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List of FC Barcelona managers

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Pep Guardiola is the most successful Barcelona manager (14 titles in 4 seasons).

Futbol Club Barcelona is a professional football club based in Barcelona, Spain, which plays in the Spanish league, La Liga. The first full-time manager for Barcelona was John Barrow. He was signed by the founder of Barcelona, and then director, Joan Gamper, and was dismissed four months later without winning a title.

Pep Guardiola is the most successful manager in terms of trophies. Guardiola was also the most successful manager in terms of trophies per year. In 2009, Guardiola's first year, Barcelona became the first club in Spain to win the treble of La Liga, Copa del Rey, and Champions League. Later they became the first football team ever to win six out of six competitions in a single year, thus completing the sextuple, comprising the aforementioned treble and the Spanish Supercup, European Supercup and FIFA Club World Cup.[1]

The second most successful FC Barcelona manager in terms of trophies won is Johan Cruyff, who won four La Liga titles, one Copa del Rey trophy, three Supercopa de España, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup trophy, one UEFA Champions League title and one UEFA Super Cup in his 8-year reign as manager.

List of managers

Johan Cruyff won La Liga four consecutive times as manager.

During the first 29 years of Barcelona's existence, from 1899 to 1928, Spain did not have a national football league. Barcelona competed in the championship of the Catalonia region, the winners of which qualified for the Copa del Rey along with the other regional champions.[2][3]

In February 1929, Spain's first national football league was formed, with Barcelona among the founder members.[4] The club also competed in the Campionat de Catalunya (Catalan Championship) until it was abandoned in 1940.[2] The Copa del Rey continued alongside La Liga.[5] Clubs continued to qualify for it based on their placings in the regional championships until 1940, when it became open to all teams in the top two divisions of La Liga and selected other teams.[6]

Name From To Honours No. of honours Refs
Switzerland Joan Gamper 1902 1917 3 Copa del Rey, 1 Copa Macaya, 1 Copa Barcelona, 7 Campionat de Catalunya 12
England John Barrow 1917 1917
England Jack Greenwell 1917 1923 2 Copa del Rey, 4 Campionat de Catalunya 6 [7]
England Alf Spouncer[8] 1923 1924 1 Campionat de Catalunya 1
Jesza Poszony 1924 December 1924 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Campionat de Catalunya 2
England Ralph Kirby December 1924 February 1926 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Campionat de Catalunya 2 [9]
Austria Jack Dumby February 1926 December 1926 1 Campionat de Catalunya 1 [10]
Romà Forns December 1926 March 1929 1 La Liga, 1 Campionat de Catalunya, 1 Copa del Rey 3 [11]
England James Bellamy March 1929 July 1931 2 Campionat de Catalunya 2 [12]
England Jack Greenwell July 1931 July 1933 1 Campionat de Catalunya 1 [13]
Austria Jack Dumby July 1933 July 1934 [14]
Franz Platko July 1934 July 1935 1 Campionat de Catalunya 1 [15]
Republic of Ireland Patrick O'Connell July 1935 March 1940 2 Campionat de Catalunya 2 [16]
Spain Josep Planas March 1940 July 1941 [17]
Spain Ramón Guzmán July 1941 January 1942 [18]
Spain Joan Josep Nogués January 1942 June 1944 1 Copa del Rey 1 [19]
Spain Josep Samitier June 1944 July 1947 1 La Liga, 1 Copa Eva Duarte 2 [20]
Uruguay Enrique Fernández July 1947 May 1950 2 La Liga, 1 Copa Eva Duarte, 1 Latin Cup 4 [21]
Spain Ramón Llorens May 1950 June 1950 [22]
Czechoslovakia Ferdinand Daučík June 1950 July 1954 2 La Liga, 3 Copa del Rey, 2 Copa Eva Duarte, 1 Latin Cup 8 [23]
Italy Sandro Puppo July 1954 June 1955 [24]
Hungary Franz Platko June 1955 June 1956 [25]
Spain Domingo Balmanya June 1956 April 1958 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Fairs Cup 2 [26]
Argentina Helenio Herrera April 1958 May 1960 2 La Liga, 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Fairs Cup 4 [27]
Spain Enric Rabassa May 1960 June 1960 [28]
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ljubiša Broćić June 1960 January 1961 [29]
Spain Enrique Orizaola January 1961 June 1961 [30]
Spain Luis Miró June 1961 November 1961 [31]
Hungary Ladislao Kubala November 1961 January 1963 [32]
Spain Josep Gonzalvo January 1963 July 1963 1 Copa del Rey 1 [33]
Spain César Rodríguez July 1963 October 1964 [18]
Spain Vicente Sasot October 1964 June 1965 [34]
Argentina Roque Olsen June 1965 June 1967 1 Fairs Cup 1 [35]
Spain Salvador Artigas June 1967 October 1969 1 Copa del Rey 1 [36]
Spain Josep Seguer October 1969 December 1969 [37]
England Vic Buckingham December 1969 July 1971 1 Copa del Rey 1 [38]
Netherlands Rinus Michels July 1971 May 1975 1 La Liga 1 [39]
West Germany Hennes Weisweiler May 1975 April 1976 [40]
Spain Laureano Ruiz April 1976 May 1976 [41]
Netherlands Rinus Michels May 1976 May 1978 1 Copa del Rey 1 [42]
France Lucien Muller May 1978 April 1979 [43]
Spain Joaquim Rifé April 1979 March 1980 1 Cup Winners' Cup 1 [44]
Argentina Helenio Herrera March 1980 May 1980 [45]
Hungary Ladislao Kubala May 1980 November 1980 [46]
Argentina Helenio Herrera November 1980 June 1981 1 Copa del Rey 1 [47]
West Germany Udo Lattek June 1981 March 1983 1 Cup Winners' Cup 1 [48]
Spain José Luis Romero March 1983 March 1983 [49]
Argentina César Luis Menotti March 1983 June 1984 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Copa de la Liga, 1 Supercopa de España 3 [50]
England Terry Venables June 1984 September 1987 1 La Liga, 1 Copa de la Liga 2 [51]
Spain Luis Aragonés September 1987 May 1988 1 Copa del Rey 1 [52]
Spain Carles Rexach May 1988 May 1988 [53]
Netherlands Johan Cruyff May 1988 May 1996 4 La Liga, 3 Supercopa de España, 1 European Cup, 1 European Super Cup, 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Cup Winners' Cup 11 [54][55]
Spain Carles Rexach May 1996 May 1996 [56]
England Bobby Robson May 1996 June 1997 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Supercopa de España, 1 Cup Winners' Cup 3 [57]
Netherlands Louis van Gaal June 1997 May 2000 2 La Liga, 1 Copa del Rey, 1 UEFA Super Cup 4 [58]
Spain Llorenç Serra Ferrer May 2000 April 2001 [59]
Spain Carles Rexach April 2001 May 2002 [53]
Netherlands Louis van Gaal May 2002 January 2003 [60]
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radomir Antić January 2003 June 2003 [61]
Netherlands Frank Rijkaard June 2003 June 2008 2 La Liga, 2 Supercopa de España, 1 UEFA Champions League 5 [62]
Spain Pep Guardiola June 2008 June 2012 3 La Liga, 2 Copa del Rey, 3 Supercopa de España, 2 UEFA Champions League, 2 UEFA Super Cup, 2 FIFA Club World Cup 14 [63]
Spain Tito Vilanova June 2012 July 2013 1 La Liga 1 [64]
Argentina Gerardo Martino July 2013 May 2014 1 Supercopa de España 1 [65]
Spain Luis Enrique May 2014 May 2017 2 La Liga, 3 Copa del Rey, 1 Supercopa de España, 1 UEFA Champions League, 1 UEFA Super Cup, 1 FIFA Club World Cup 9 [66]
Spain Ernesto Valverde May 2017 January 2020 2 La Liga, 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Supercopa de España 4 [67]
Spain Quique Setién January 2020 15 August 2020 [68]

References

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  8. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 15 April 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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