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FourFourTwo
FourFourTwo
Sport
Mark White

Ranked! The 50 best managers in the world right now

Best managers in the world.

You already know the best managers in the world. They're the ones that have hands gripped around silver handles at the end of every season.

Except… that doesn't tell the full story. Arsene Wenger once famously opined that, “You're loved when you're born, you're loved when you die – and in between you have to manage.” It's a job in which you're battered by the press, by fans and by defeat: many managers will win fewer games than they'll ever draw or lose, after all.

But sometimes, the best managers are those who simply… get on by. So who should be the best managers in the world?

How FourFourTwo's expert panel decided on the best managers in the world

Our expert panel, comprised of football writers on the team, were asked to send their list of the best managers in the world right now. There were no stipulations as to the level of each manager, either: anyone was eligible.

We were looking for their tactical ability, of course, but also man management and their achievements at their club – whatever level the club. Fighting relegation on a shoestring is as important as winning a title with bucketloads of money… in this list at least. 

When our writers sent over the lists, we gave a score to each manager, marking them more points the higher up they were rated. Our top-rated manager finished first with 179 points, just eight ahead the second-placed boss.

And this is what we came up with, searching across the globe for a top 50. Did we get it right?

50. Manuel Pellegrini

Manuel Pellegrini, manager of Real Betis

Age: 71
Club:
Real Betis
Nationality: Chilean

The indefatigable Manuel Pellegrini is showing no signs of winding his career down. Now 71, the Chilean has a long and illustrious CV, notably winning the Premier League with Manchester City and the Copa del Rey with current club Real Betis.

Pellegrini has been remarkably consistent, avoiding failure at almost every club in his long career and instilling organisation and discipline in his players. While he is unlikely to manage another of Europe’s elite clubs, he remains a top coach and will look to take Betis deep into the Conference League this season.

49. Gary O'Neil

Gary O'Neil applauds the Wolves fans (Image credit: Alamy)

Age: 41
Club:
Wolverhampton Wanderers
Nationality: English

After showing real promise in a brief spell with Bournemouth, before being cast aside – unfairly, in many people’s eyes – at the end of the 2022-23 season, Gary O’Neil made the switch to Wolves.

He has since shown real tactical acumen with the Midlands club, taking them to a safe mid-table finish last season when many expected them to struggle following a difficult transfer window. Still only 41, O’Neil will hope to continue proving his doubters wrong and establish himself as a top Premier League manager.

48. Kieran McKenna

Kieran McKenna acknowledges the fans at Ipswich (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 38
Club:
Ipswich Town
Nationality: Northern Irish

Kieran McKenna was heavily linked with a summer exit after guiding Ipswich to successive promotions from League One to the Premier League. The Northern Irishman achieved it in style, too, instilling an aesthetically-pleasing brand of football that has delighted fans at Portman Road.

Having previously worked as a youth coach at Manchester United and Tottenham, it is inevitable that McKenna’s next move is the subject of constant speculation. At 38, he certainly has the potential to be a world-class coach.

47. Oliver Glasner

Oliver Glasner of Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 50
Club:
Crystal Palace
Nationality: Austrian

Oliver Glasner arrived at Crystal Palace with a point to prove and immediately turned the Eagles into a formidable outfit, finishing the 2023-24 Premier League season with six wins from seven, including emphatic victories over Manchester United and Aston Villa.

That was a glimpse of what a Glasner team can do, although Palace have started the 2024/25 campaign poorly. But faith shouldn’t be lost in the Austrian, who won the Europa League with Frankfurt in 2022 and has demonstrated his ability to produce free-flowing, attacking football.

46. Paulo Fonseca

Milan boss, Paulo Fonseca

Age: 51
Club:
Milan
Nationality: Portuguese

Paulo Fonseca has had a slightly rocky start to life at Milan but his reputation is high after successful spells with several top European clubs, including Lille and Roma in recent years.

An attack-minded manager with progressive tactical ideas, Fonseca is now vastly experienced and a dependable figure, even if trophies – outside of his successful spell with Shakhtar Donetsk – have proved elusive. If he can get things right in Milan, the Portuguese will further enhance his status as one of the continent’s best coaches.

45. Imanol Alguacil

Imanol Alguacil which coaching Real Sociedad (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 53
Club:
Real Sociedad
Nationality: Spanish

The definition of a one-club man as a manager, Imanol Alguacil has been with Real Sociedad in some form or another since 2014, first taking charge of the B team before eventually taking the reins of the first team in 2018.

He has since guided his team to a Copa del Rey title in 2020, as well as qualification for the Champions League. Favouring a high-energy press and incisive, vertical passing, it would be no surprise if some of Europe’s elite clubs are monitoring Alguacil’s progress with Sociedad.

44. Enzo Maresca

Enzo Maresca on the Stamford Bridge touchline (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 44
Club:
Chelsea
Nationality: Italian

There was some scepticism when Enzo Maresca was appointed Chelsea manager in the summer after just one season - albeit a promotion-winning one - with Leicester in the Championship. But the Italian is clearly a gifted coach and has already got Chelsea playing some fluid football.

Having worked closely with Pep Guardiola at Manchester City for several years, Maresca’s style of play is possession-heavy and based largely on positional superiority. At 44, there is plenty of time for him to establish himself as one of the best managers in the Premier League.

43. Adi Hutter

Adi Hutter of Monaco (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 54
Club:
Monaco
Nationality: Austrian

Austrian Adi Hutter worked his way up to the top in his homeland, managing Rheindorf Altach and SV Grodig before eventually joining Red Bull Salzburg in 2014. He impressed in his year-long spell there, later establishing himself as one of Europe’s top coaches in spells with Young Boys, Eintracht Frankfurt and Borussia Monchengladbach.

Now at Monaco, he has guided his side to the top of Ligue 1. His teams have developed a reputation for being exceptionally well-organised out of possession, pressing aggressively and giving up very few chances.

42. Marco Rose

Leipzig coach, Marco Rose (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 48
Club:
RB Leipzig
Nationality: German

Marco Rose made his breakthrough as a manager with Red Bull Salzburg, where he won two Austrian Bundesliga titles. That paved the way for success back in Germany, where he has had spells with Borussia Monchengladbach, Borussia Dortmund and now RB Leipzig.

Rose’s high-energy, attacking style of play reaped rewards with Dortmund and now hometown club Leipzig, with the latter consistently challenging at the top end of the Bundesliga. Under the 48-year-old, they look like genuine contenders for the title this season.

41. Vincenzo Italiano

Bologna boss, Vincenzo Italiano (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 46
Club:
Bologna
Nationality: Italian

Vincenzo Italiano is not yet a big name outside Italy, but in Serie A he is regarded as one of the very best coaches. The 46-year-old excelled with Fiorentina after joining from Spezia in 2021, taking the Florence club to two UEFA Conference League finals and a Coppa Italia final.

That earned the pragmatic tactician a move to Bologna, who are in the Champions League after a superb 2023/24 season under new Juventus boss Thiago Motta. If Bologna impresses in Europe, more people will begin to take notice of Italiano’s managerial talent.

40. Vincent Kompany

Bayern Munich boss Vincent Kompany (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 38
Club:
Bayern Munich
Nationality: Belgian

Intelligent and cerebral as a player, it’s no real surprise that Vincent Kompany has become an accomplished coach. The former Manchester City defender, heavily influenced by Pep Guardiola, successfully integrated an eye-catching style of play at both Anderlecht and Burnley, earning promotion from the Championship with the latter.

Despite relegation last season, Kompany earned a move to Bayern Munich, where he has started strongly. The next challenge for the Belgian will be to win major trophies at a club where expectations are extremely high.

39. Marcelo Gallardo

River Plate gaffer, Marcelo Gallardo

Age: 48
Club:
River Plate
Nationality: Argentine

Highly decorated as a player, Gallardo has added yet more silverware to his collection since turning manager. He’s won the Uruguayan Primera Division with Nacional and everything going with River Plate, to whom he returned mid-season August after a disappointing spell in the Saudi Pro League with Al-Ittihad.

With River Plate still in the frame for the league title and the Copa Libertadores, there could be yet more trophies on the way for Gallardo.

38. Edin Terzic

Edin Terzic while coach of Borussia Dortmund (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 41
Club: —
Nationality: German

A two-time Borussia Dortmund boss, Terzic won the DFB-Pokal in his first season in charge in 2021 before being moved upstairs to a technical director role. One year later he was back in the dugout, however, and Dortmund fell agonisingly short of claiming the Bundesliga title, missing out on goal difference on the final day.

Last season was disappointing on a domestic front – Dortmund finished fifth – but they made it to the Champions League final before Terzic stepped down, this time leaving the club altogether, feeling he needed to find work in a new environment…especially after a spat with Mats Hummels over what the defender felt was overly-conservative tactical approach.

A former West Ham assistant manager under Slaven Bilic, Terzic is believed to want some time out of the game to consider his options – might a return to England be on cards one day?

37. Graham Potter

Former Chelsea boss, Graham Potter (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 49
Club: —
Nationality: English

In football terms, it’s been a long time since Graham Potter was last in work: he was dismissed by Chelsea back in April 2023, then opted to take some time out of the game to regroup.

That short-lived spell has not significantly dented Potter’s reputation, however, and he continues to be linked with practically every job that comes up in English football, up to and including the vacant national team job. There’s a reason for that: he is one of the best tactical minds around, with Pep Guardiola among his public admirers.

36. Ange Postecoglou

Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 59
Club:
Tottenham Hotspur
Nationality: Australian

The Australian has his critics – what some might call a commitment to attacking football, others might say is overly-dogmatic – but when Tottenham hit their stride playing Postecoglou’s style of football, they can look sensational.

Postecoglou has been tasked with the long-term project of building a youthful side into Champions League qualifiers again, and they just narrowly missed out on that objective last season after proving unable to maintain their brilliant initial run of form. There’s been hiccups this season, too…but you still sense that if he can get a bit of the naivety out of his team, they could become a rising force.

35. Nestor Lorenzo

Nestor Lorenzo, Head Coach of Colombia (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 58
National team: Colombia
Nationality: Argentina

You may only have had dim memories of Lorenzo from the 1990 World Cup or his spell at Swindon Town thereafter – but the former centre-back has been brilliant since taking over as Colombia boss in 2022. Lorenzo’s side went 28 games unbeaten from his appointment two years ago until they were finally beaten in extra time by Argentina in this year’s Copa America final.

Along the way on that two-year run, Lorenzo’s led Colombia to claim the scalps of Spain, Brazil, Uruguay and Germany – and they repaid the favour to Argentina by beating them, too, in a World Cup qualification match. They could be ones to watch if and when they secure qualification for the finals in two years.

34. Marco Silva

Fulham manager Marco Silva (Image credit: George Wood/Getty Images)

Age: 47
Club:
Fulham
Nationality: Portuguese

Silva may have lost some of the shine he had on him after his short-lived spells at Hull City and Watford in 2017, but he is well-established as a capable top-flight manager after an up-and-down spell with Everton and guiding Fulham to promotion from the Championship.

Staying in the Premier League is increasingly difficult for teams coming up from the second tier over the past few years, but Fulham have done so comfortably in each of the past two seasons and are now building a side they hope can entrench them in the top half of the table.

33. Fabian Hurzeler

Fabian Hurzeler, the head coach of Brighton and Hove Albion (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 47
Club:
Brighton & Hove Albion
Nationality: German

The hot new young thing on the Premier League scene after working his way up through the coaching ranks in Germany. Hurzeler is still just 31 years old but has already taken St Pauli from a potential relegation struggle to achieving promotion to the Bundesliga.

Hurzeler’s innovative attacking system is certainly easy on the eye – a great fit for long-standing entertainers Brighton – and he has started superbly in the job, claiming a victory over Manchester United, a draw away at Arsenal, and a phenomenal 3-2 comeback win over Tottenham Hotspur. At this stage, you just wonder how far he can go.

32. Andoni Iraola

Andoni Iraola of Bournemouth in preseason (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 42
Club:
Bournemouth
Nationality: Spanish

The Basque Bournemouth boss already feels like part of the furniture in the Premier League not even a year and a half into his spell at Dean Court, which says something about how well he has done at a club who will know not to take top-flight status for granted.

Thanks to his high-pressing style and ability to get the best out of a sometimes-inconsistent group of players, Iraola led Bournemouth to their best-ever Premier League points tally last season. The stats suggest that was no accident, with Bournemouth performing admirably well at both end of the pitch – a kind of balance that many managers struggle to find.

31. Roberto De Zerbi

Marseille coach Roberto De Zerbi (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 45
Club:
Marseille
Nationality: Italian

Things did not end well for Roberto de Zerbi at Brighton, who had started brilliantly under the Italian before hitting a rough run of form in his final few months at the club – but it’s hard to say how much of that could be put down to his having been linked with so many bigger jobs elsewhere in the Premier League and an overall vibe that he would be off sooner or later.

De Zerbi had gained a well-earned reputation as a tactical innovator at Shakhtar Donetsk and was talked about in coaching circles across Europe. Now at Marseille, de Zerbi’s side have started the season well despite an early-campaign raft of red cards and will be hoping, at the very least, to close the gap on long-dominant PSG.

30. Thomas Frank

Brentford boss, Thomas Frank (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 51
Club:
Brentford
Nationality: Danish

It feels inevitable that Thomas Frank will eventually be offered the chance to manage one of Europe’s biggest clubs after his exceptional work with Brentford. The Dane took his side to promotion from the Championship, and has since expertly kept them clear of relegation with modest resources.

High-energy pressing and quick turnovers are the focus for Frank, who has also utilised set pieces to great effect at Brentford. After six years with the Bees, it will be interesting to see what the future holds for the 51-year-old.

29. Peter Bosz

PSV manager, Peter Bosz (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 60
Club:
PSV Eindhoven
Nationality: Dutch

Linked with Liverpool and Tottenham before both clubs appointed their respective managers, Peter Bosz has caught the eye in the Netherlands. He led PSV Eindhoven to the Eredivisie title in emphatic style last season, with 111 goals scored and 91 points accumulated.

Having previously impressed with Ajax, Bayer Leverkusen and Lyon, Bosz is without doubt one of the most gifted coaches in Europe. He has cited Johan Cruyff as an influence, with his teams adopting a high, aggressive press and an emphasis on winning and retaining possession in the opposition’s half.

28. Ernesto Valverde

Ernesto Valverde, of Athletic Club

Age: 60
Club:
Athletic Club
Nationality: Spanish

Ernesto Valverde had a somewhat difficult time at Barcelona, despite winning two La Liga titles in 2018 and 2019. Given what had come before him – Pep Guardiola and Luis Enrique – standards were stratospheric, and in retrospect, Valverde did a relatively impressive job.

The 60-year-old is now back at Athletic Club – where he spent four years before his move to Barca and a spell before that – and continues to impress in the Basque country. He guided his side to fifth in La Liga last season, with an emphasis on direct attacks and a compact defence.

27. Marcelo Bielsa

Marcelo Bielsa during his Leeds tenure

Age: 69
National team: Uruguay
Nationality: Argentine

A familiar name now for English football fans after his memorable spell with Leeds, Marcelo Bielsa was once on the fringes of top-level football, viewed as an enigmatic eccentric. His tactical ideas are radical, but when his teams play at their fluid best it is a marvel to watch.

Now Uruguay manager, Bielsa has rarely stayed in one place for too long (Leeds were the exception in that sense). At 69, he appears to be no less energetic and no less influential, continuing to approach the game with the same sense of idealism and passion that has earned him so many admirers.

26. Sebastian Hoeness

Sebastian Hoeness, head coach of VfB Stuttgart (Image credit: Christian Kaspar-Bartke/Getty Images)

Age: 42
Club:
Stuttgart
Nationality: German

Sebastian Hoeness has been a revelation at Stuttgart, taking a side that had languished in the lower reaches of the Bundesliga – and briefly the second tier – for years back to the top table of German football.

Stuttgart finished second in the top flight last season, above Bayern Munich, having only narrowly avoided relegation the year before. It was a miraculous turnaround, and it was done in style, with Hoeness’ style of play easy on the eye. His side regularly play through their opposition, able to mix up their buildup and constantly create openings. The 42-year-old is definitely one to watch.

25. Fernando Diniz

Fernando Diniz, which manager of Fluminense (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 50
Club:
Cruzeiro
Nationality: Brazilian

Fernando Diniz has never left Brazil in his 15-year managerial career, a journeyman of the Serie A – but though he's only really been genuinely brilliantly successful at one club, his influence extends far beyond that.

Diniz's unique brand of football, labeled ‘relationism’ relies not on a conventional formation but the idea of players forming bonds with one another and building play according to where they find themselves, rather than on exploiting space. It worked a treat at Fluminense, where he picked up a Copa Libertadores in 2023 and was tasked with reshaping the Brazilian team on an interim basis. Sounds Carsley-esque, right?

The Brazilian's style is typically South American, though, and with so many coaches copying Guardiola-like 3-2-5 shapes in attack, Diniz is still doing something unrecognisable.

24. Mauricio Pochettino

Mauricio Pochettino celebrates as Chelsea manager (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 52
National team: United States
Nationality: Argentine

Mauricio Pochettino was one of the most heralded managers in world football during his time at Tottenham, taking his team from relative obscurity to Premier League title challenges and a Champions League final. His ability to develop young players and create a team full of energy and attacking verve was hugely impressive.

Since leaving Spurs in 2019, the Argentine has had turbulent spells with Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea, and he is now in charge of the USA ahead of the 2026 World Cup.

23. Eric Roy

Brest's head coach Eric Roy with Franck Honorat (Image credit: JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER/AFP via Getty Images)

Age: 57
Club:
Brest
Nationality: French

Eric Roy has guided Ligue 1 side Brest to new heights, with a third-place finish last season securing them a place in this year’s new-look Champions League. The 57-year-old, who had a brief spell at Sunderland as a player, has been with the Brittany-based team since the beginning of 2023, after several years working as a sporting director for clubs including Lens and Watford.

Roy has established a reputation as an excellent motivator, creating a well-drilled and disciplined Brest side. While not amongst the most innovative coaches tactically - understandable given his previous managerial job was with Nice in 2012 - he has quickly proved his doubters wrong in France.

22. Abel Ferreira

Abel Ferreira, head coach of Palmeiras (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 45
Club:
Palmeiras
Nationality: Portuguese

Abel Ferreira may not be an overly familiar name to European football fans, having spent the last four years in Brazil with Palmeiras, where he has won two Serie A titles and two Copa Libertadores.

The 45-year-old had previously enjoyed successful spells with PAOK in Greece and Braga in his native Portugal. A coach who prioritises quick, direct transitions from defence to attack, Ferreira has an exciting future, whether in South America or back in Europe.

21. Didier Deschamps

France head coach Didier Deschamps (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 56
National team: France
Nationality: French

Inarguably one of the best international managers of his era, Didier Deschamps has been a remarkable success with France. It is now more than 12 years since he was appointed, and he has since taken Les Blues to World Cup glory in 2018, as well as the 2022 World Cup final and Euro 2016 final.

Occasionally criticised for his cautious tactics, Deschamps is uniquely adept at winning knockout matches regardless of the aesthetic merits of his teams. His target now will be to win another World Cup in 2026.

20. Gian Piero Gasperini

Gian Piero Gasperini celebrates with the Europa League trophy (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 66
Club:
Atalanta
Nationality: Italian

Gian Piero Gasperini told reporters that crowning his managerial career with a European title last season made him no better a manager than when he'd never won anything – and we're tempted to agree: he's always been a superb boss.

Atalanta have gone from Serie A also-rans to consistent European contenders since the highly-respected and attack-minded Italian arrived in 2016, finally earning a trophy to match his reputation with a Europa League triumph last season. Along the way, Atalanta saw off – and often dominated – Ruben Amorim’s Sporting, Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, and finally dealt Xabi Alonso’s Bayer Leverkusen their first and only defeat of the season.

19. Luis Enrique

PSG boss Luis Enrique (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 54
Club:
Paris Saint-Germain
Nationality: Spanish

A domestic treble and a Champions League semi-final in your first year in charge of a new club isn’t bad going – even if it is at Paris Saint-Germain, where that is just about the minimum expectation.

Lionel Messi ranks Enrique alongside Pep Guardiola as the best managers he has ever played for, while Guardiola himself has described Enrique as his toughest opposition manager alongside Jurgen Klopp.

18. Hansi Flick

Hansi Flick while Bayern Munich manager

Age: 59
Club:
Barcelona
Nationality: German

Formerly a long, long-serving assistant to Joachim Low in the German national team before taking a technical director role with the German FA, Flick only stepped back into his managerial career in 2019 when he took over at Bayern Munich.

Two league titles and a Champions League meant he was back with Germany in two years, this time as manager, but was unable to turn around the fortune of a side that has underperformed since he helped them win the 2014 World Cup. Flick has made a promising start at Barcelona since taking over in the summer, however, where he will be trying to bring his unique hybrid gegenpressing/possession-based stylings to the side.

17. Michel

Miguel Angel Sanchez of Girona (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 48
Club:
Girona
Nationality: Spanish

The one at Girona, not the one formerly of Olympiacos. Michel took the Manchester City sister club on an unexpectedly convincing title challenge for much of last season, just two years after taking them to promotion from the second tier; they ultimately finished an excellent third.

Michel’s system typically lines up in a 3-3-1-3 – a formation inevitably linked with Marcelo Bielsa – but with his own twist on it, prioritising packing the centre of the pitch to help maintain a numerical advantage in a slow build-up before killing teams off with moves into the channels.

16. Thiago Motta

Thiago Motta while Bologna head coach (Image credit: Alamy)

Age: 42
Club:
Juventus
Nationality: Italian

All right, so Bologna needed the extra Champions League place Italy earned through their co-efficient to qualify for this season’s edition of the tournament – but their fifth-place finish was the best the club had done in Serie A since 1971. Motta opted to leave rather than guide Bologna to the tournament, however, joining Juventus in the summer.

A flexible manager who likes his side to have plenty of the ball and build the play gradually from the back, Motta’s style requires lots of positional rotation, and he famously thinks of his formations in vertically lines up the pitch, rather than the traditional horizontal banks: he refers to his 4-3-3 as a 2-7-2 for that reason.

15. Luis de la Fuente

Luis de la Fuente, Head Coach of Spain (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 63
National team: Spain
Nationality: Spanish

Going with a head coach who has worked his way up through the youth teams hasn’t always worked for Spain – ask Julen Lopetegui – but boy has it paid off with de la Fuente. The 63-year-old had an unremarkable career as a club team manager but found his home in the Spanish FA from 2013, progressing from under-19s to under-21s (with an Olympics silver medal along the way in 2021)

That earned him the trust to take control of the senior team after the 2022 World Cup. And he’s only gone and led a young Spain side to the trophy in his first tournament in charge, lifting the Euro 2024 trophy this summer and winning every game along the way.

14. Eddie Howe

Eddie Howe, manager of Newcastle United (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 46
Club:
Newcastle United
Nationality: English

Eddie Howe took Bournemouth from the bottom of League Two to ninth in the Premier League in less than a decade – and for that, he should perhaps always be regarded as one of the best managers in the world. But since arriving at Newcastle, he's arguably shown a more impressive side of himself.

Howe went away to study from the likes of Andoni Iraola, Jurgen Klopp and Diego Simeone to come back a better manager… and he did: a more rounded coach, tactically versatile, able to take a game to bigger sides better and shut up shop more convincingly. The modesty it took for him to assess his own game, the desire to be as positive as possible and the tactical acumen to have reinvented himself since arriving at Dean Court is, dare we say it, not what much of English management lore was built on. He'll be England manager one day: we're sure of it.

13. Julian Nagelsmann

Julian Nagelsmann, head coach of Germany (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 37
National team: Germany
Nationality: German

The gulf between Germany and most of their opponents at Euro 2024 was clear, bar Spain. The gulf between their coach and everyone else's was obvious, too.

Nagelsmann was tactically flawless at his home Euros, reinventing Toni Kroos as a quarter-back and showing England a thing or two about ‘too many cooks’ in attack. Still just 37, he has the experience of a veteran at the top level now and has refined his style to the prototypical German model of possession and pressing: and he'll lead Die Mannschaft into the World Cup in 2026 as one of the favourites – off his name alone.

12. Antonio Conte

Antonio Conte during his Premier League days (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 55
Club:
Napoli
Nationality: Italian

The Serie A cheat code, the Duracell bunny, the man who made the back three cool again. Antonio Conte's Napoli are balling – as we all knew they would – and the Lecce-born boss is still in the prime of his life.

We all know what to expect from Conte teams by now. They will suffocate the life out of you and keep everything tight at the back, shaping tools from other managers' discarded fringe stars to compete among the elite. Silverware surely beckons for him once more: you just can't put a good madman down.

11. Ruben Amorim

Sporting's head coach Ruben Amorim (Image credit: FILIPE AMORIM/AFP via Getty Images)

Age: 39
Club:
Sporting
Nationality: Portuguese

The brain behind the rise of Portugal's incumbent unstoppable force, Sporting are enjoying an unprecedented renaissance in their modern history. Ruben Amorim has gotten this group to turn a two-horse race into their title to lose – and they've looked good in Europe, too.

Is Sporting's true success with the recruitment or the coaching? Well, a little of both. Amorim is a sharp mind who's been sought out by some of Europe's finest – and he's taken big scalps in crunch clashes. Still under 40, a bright future lies ahead.

10. Thomas Tuchel

Thomas Tuchel while at Bayern (Image credit: Alamy)

Age: 51
National team: England
Nationality: German

Like a wily politician rising to No.10 through various cabinet roles, battling the in-fighting and the backstabbing, Thomas Tuchel sidestepped through minefields at Dortmund, PSG and Chelsea to get to the promised land of German football: the Allianz Arena. You'd have thought that Bayern Munich would have had the least politics to deal with behind the scenes of all those clubs, too.

In a decade at the top, Tuchel has established himself as one of the elite of the European game, thanks to his ability to platform superstars better than almost anyone else in football. He was the only one who could get a tune from Neymar and Mbappe at the same time; he found peace at Stamford Bridge in a back three.

Really, the Bayern job probably didn't work out because the German is still best when he's the underdog. His greatest heights have come when he's stolen the result from someone bigger and badder – which makes his next move all the more intriguing. 

What will he do with England, exactly?

9. Arne Slot

Liverpool boss Arne Slot (Image credit: Julian Finney/Getty Images)

Age: 46
Club:
Liverpool
Nationality: Dutch

Arne Slot was subject of a FourFourTwo magazine feature over the summer of 2023, introducing Pep Guardiola's ‘disciples’ in European football. “Replacing Klopp, inspired by Pep,” we said.

In Jamie Carragher's words, Arne Slot is truly a student of the game: a man who obsessed over Guardiola, Marcelo Bielsa and the old masters to make something new in Dutch football. And though he's not been a coach all that long, really – since 2016 – he has shown sides of himself in his short career already that are distinctly him and him alone: he can reinvent teams from nothing and he's an elite communicator of ideas.

“He used to show us clips of Liverpool all the time,” American midfielder Cole Bassett, who was at Feyenoord during Slot’s first season told FourFourTwo in the feature. “They were the team he used to emphasise to us: if we wanted to play at the top level, that’s what you had to do.” It seems he was always destined for Anfield, after all – but Slot is no one's imitator.

8. Diego Simeone

Atletico boss Diego Simeone

Age: 54
Club:
Atletico Madrid
Nationality: Argentine

Diego Simeone is caricatured as having a devil on each shoulder. Over the years, we have been at the forefront of those praising his practice of the dark arts: no one does it better.

But we're now at the point in the timeline where El Cholo has earned longevity in an industry allergic to keeping the faith. The Argentine has survived it all: he arrived at the height of tiki-taka and fought it with a 4-4-2, changing his ways when he needed to bulk out his backline. He's won titles in an age in which Barça and Real ruled like no one ever had. He's inspired underdogs across the globe.

Simeone will go down as an all-timer for what he's brought to the game. And he's still got life in him yet: does he have a dramatic next chapter at Atletico to come?

7. Lionel Scaloni

Argentina manager Lionel Scaloni (Image credit: Alamy)

Age: 46
National team: Argentina
Nationality: Argentine

An Argentine Lionel ended a 28-year wait for an international trophy for his nation. Only Messi had been playing in the national setup for over a decade: Scaloni was the arrival who set the ball rolling.

Now, Argentina are a force in international football, having won their last three tournaments: the last of which, Messi barely featured. It's a very different task to the club game and Scaloni has managed to galvanise this group and add focus, aligning an entire nation not just to one player but one goal.

Aside from the obvious outstanding hero, this isn't exactly a golden generation, either. Scaloni deserves his credit for what he's done.

6. Unai Emery

Unai Emery of Aston Villa (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 52
Club:
Aston Villa
Nationality: Spanish

When waxing over what Unai Emery has achieved at Villa Park, pundits always look backwards – to the Europa League triumphs, the subsequent ‘downfall’ at so-called bigger clubs and then the re-emergence as a serious, top-level boss.

Emery has always had it: he just didn't always have the environment. Villa suits him down to the ground though, with a group of players prepared to run the hard yards, stay compact in his midblock and press with the fervour he asks. They relish spoiling a day and are looking ever more dominant as he evolves them.

Emery is a better coach than his Arsenal days, his PSG days – and yes, more tactically astute than he was at Sevilla, too. The Basque is enjoying his best spell in management in the Midlands.

5. Simone Inzaghi

Inter coach Simone Inzaghi (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 48
Club:
Inter Milan
Nationality: Italian

As a player, Simone Inzaghi lived in the shadow of brother, Filippo. As a manager, he's the one draping his cloak over Serie A.

In and out of possession, Inzaghi is unparalleled in Italian football, able to throttle an opponent's defence or stifle their attack with equal aplomb. The Italian took over from Antonio Conte and brought evolution not revolution – but in his reinvention of Hakan Calhanoglou as a deeper midfielder, his use of No.8s as attacking weapons and his precisely drilled backline, he has taken Inter Milan to a new level.

Inzaghi's jaunt to the Champions League final in 2023 was seen as an outsider getting lucky from the weak side of a draw. In years to come, perhaps people will think of it a little more as it actually was: an expert tactician who deservedly almost took a superbly coached group within a whisker of the biggest prize in the sport. More is to come, for sure.

4. Mikel Arteta

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta (Image credit: Alamy)

Age: 42
Club:
Arsenal
Nationality: Spanish

Arsenal are unique within English football's elite as a club led by Arsene Wenger's on-field leaders, schooled in the Gunners' way of play. Edu Gaspar is sporting director, Per Mertesacker heads the academy and Jack Wilshere takes on the under-18s: all of whom were generals for their previous boss.

Mikel Arteta is often compared to compatriot Pep Guardiola for his positional play nous or even one-time boss David Moyes for his defensive rigidity – but make no mistake: he is Wenger's heir, too, in that he's always looking for the edge. He trusts his players as people, emphasises the collective and wants on-field relationships to blossom so that his team figures things out in-game, as much as they do from his own leadership.

Only really Jose Mourinho, Jurgen Klopp and Antonio Conte have mounted title challenges against Pep Guardiola: now Arteta has, too. But he's not just a sum of those who have inspired him, he's making history himself at Arsenal. Silverware surely has to follow.

3. Xabi Alonso

Xabi Alonso celebrates Bayer Leverkusen's Bundesliga title win (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 42
Club: Bayer Leverkusen
Nationality: Spanish

Xabi Alonso's overthrowing of German royalty without so much as losing a fixture is one of the most impressive achievements a manager has ever been able to boast. That it was his first full season in senior management is nothing short of astonishing.

Alonso has learned from the best – so seeing him employ a system that he never actually played in, under the likes of Ancelotti, Guardiola and Benitez, was a curveball. The results have been extraordinary: Granit Xhaka has become one of the best midfielders in the world, Florian Wirtz has conquered injury hell to reach a level we all dreamed of and his defence is one of the most balanced in world football – not to mention the two wing-backs who have performed perhaps unique roles under Alonso.

A legendary management career hopefully beckons. Alonso is the most exciting thing in the dugout – and we can't wait to what he has up his sleeve for his next trick.

2. Carlo Ancelotti

Carlo Ancelotti after winning the Champions League with Real Madrid (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 65
Club:
Real Madrid
Nationality: Italian

Where football was reinvented by those who gave it structure in the late 2000s, it's perhaps an oddity that it's an Italian grandfather – brought up on old footage of catenaccio and the tales of dastardly defenders – who has most successfully fought against the tide of rigidity and patterned attacks.

Carlo Ancelotti's mantra of bending his system to his players will be remembered for the likes of Seedorf and Kaka – but it's perhaps never been better than with Bellingham and Benzema at the Bernabeu. Don Carlo's ability to always find a way is the perfect philosophy for a club whose DNA is imprinted on the Champions League trophy – and even into his 60s, he's finding new ways to succeed with egos where mere mortals would flounder.

Ancelotti is an all-time great – and the recognition he's receiving this late into his career for being the genius he always has been is welcome, to say the least.

1. Pep Guardiola

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola (Image credit: Getty Images)

Age: 53
Club:
Manchester City
Nationality: Spanish

Who else? He reshaped the sport, he won everything there was to win. But perhaps the thing that makes Pep Guardiola the greatest in the modern game – perhaps of all time – is his ability to dust himself off and do it all again. And again. And again.

He's always four or five steps ahead. Every new tactical iteration of a simple 4-3-3 is revolutionised ahead of anyone else cottoning on, as he marches towards trophies with an icy relentlessness. Dynasties are fleeting in football, challengers welcomed by neutrals, as the old guard always has to bow out before they're boring – and yet Guardiola is now looking to a fifth successive title in a country that had only seen three in a row before.

Almost two decades on, we're still searching for new ways to describe the things he's done. We're still not used to this standard of ‘elite’. He's the best all right – and he probably always will be.

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