest player in friendly games – Gamper is known to have played for FC Winterthur and FC Basel, among others. During the same year, he also organized the first international athletics competition in Zurich. The Weltklasse Zurich is now one of the most prestigious international athletics events in the world (organized by FC Zurich spin-off LC Zurich).

Gamper traveled to Barcelona in 1899 to see his uncle who was living there. Gamper announced his intention to form a football club in Los Deportes on October 22, 1899. A positive response resulted in a meeting on November 29 at the Gimnasio Sole, and “Futbol Club Barcelona” was born. Between 1899 and 1903, Gamper appeared in 48 games for FC Barcelona, scoring over 100 goals. He was a member of the Barcelona team that won the club’s first trophy, the Copa Macaya, in 1900-1901. This competition is now known as the Catalan championship. 

In his honor, FC Barcelona president Enric Llaudet established the Joan Gamper Trophy in 1966. This is a pre-season tournament with international teams as guests that are traditionally used by the club to introduce the team for the upcoming season.

Joan Gamper won three Copa del Reys, one Copa Macaya, one Copa Barcelona, and seven Campionat de Catalunya during his career. Gamper committed suicide on July 30, 1930, after a period of depression brought on by personal and financial problems, and was buried in the Montjuic Cemetery.

3. Johan Cruyff – Best Barcelona coach of all time

Johan Cruyff – Best Barcelona coach of all time

Johan Cruyff is without a doubt one of the most influential figures in football history. During his little more than ten years in management, Cruyff led only two teams: his beloved Ajax (1985-1988) and, between 1988 and 1996, Barcelona, where he built a squad of serial winners that would win four consecutive Spanish league titles between 1991 and 1994, secure the 1992 European Cup, and become known as the Dream Team.

He led them to their first league title in 14 years as a player and their first European Cup as a manager. The legacy is obvious, profound, and ever-present. Barcelona had won 10 league titles and no European Cups prior to 1990; since then, they have won 13 leagues and five European Cups. He moved to Barcelona for a world record transfer fee in 1973, where he helped the team win La Liga in his first season and won the Ballon d’Or. Cruyff became a highly successful manager of Ajax and later Barcelona after retiring from playing in 1984; he remained an influential advisor to both clubs after his coaching tenures.

Johan Cruyff returned to Barcelona for the 1988-1989 season, this time as head coach of the first team. Cruyff, on the other hand, had gained valuable experience as a coach/manager before returning to Barcelona. In the Netherlands, he was lauded for the attacking flair he instilled in his teams and his commendable work as a talent scout. Barcelona’s “Dream Team” won four consecutive La Liga titles under Johan Cruyff. Johan Cruyff was Barcelona’s most successful manager with 11 trophies, but he has since been surpassed by his former player Pep Guardiola, who has 15 trophies. Cruyff also served as the club’s longest-serving manager.

Johan Cruyff Profile Overview

Born Date: 25 April 1947, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Died On: 24 March 2016, Barcelona, Spain
Spouse Name: Danny Coster (m. 1968–2016)
Children(s): Jordi Cruyff, Susila Cruyff, Chantal Cruyff
Parents: Hermanus Cornelis Cruijff, Petronella Bernarda Draaijer
Sibling(s): Henny Cruijff

4. Luis Enrique – Best manager of Barcelona

Luis Enrique – Best manager of Barcelona

Luis Enrique was appointed head coach of the Italian club Roma in the summer of 2011, his second managerial position. Enrique’s first opportunity to showcase his skills and talents at the first-team level came after taking charge of Barcelona B in the previous years. He is currently the head coach of the Spanish national team. He is universally perceived as one of the world’s best managers. Luis Enrique’s tenure as FC Barcelona manager ended with a fantastic record of nine trophies from a possible thirteen (a Club World Cup, a Champions League, two Spanish Super Cups, two league titles, and three Copa del Rey trophies).

Luis Enrique resigned from the position in June to spend more time with his daughter Xana, who was diagnosed with cancer and died in August at the age of nine. Later he stated that ‘It would have been the easiest thing for me to renew,’ says Luis Enrique of his decision to leave Barcelona. Luis Enrique has revealed that he informed Barcelona of his intention to leave at the start of the 2016/17 season. The former Barcelona manager insists that renewing his contract would be “the easiest thing in the world.”

5. Ferdinand Daucik – 8 titles for Barcelona

Barcelona greatest managers_ Ferdinand Daucik – 8 titles for Barcelona

Ferdinand Daucik was a football player and manager from Slovakia. Daucik managed several La Liga clubs, including Barcelona, Atletico Bilbao, Atletico Madrid, and Real Zaragoza. Daucik was Barcelona’s coach during one of the club’s most prosperous periods. In 1952 and 1953, the club won two consecutive La Liga/Copa del Generalisimo doubles under his leadership. Daucik joined the club in 1950, the same year as the great Kubala, and his fortunes were inextricably linked to the Hungarian striker, who would not be granted permission to play official games until April 1951.

Daucik left at the end of the 1953/54 season, having won two leagues, three cups, the Latin Cup, and two Eva Duarte Cups. He went on to manage a variety of clubs, mostly in Spain, in 553 games, 488 of which were in the first division, before retiring in 1977 as manager of Barcelona-based Sant Andreu. On November 14, 1986, he died in the town of Alcala de Henares, near Madrid.

6. Jack Greenwell

Barcelona greatest managers_ Jack Greenwell

John Greenwell was a footballer and successful manager from England. He was Barcelona’s manager for seven consecutive seasons, a record only broken by Johan Cruyff, and later had a second stint as manager. Greenwell became the only non-South American coach to win the South American Championship when he led Peru to their first victory in 1939. After retiring as a player, he was appointed manager of Barcelona by club president Joan Gamper, and made his managerial debut on July 7, 1917, with a 3-1 victory over CE Europa.

He eventually took over as manager for 492 games and coached the club during its first “golden age.” After experimenting with Alcantara as a defender, he survived early calls for his resignation and went on to lead the club to four Campionats de Catalunya and two Copas del Rey. Greenwell was known at Barcelona for his unconventional approach to tactics, focusing on developing a passing game and building attacks from the back rather than focusing on dribbling past opponents.

After the departure of Jack Alderson, the club’s youngest coach, former teammate Jack Greenwell took over as player-coach in January 1913. In 1923, he left Barcelona to take over rivals RCD Espanyol, with whom he finished seventh in the first season of La Liga and won another Catalonia Championship and Copa Del Rey in 1929. His first spell as manager of the first team lasted until August 1923, when he left for UE Sants. His second tenure was brief, lasting only from 1931 to 1933.

7. Frank Rijkaard

Barcelona greatest managers_ Frank Rijkaard

Franklin Rijkaard is a former Dutch footballer and manager who primarily played as a midfielder or defender. Rijkaard led Barcelona to 167 victories, 64 draws, and 52 defeats in 283 official games with his win percentage being 59%.

Rijkaard was appointed manager of Barcelona for the 2003-04 season, with Albert Roca as his assistant coach, less than a year after leaving Sparta. Frank Rijkaard joined the club as it entered a new phase, having elected a new president in Joan Laporta and a new managerial board, but with fans unhappy that Laporta had passed up the opportunity to sign English midfielder David Beckham.

Rijkaard had a disappointing start at Barcelona, prompting some fans to call for his resignation, and he received criticism from the media after the team lost to Real Madrid in December 2003. Frank Rijkaard’s perseverance paid off, and from 2004 onwards, the team grew from strength to strength under his leadership. Barcelona finished second in La Liga in 2003-04, despite being on the verge of relegation at one point during the season.

Rijkaard then took Barcelona to the next level by phasing out the old guard and rebuilding a new-look side around Ronaldinho, with new players like Deco, Samuel Eto’o, Rafael Marquez, and Ludovic Giuly, as well as the most recent promotion of some young players from the previous era who had trained in the club’s youth teams, including Victor Valdes, Lionel Messi, and Andres Iniesta. With Laporta’s strong support, he eventually succeeded in turning around the club’s fortunes, and within the next few years, he won La Liga both in 2004-05 and 2005-06. Barcelona president Joan Laporta has announced that coach Frank Rijkaard will leave after this season and will be replaced by Pep Guardiola.

Read also- The 10 Most successful Real Madrid managers who have won the most trophies?

Conclusion

We hope you enjoyed our article on the list of the most successful Barcelona managers of all time with the most trophies in club history. Please drop your opinions in the comment box. Wikipedia & FC Barcelona provided the information for the article on the most successful Barcelona managers. Our website makes no guarantees about the accuracy of the information because it is subject to change

Chethan HC

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