Rui Faria
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Rui Filipe da Cunha Faria | ||
Date of birth | 14 June 1975 | ||
Place of birth | Barcelos, Portugal | ||
Managerial career | |||
Years | Team | ||
2016–2018 | Manchester United (assistant) | ||
2019–2020 | Al-Duhail |
Rui Filipe da Cunha Faria (born 14 June 1975) is a Portuguese football coach, known for his work with football manager José Mourinho for 17 years.
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Faria was born in Balugães, a tiny parish of Barcelos in Portugal.[1] Like Mourinho, he was a physical education graduate who had not played football at a high level.[2]
Faria's education took him to a seminar day at the Camp Nou, Barcelona's home stadium, where Mourinho was working as assistant manager to Louis van Gaal. Mourinho saw a kindred spirit in Faria, and when he took the União de Leiria job in April 2001, he hired Faria as his assistant and fitness coach.[2]
Coaching career
[edit]Faria's early time at Leiria, emblematic of Mourinho's new fitness regime, led to a stand-off with the club's directors.[2] Since then, the two have been inseparable, with Faria joining Porto in January 2002, Mourinho's first month in charge of his new club. He was part of the club's staff for their 2003 league, cup and UEFA Cup treble and won the UEFA Champions League in 2004 with the club. Faria then followed Mourinho to Chelsea that summer along with assistant manager Baltemar Brito, chief scout André Villas-Boas and goalkeeping coach Silvino Louro. He became ubiquitous in his Chelsea tracksuit on the London side's bench.
Faria left Chelsea in late 2007, following Mourinho out of the club, and joined him at Internazionale in the summer of 2008. In June 2009, André Villas-Boas left to manage Académica de Coimbra (later following in Mourinho's footsteps by taking over Porto, then Chelsea) and was replaced at Inter by José Morais. After winning the Serie A in their first season, the side completed a high-profile treble of league, cup and Champions League in 2010. Since the 2010–11 season, Faria was the assistant coach of Real Madrid, moving to the club along with Mourinho, Morais and Louro.[3] Faria followed Mourinho back to Chelsea, when he was confirmed as the manager in June 2013.[4]
He has worked alongside Mourinho since 2002, a period that had seen the manager and his staff fail to lose a league game at home in eight years, the run ending with a 0–1 defeat to Sporting de Gijón whilst with Real Madrid. Mourinho described Faria as his "methodology right arm, the guy that understands best my information and the way I work".[5]
In April 2014, Faria was sent from the dugout by referee Mike Dean following the coach's aggressive behaviour to the official during Chelsea's home defeat to Sunderland. He was charged with using abusive and insulting words.[6] He received a four-match stadium ban after appealing against a six-match ban.[7]
Faria once again was appointed as Mourinho's assistant upon his appointment at Manchester United in 2016. In May 2018, Faria resigned as assistant manager of Manchester United to spend more time with his family, ending his 17 year partnership with Mourinho.[8]
"The one that has more potential than any other one, the one that if he wants to become a manager tomorrow he is more than ready to do it at the highest level […] is my assistant, Rui Faria."
On 18 January 2019, Faria was appointed manager of Qatar Stars League club Al-Duhail, his first full management position.[10] He resigned from his role one year later.[11]
Controversy
[edit]As with his long-time manager, colleague and friend Mourinho, Faria has been the subject of controversy in the media. In a match against Reading in 2006, where Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Čech received a severe blow to the head, Faria was sent off alongside Chelsea midfielder Mikel John Obi.[12]
In a 2005 Champions League quarter-final match against Bayern Munich, where Mourinho was suspended for Chelsea, Faria was seen wearing a woolly hat and scratching his ear enough to elicit suspicions that Mourinho was covertly communicating with his fitness coach.[13]
At Real Madrid, Faria was said to have been party to an altercation with Sporting de Gijón manager Manuel Preciado after a match between the two clubs in November 2010.[14]
In April 2014, Faria was dismissed from the Chelsea bench during the home defeat against Sunderland when he made comments to the fourth official complaining about a penalty that had been awarded to Sunderland. It was alleged he had used "abusive and/or insulting words".[6] The match resulted in Chelsea's first-ever Premier League loss at Stamford Bridge under Mourinho.[15]
Personal life
[edit]Faria is married and is a father to three children.[16]
Honours
[edit]As assistant coach
[edit]As an assistant coach, including a sabbatical in 2007–08, Faria's club sides have won their domestic league eight times, the UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League twice and the Champions League twice. Between 2002 and 2012, Mourinho and Faria did not go a full season or a calendar year without winning at least one trophy.
Porto
- 2002–03 Primeira Liga
- 2002–03 Taça de Portugal
- 2002–03 UEFA Cup
- 2003 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira
- 2003–04 Primeira Liga
- 2003–04 UEFA Champions League
Chelsea
- 2004–05 FA Premier League
- 2004–05 League Cup
- 2005 FA Community Shield
- 2005–06 FA Premier League
- 2006–07 League Cup
- 2006–07 FA Cup
Internazionale
- 2008 Supercoppa Italiana
- 2008–09 Serie A
- 2009–10 Serie A
- 2009–10 Coppa Italia
- 2009–10 UEFA Champions League
Real Madrid
Chelsea
Manchester United
The Treble (League, Cup and European trophies)
- 2002–03 with Porto: League, Cup and UEFA Cup
- 2009–10 with Inter Milan: League, Cup and UEFA Champions League
As head coach
[edit]Al-Duhail
References
[edit]- ^ "Rui Faria da Cunha Faria". zerozerofootball. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
- ^ a b c Scott, Matt (2 June 2004). "Porto coaching staff likely to follow Mourinho to Chelsea". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
- ^ "Mourinho adds Karanka to Real Madrid staff".
- ^ Riach, James (3 June 2013). "José Mourinho returns to Chelsea and tells fans: 'I am one of you now'". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- ^ "RUI FARIA - ASSISTANT FIRST TEAM COACH". Archived from the original on 27 September 2013.
- ^ a b "FA charge Chelsea's José Mourinho, Rui Faria and Ramires with misconduct". The Guardian. 23 April 2014. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
- ^ "Rui Faria sees ban reduced". ESPN. 23 May 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- ^ "Rui Faria to leave Manchester United at end of the season | Official Manchester United Website". www.manutd.com. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018.
- ^ "Faria Profile". Planetfootball.com. Retrieved 1 November 2020
- ^ "Rui Faria takes head coach job in Qatar at Al Duhail". Sky Sports. 25 January 2019. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- ^ "Rui Faria Resigns From The Team's Training". Al Duhail SC. 20 January 2020.
- ^ "Cech Facing Months Out After Brain Operation". Guardian News and Media. 15 October 2006. Archived from the original on 19 January 2013. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Mourinho denies ordering 'deliberate' red cards". Telegraph. 24 November 2010. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
- ^ "Mou's Clues: The Preciado Affair Continues". Managing Madrid. November 2010. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
- ^ Sheringham, Sam (19 April 2014). "Chelsea 1-2 Sunderland". BBC Sport. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- ^ "Rui Faria, el chico de gafas con cara de niño". Archived from the original on 26 June 2012.
- 1975 births
- Living people
- People from Barcelos, Portugal
- University of Porto alumni
- Portuguese football managers
- Chelsea F.C. non-playing staff
- Real Madrid CF non-playing staff
- Manchester United F.C. non-playing staff
- Al-Duhail SC managers
- Portuguese expatriate football managers
- Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in England
- Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Italy
- Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
- Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Qatar
- Expatriate football managers in Qatar
- Association football coaches
- Sportspeople from Braga District