The top five managers in world football

By Christian Montegan / Roar Pro

When results don’t go a certain way for a long period of time, the manager is always the first to get the blame and is the first to walk out the door.

These are five managers that I feel deserve to be in this list for their achievements throughout the course of the 2016-17 season.

#5 – Carlo Ancelotti
Although Ancelotti has achieved so much throughout his career as a manager, he is still highly underrated by many.

He isn’t a coach who likes to implement a philosophy or a certain style of football. He is known for his tactical prowess and his man management skills, getting the best out of players with big egos such as Cristiano Ronaldo and Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

This coaching method has resulted in Ancelotti winning domestic league titles and Champions League crowns at multiple clubs.

Focusing on 2016-17, Bayern Munich were able to win the Bundesliga title once again. Most people would agree that the Bundesliga is not as competitive as other leagues, but it was about how Ancelotti was able to let his team play free flowing football. It was entertaining to watch, which got the best out of players such as Robert Lewandowski and Arjen Robben.

They were knocked out undeservedly by Real Madrid in the Champions League quarter-finals, because over the two legs I though Bayern were the better team. For the club it was a disappointment in that regard, but Ancelotti was once again able to deliver domestically.

(AP Photo/Andres Kudacki,file)

#4 – Leonardo Jardim
The 42 year old is an up-and-coming coach with a lot of potential to move to a bigger club when the time is right.

He was able to introduce counter attacking football with pace down the wings which was helped by quality finishing up front with Radamel Falcao the go-to man. They were the most exciting team to watch in Europe, but that caused the defence to be vulnerable which caused a set back.

In saying that, Monaco were able to reach the semi-finals of the Champions League and were crowned Ligue 1 champions by impressively by beating the cashed-up PSG.

The reason why Jardim makes this list is not only for the achievements mentioned but also giving youth a chance, most notably getting the best out of 18-year-old Kylian Mbappe. The Frenchman is rated at $150 million with Real Madrid favourites for his signature. He only got given a chance in November, but since then he was able to score 21 goals.

#3 Massimiliano Allegri
A tactical master and an ability to read the game and change things up is what makes Allegri such a special manager.

Since taking over the reigns from Antonio Conte, he was able to reach two Champions League finals and has won three domestic league titles in his first three seasons at Juventus.

He has mostly played with a 3-5-2, but this season has shown he is capable of reverting to a 4-3-1-2. He isn’t a one-trick pony, and he’ll pull others into line whenever they are seen to be drifting off. Leonardo Bonucci experienced this by being handed a one game ban from Allegri for arguing with him.

He won the Serie A title along with the Coppa Italia, conquering Italy once again. It was the Champions League final that stopped Allegri from having a treble on his CV, losing out to Real Madrid.

The best part about him is that he will focus on the defence more than anything. In the Champions League, Juventus conceded just two goals before the final, a remarkable achievement that all started with Allegri’s experience in being able to sort out the backline.

(AFP PHOTO / MARCO BERTORELLO)

#2 Zinedine Zidane
Two seasons in charge at real Madrid, two Champions league trophies. An unbelievable accomplishment by a man who by many was criticised for not being ‘coach material.’

In 2016-17 he was able to guide Madrid to the La Liga title as well as getting the better of Juventus in the Champions League.

He had absolutely no top flight coaching experience before he took on the job, but has succeeded with ease. Tactically he is not the strongest, but in terms of man management he is able to get the best out of Cristiano Ronaldo (something that Rafael Benitez failed to do which ultimately lost the dressing room). Many were wondering if Ronaldo was coming to the end of his career.

We still haven’t seen him build a team himself and start from scratch, but he has all the tools required to be an even more successful coach in the near future, and could just be the France national team coach one day.

#1 Antonio Conte
A tactical master, every club he has coached has been built from scratch. Every club he has coached he has been able to implement the correct foundations. He is able to read the game perfectly. A typical Italian. An absolute genius.

Before his tenure at Chelsea he was manager of Italy at Euro 2016, guiding them to the quarter-finals only to be beaten on penalties. An average Italian squad mind you, he excited Chelsea fans when he announced his arrival.

Conte had 1 proper month to assemble his squad, with main targets such as Leonardo Bonucci, Alessio Romagnoli and Kalidou Koulibaly not falling his way. His last option was PSG centre back David Luiz who was not a very good defender in truth.

However, he was signed by Chelsea, and Conte was able to transform him into one of the best defenders in Europe. It’s his ability to put the defence first which helped Chelsea win the Premier League.

A 13-game unbeaten run helped Conte keep his record intact of always winning a league title as a manager. A 3-0 loss to Arsenal at the start of the season forced Conte to change to a 3-5-2, being the key to keeping clean sheets and scoring goals especially on the counter attack.

He deserves to be number 1, and I’m sure he’ll cement his status as the best coach in the world in the years to come.

The Crowd Says:

2017-07-13T06:52:39+00:00

Josh Barton

Roar Pro


No love for Tony Popovic? Oh wait, he's probably got the worst record in world football for player retention.

2017-07-12T08:33:54+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


jb, I know Moyes, LvG & Mourinho have spent a bit, but I think $1.25 trillion is a tad of an exaggeration.

2017-07-12T07:46:14+00:00

j,binnie

Guest


Jim - you are aware that since Fergie left the job his 3 successors have spent a sum of money in the region of 1,25 trillion dollars in attempts to improve the former champion club's EPL position. Moyes spent $130 million, buying 2 players (who rather strangely are still being used by Mourhino today despite being classed as total failures by fans 4 seasons ago)!!!!! Van Gaal seriously outspent Moyes by spending $500 millions in team building to gain one place in the table and, if the latest figures are to be believed, Jose has kept pace also spending another $500millions on 6 more players.He too has gained a place in the EPL and exposure to Europe in a few lesser competitions. Running a team has become an expensive pastime has it not???? Cheers jb.

2017-07-12T05:28:04+00:00

punter

Guest


Chris was the original!!!!! The godfather!!!!

2017-07-12T05:17:38+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


As it stands, I liked your take that performances of managers with weaker squads have been more impressive. And would be interested in thoughts on what they had done with their squads that was observable from the outside. Were the teams better drilled, more co-ordinated, did they display more varied tactics against teams that played with different shapes, were they better at spotting developing talent that they could get more value out of? Always remember that there will be novices and experts on the site so thinking that the standard of conversation will always evolved to a particular level is going to lead to disappointment.

2017-07-12T05:10:20+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


Nope. Not versatile enough for my liking. He's a bit old too. Khan definitely top 5 material though.

2017-07-12T05:07:08+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


I really liked him in Chennai Express. A worthy selection.

2017-07-12T04:05:02+00:00

The Auteur

Guest


Fixed your list for you 1. David Moyes 2. Alan Pardew 3. Steve Bruce 4. Mark Jones 5. Tony Walmsley

2017-07-12T03:38:43+00:00

Jim S

Guest


Sorry for the confusion Swanny, I wasn't questioning you. It's the Original Poster that's been overly critical of Manchester United the last few days.

2017-07-12T03:35:08+00:00

punter

Guest


Chris Tarrant.

2017-07-12T03:33:23+00:00

punter

Guest


Shahrukh Khan.

AUTHOR

2017-07-12T03:12:51+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


Over the course of 3-4 seasons he definitely has been one of the best managers in the world. But as you said they were not the same team this season as to previous ones, conceding more goals and the aggressiveness just isn't the same

AUTHOR

2017-07-12T03:09:58+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


Totally agree

2017-07-12T03:07:00+00:00

Craig Dunsall

Roar Rookie


An interesting debate You've raised Christian. I would maybe of tried to add in Diego Simeone from Atletico Madrid. He has taken a team with a small budget to playing an aggressive style of football which has made them solid at the back which has been the backbone to their achievements. They may have Slowed down this season, but he is a top manager for sure.

2017-07-12T02:44:26+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Maybe chuck up your own top five with some substance as to why you argue for others. I much prefer the bloke putting something up to try and generate discussion rather than the person who shoots it down, calls the author a simpleton and doesn't add anything themselves.

2017-07-12T02:34:29+00:00

Swanny

Guest


Jim I was being very toungue in cheek I have followed United for 45 years Mourinho is building slowly on the right path

2017-07-12T02:28:08+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Fair enough. I find such conversations mind-numbingly tedious & meaningless. It's something I expect to see on discussion boards for other sports, but I expect football discussions to have evolved from this. Why would anyone care who are the Top 5 managers. All I care about is my team playing good football & winning.

2017-07-12T02:16:34+00:00

Jim S

Guest


Who is that you hate, Manchester United or Mourinho? I ask because apparently Pogba flopped, Lukaku is a certain failure, and Mourinho has lost the plot... Despite finishing 6th, Mourinho has Man Utd are back in the Champions League and winning trophies. Pogba was their best player last year. Lukaku has been one of the top 3 or 4 forwards every year in the EPL but suddenly he's going to be crap because he's going to get more shots a game and not have to beat 4 defenders on a counter attack to score goals. (that FA cup goal v Chelsea though!!!) Pretty ordinary stuff. The closest i get to liking Manchester United is they get Liverpool fans upset so it's pretty clear you're grinding an axe.

2017-07-12T02:12:43+00:00

Caltex Ten & SBS support Australian Football

Guest


"So, why bother with a list of “Top 5 Managers”?" Nemesis - Well yes, you could say that, but then some people would want to know; who do you think rates the best---in your opinion ? Then funnily enough we end up with an interesting debate with managers coming from left field being nominated. "No love for Brendan Rogers" who had a good season at Celtic mentioned by Andrew. All interesting---and someone I had not figured worth mentioning until know.

AUTHOR

2017-07-12T01:20:24+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


Because people have different opinions about a top 5.... Some may put Zidane at #1... Some may put Ancelotti #1....

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