Portuguese football manager and former player (born 1965)
In this
Portuguese name , the first or maternal
family name is
Soares da Costa and the second or paternal family name is
Faria Carvalhal .
Carlos Augusto Soares da Costa Faria Carvalhal (Portuguese pronunciation:
[ˈkaɾluʃ kɐɾvɐˈʎal] ; born 4 December 1965) is a Portuguese former
footballer who played as a
centre-back , currently a
manager .
As a player, he totalled 197
Primeira Liga appearances in service of six clubs, including two spells each at
Braga and
Chaves , as well as a single game for
Porto .
[3]
In a managerial career of over two decades, Carvalhal led eight teams in Portugal's top flight, including Braga twice, winning the
Taça de Portugal in
2021 . He reached the same final with
Leixões in
2002 and won the
Taça da Liga with
Vitória de Setúbal in
2008 . Abroad, he had spells in Greece, Turkey, England, Wales, the United Arab Emirates and Spain.
Playing career
Born in
Braga ,
[4]
[1] Carvalhal represented mainly his hometown's
Braga during his career. In the
1987–88 campaign , in one of his three spells at the club, he had one of his best years in the
Primeira Liga , appearing in 34 games and only being
booked seven times, even though the
Minho team could only finish in 11th position.
[5]
Immediately afterwards, Carvalhal joined
Porto ,
[6] but was released after only one year,
[7] going on to represent in the following nine seasons – until his retirement at the age of 32 –
Beira-Mar ,
[8] Braga,
Tirsense ,
Chaves and
Espinho .
Coaching career
Early career
Carvalhal began managing at his last club Espinho, in the
Segunda Liga , being dismissed early into his
second year . In 2002, he became the first coach in the country to take a team in the
third division to the
UEFA Cup , after leading
Leixões to
the final of the
Taça de Portugal .
[9]
Two years later , he helped
Vitória de Setúbal back to the top flight, which prompted his move to a side in that tier,
Belenenses .
[10]
Carvalhal was sacked by Belenenses early into
2005–06 , after five defeats in eight games. He met the same fate with the two teams he coached the
following season , Braga and Beira-Mar. With the latter, he was dismissed in December 2006 after the
Aveiro club signed a cooperation deal with Inverfutbol, a Spanish-based sporting company, in a relegation-ending campaign.
[11]
Returning to Setúbal for
2007–08 , Carvalhal enjoyed his best year as a manager. He led the
Sadinos to the sixth position in the league – with the subsequent
UEFA Cup qualification and with the team posting one of the best defensive records in Europe that year – and victory in the
inaugural edition of the
Taça da Liga , against
Sporting CP .
[12]
Marítimo and Sporting CP
In May 2008, Carvalhal accepted the first foreign job of his career at
Asteras Tripolis of
Super League Greece , signing a two-year contract worth an annual salary of
€ 500,000.
[13] He left by mutual consent in November with the club in 12th, having been warned by compatriot
José Peseiro about the precarious nature of management in the Mediterranean country.
[14]
Carvalhal returned to Portugal and joined
Marítimo , only winning one match in 11 but with the
Madeira side
finishing comfortably in mid-table . He was relieved of his duties late into the year 2009, moving to Sporting in mid-November to replace the fired
Paulo Bento .
[9]
[15]
As originally intended, Carvalhal left his post at the end of
the season , with Sporting finishing in fourth position, 28 points behind champions
Benfica .
[16]
Turkey
On 2 August 2011, Carvalhal was appointed as caretaker manager of
Beşiktaş from Turkey, as incumbent
Tayfur Havutçu resolved his legal issues stemming from the
2011 Turkish sports corruption scandal .
[17]
[18] At the start of the following April, with the team trailing
Galatasaray by 20 points and him having fallen out with compatriot star player
Ricardo Quaresma , he was relieved of his duties and replaced by his predecessor.
[19]
Remaining in
the same city , Carvalhal joined
İstanbul Başakşehir also of the
Süper Lig in May 2012.
[20] He resigned on 12 November, as they were in 14th place.
[21]
Sheffield Wednesday
On 30 June 2015, after nearly three years of inactivity, Carvalhal was appointed head coach of English
Championship club
Sheffield Wednesday .
[22] He led the team to sixth position in his
debut campaign and, subsequently, qualified them for
the play-offs , ultimately losing in the
play-off final at
Wembley .
[23] Another notable achievement in his first season in England was ousting
Arsenal in
the fourth round of the
Football League Cup , with a 3–0 victory.
[24]
In May 2017, after leading Wednesday to a
fourth-place league finish , Carvalhal became the first Portuguese to win the
EFL Championship Manager of the Month award.
[25] He subsequently coached them to
the play-offs , where they were defeated by
Huddersfield Town on
penalties .
[26]
Carvalhal left by mutual consent on 24 December 2017, as the side ranked in the
lower half of the table .
[27]
Swansea City
On 28 December 2017, four days after leaving Sheffield Wednesday, Carvalhal moved to the
Premier League with
Swansea City following the sacking of
Paul Clement the previous week.
[28]
[29] His first game in charge took place late in the month, and he led his team to a 2–1 away win over
Watford , led by compatriot
Marco Silva .
[30] After two consecutive league home victories against
Liverpool (1–0)
[31] and Arsenal (3–1),
[32] he was nominated for his first
Premier League Manager of the Month award for the month of January.
[33]
On 18 May 2018, after
the club's relegation , Carvalhal left the
Liberty Stadium .
[34]
Return to Portugal
Carvalhal returned to Portugal one year later, being named
Rio Ave 's coach,
[35] In his
only season , he led the team from
Vila do Conde to
Europa League qualification in fifth place, along with a best-ever points tally of 55.
[36]
On 28 July 2020, two days after leaving Rio Ave, Carvalhal signed a two-year contract at Braga, returning to the
Estádio Municipal de Braga 14 years later.
[37] The following 23 January, his side lost the
league cup final 1–0 to Sporting; both he and opposing manager
Rúben Amorim were
sent off for arguing with each other.
[38] He also reached the
decisive match in the other domestic cup , winning 3–2 at Porto in the
semi-finals second leg in spite of playing more than one hour with one player less;
[39] the final was a 2–0 victory over Benfica on 23 May.
[40]
Carvalhal was linked to
Flamengo in Brazil for the
2022 season , but would have faced a €10 million fine for not completing his Braga contract.
[41]
Atlético Mineiro in the same country managed to reduce that fee down to €8 million due to only months remaining on his deal, but still considered it to be too high.
[42] He again
finished fourth in the Portuguese League , reaching the
quarter-finals in the Europa League ;
[43] on 16 May, he asked the board of directors to allow him to leave and "embrace a new project", and his wish was granted.
[44]
Al Wahda
Carvalhal was linked to a return to the
English second tier , and was interviewed by
Blackburn Rovers . However, on 1 June 2022 he signed a one-year deal at
Al Wahda in the
UAE Pro League .
[45] He was dismissed on 3 October, having won and drawn once each from four games of the
new season .
[46]
Celta
On 2 November 2022, Carvalhal was appointed at
Celta after the sacking of
Eduardo Coudet ; he agreed to a contract until June 2024.
[47] In his first
La Liga game three days later, he lost 2–1 at home to
Osasuna .
[48] His team
finished 13th , but only survived on the final day with a 2–1 win at
Balaídos over champions
Barcelona .
[49]
Carvalhal left the club on 10 June 2023.
[50] During his spell, and also after his departure, he stated in interviews that
Iago Aspas had been the best player he had ever coached.
[51]
[52]
Olympiacos
On 5 December 2023, Carvalhal signed as coach of
Olympiacos .
[53]
[54] He debuted nine days later in a 5–2 home win over
FK TSC of Serbia in the
Europa League group stage , ensuring passage to the
UEFA Europa Conference League .
[55] In the January transfer window,
sporting director
Pedro Alves brought in six compatriots; the coach was removed from his position on 8 February 2024 after winning five and losing three of his eleven games, culminating in a 2–0 defeat to
Panathinaikos in the
Derby of the eternal enemies after the rivals had already eliminated them from the
last 16 of the
Greek Football Cup .
[56]
Personal life
Carvalhal attended university alongside fellow coach
Rui Faria in Porto, and studied for his
UEFA Pro Licence alongside
José Mourinho .
[57]
[58] He also authored the book Soccer: Developing a Know-How (2014), in which he discussed his own coaching philosophy.
[59]
Carvalhal has a five-year university degree awarded by the School of Sport Sciences of the
University of Porto ;
[60] the curricula included subjects such as psychology and philosophy.
[61] He was known for giving
metaphorical and
allegorical answers to questions in
press conferences .
[62]
[63]
[64]
[65]
In 1988, Carvalhal co-founded Braga-based
sportswear company Lacatoni, the ca in the brand's name coming from his own name.
[66]
[67]
[68] In July 2020, he suffered light injuries in an attempted
mugging when returning home to Braga after a match.
[69]
Managerial statistics
As of match played 4 February 2024
[70]
[71]
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team
Nat
From
To
Record
Ref
Espinho
20 May 1998
8 November 1999
47
17
13
17
58
55
+3
0 36.17
[72]
Freamunde
15 November 1999
30 May 2000
24
9
7
8
30
27
+3
0 37.50
[73]
Vizela
30 June 2000
4 December 2000
14
8
3
3
25
14
+11
0 57.14
[74]
Aves
4 December 2000
8 June 2001
22
2
8
12
17
46
−29
00 9.09
[75]
Leixões
8 June 2001
9 December 2002
64
42
13
9
118
56
+62
0 65.63
[76]
Vitória Setúbal
5 June 2003
19 May 2004
38
20
11
7
69
43
+26
0 52.63
[77]
Belenenses
19 May 2004
27 October 2005
46
18
8
20
55
48
+7
0 39.13
[78]
Braga
10 May 2006
8 November 2006
13
6
2
5
17
16
+1
0 46.15
[79]
Beira-Mar
10 November 2006
8 January 2007
6
1
2
3
10
10
+0
0 16.67
[80]
Vitória Setúbal
23 May 2007
15 May 2008
43
19
16
8
55
41
+14
0 44.19
[77]
Asteras Tripolis
15 May 2008
11 November 2008
10
2
5
3
7
8
−1
0 20.00
[81]
Marítimo
24 February 2009
28 September 2009
18
2
8
8
20
25
−5
0 11.11
[82]
Sporting CP
16 November 2009
9 May 2010
33
16
7
10
53
37
+16
0 48.48
[83]
Beşiktaş
2 August 2011
2 April 2012
47
22
9
16
70
56
+14
0 46.81
[84]
İstanbul Başakşehir
16 May 2012
12 November 2012
12
3
2
7
11
16
−5
0 25.00
[85]
Sheffield Wednesday
30 June 2015
24 December 2017
131
56
38
37
177
138
+39
0 42.75
[86]
Swansea City
28 December 2017
18 May 2018
25
8
8
9
30
31
−1
0 32.00
[86]
Rio Ave
28 May 2019
25 July 2020
42
20
11
11
63
43
+20
0 47.62
[87]
Braga
28 July 2020
15 May 2022
104
58
20
26
179
110
+69
0 55.77
[79]
Al Wahda
1 June 2022
3 October 2022
4
1
1
2
7
5
+2
0 25.00
[88]
Celta
2 November 2022
12 June 2023
29
10
8
11
40
33
+7
0 34.48
[89]
Olympiacos
5 December 2023
7 February 2024
11
5
3
3
16
12
+4
0 45.45
[90]
Total
783
345
203
235
1,127
870
+257
0 44.06
—
Honours
Manager
Leixões
Setúbal
Braga
Individual
References
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a
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^
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a
b
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
a
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^
a
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^ Thomas, Lyall (14 July 2020).
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^
Carlos Carvalhal coach profile at Soccerway
^
Carlos Carvalhal manager stats at ForaDeJogo (archived)
^
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^
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"Sporting CP: Matches" . Soccerway . DAZN Group. Retrieved 1 November 2019 .
^
"Beşiktaş JK: Matches" . Soccerway . DAZN Group. Retrieved 1 November 2019 .
^
"İstanbul BB: Matches" . Soccerway . DAZN Group. Retrieved 1 November 2019 .
^
a
b
"Managers: Carlos Carvalhal" . Soccerbase . Centurycomm. Retrieved 12 May 2018 .
^
"Carlos Carvalhal" . Zerozero . Retrieved 12 September 2019 .
^
"Al Wahda FC: Matches" . Soccerway . DAZN Group. Retrieved 3 October 2022 .
^
"Matches Carlos Carvalhal, 2022–23 season" . BDFutbol . Retrieved 3 November 2022 .
^
"Olympiakos CFP: Matches" . Soccerway. Retrieved 15 February 2024 .
^
"Leixões-Sporting, 0–1: Taça só para uns e festa para todos" [Leixões-Sporting, 0–1: Cup only for some and party for everyone]. Record (in Portuguese). 13 May 2002. Retrieved 15 January 2016 .
^ Hart, Simon (22 October 2015).
"Sheffield Wednesday boss Carlos Carvalhal hopes that his Cup pedigree pays off against Arsenal" .
The Independent . Retrieved 15 January 2016 .
^
"Revoltados por Beto" [Angry over Beto]. Record (in Portuguese). 20 August 2002. Retrieved 15 January 2016 .
^
"Carlos Carvalhal: "Eduardo dá pontos e Taças" " [Carlos Carvalhal: "Eduardo gives points and Cups"]. Record (in Portuguese). 22 March 2008. Archived from
the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016 .
^ Kundert, Tom (31 July 2021).
"Sporting come from behind to lift Super Cup" . PortuGOAL. Retrieved 2 August 2021 .
^ Catterick, Phill (28 February 2016).
"Capital One Cup: Team of the Tournament" . Capital One Cup. Archived from
the original on 15 March 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2016 .
External links
Managerial positions
(c) = caretaker; (i) = interim.