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#Andre Villas-Boas
trentxaa · 11 days
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porto finally getting a senior women's team 🥳🥳🥳🎊🎊🎊🎊😫😫😩😩😩😩😩
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mariamartins-world · 2 years
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🚨URGENTE! DUÍLIO FALA SOBRE O NOVO TÉCNICO DO CORINTHIANS! ÚLTIMAS NOTÍC...
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swamyworld · 10 days
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Xabi Alonso expects next scene of Bayer Leverkusen's 'movie' in Dublin | Europa League
TThey last played the Europa League here 13 years ago. An anticlimactic 1-0 win over Porto Braga. Andre Villas-Boas was 33 years old and was set to take over at Chelsea following the sacking of Carlo Ancelotti. He was calmer, more ambitious and had a clear presence. Comparisons with Jose Mourinho were understandable and inevitable, but Villas-Boas seemed a different order to other managers. He…
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ramtracking · 30 days
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At F.C. Porto, a Toxic Presidential Race Feels Typical for 2024 [ Tottenham Hotspur F.C. ]
At F.C. Porto, a Toxic Presidential Race Feels Typical for 2024 [Highlights] UPDATE: André Villas-Boas was elected president of F.C. Porto in a landslide on Saturday. Things started with a brawl and have scarcely… Andre Villas-Boas, the former Chelsea and Tottenham manager, has been elected as president of FC Porto in a landslide victory, ending the… Andre Villas-Boas has been named the new…
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ekingsnewscom · 1 month
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Perjalanan karir seorang Andre Villas-Boas bersama FC Porto :
📆 2008-2009: Assisten manajer 📆 2009-2021: Manajer
📆 2024: Presiden
Selamat menjalankan tugas dengan jabatan barunya, Pak Pres!
- Follow juga kami di :
Instagram : @ekingsnews
Facebook : ekingsnews
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kashicloud · 2 months
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[ad_1] An important thing to remember about Andre Villas-Boas is that he had ridiculously good hair.You don’t spend a record-shattering €15 million (£12.9; $16.3m) fee to sign a rookie manager away from Porto unless you’re pretty sure you know what you’re getting, and one thing Chelsea knew for certain, back in the heady days of 2011, was that the man with a swirling, fox-red side-parting looked impossibly cool getting tossed in the air during trophy celebrations. Villas-Boas at Porto in 2010 (Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images)Hair like that had sexy new ideas — a philosophy, perhaps. It had the sort of rakish sweep that could command a press conference, smouldering volcanically above the jagged peaks of an unbuttoned collar. But when the 33-year-old prodigy conducted his first interview as the world’s most expensive manager, all of the glamour quickly drained away.“Don’t expect something,” Villas-Boas warned gently, “from one man.”True to his word, he was sacked by March.Villas-Boas to Chelsea might have gone down as a historic blunder if not for all the other managers teams have squandered transfer fees on in the last few years alone: Marco Rose to Borussia Dortmund (€5 million up front for one lacklustre season); Adi Hutter to Borussia Monchengladbach (€7.5 million, ditto); Julian Nagelsmann to Bayern Munich (€25 million for 19 months); Graham Potter to Chelsea (let’s not talk about it). These were the cream of the crop, the head coaches clubs couldn’t afford to wait around for, yet in their new jobs they had the shelf life of a bunch of bruised bananas.How do we know if a manager is good? The question sounds almost too obvious to ask — anyone down the pub will be happy to explain it to you loudly over a pint — but professional organisations with millions at stake whiff on it every year. Apparently the answer isn’t great hair. It can’t be trophies, either, since those are pretty much only available to managers already at top clubs. If the study of up-and-coming coaches can be called a science, it remains a largely theoretical one.“We’ve done work with football clubs and leagues, actually, around what predicts head coach success and it’s very, very hard,” says Omar Chaudhuri of the sports consultancy 21st Group. “There are very few strong predictors.”Everyone loves a winner, so it makes sense that employers would start by looking for coaching talent toward the top of the table. But we also know that in the grossly unequal world of European football, wage bills are destiny for most teams, no matter who’s in the technical area. The managers we admire most are the ones who find a way to punch above their weight.To pick out those overachievers, we can start by modelling the relationship between squad strength and success using crowdsourced “market values” from Transfermarkt, which are a decent proxy for player quality when you don’t have wages handy. We’ll average this season’s values with last season’s, where available, to give coaches some credit for player development, then weight the values by minutes played to account for absences.For the performance side, we’ll use a 70/30 blend of non-penalty expected goal difference and actual goal difference, which captures team strength pretty well and puts more emphasis on the parts of the game coaches are likely to have some influence over (creating and denying chances) than the parts they probably don’t (finishing, saving shots, successfully lobbying for penalties by doing the VAR rectangle thing with their fingers).The results are striking. Over the last seven seasons across Europe’s top leagues, our simple player quality model can explain around 80 per cent of teams’ success.But what about the remaining 20 per cent — who should get credit for that?When we look at the outliers on the chart above, it seems fair to say that Gian Piero Gasperini’s freewheeling style helped elevate Atalanta’s mid-budget squad into a Champions League contender a few years back, and the whole platoon of head coaches and interim guys who oversaw Schalke’s disastrous 2020-21 campaign probably weren’t so hot at their job. Maybe performance over squad value is a fair measure of what a manager brings to the table.Reassuringly, this season’s list of top teams for adjusted goal difference over expected is a veritable who’s who of coaching legends and the game’s hottest up-and-coming managers.Xabi Alonso has turned down overtures from Bayern Munich and Liverpool to stay at German champs-in-waiting Bayer Leverkusen, while Brighton’s Roberto De Zerbi, whom no less an authority than Pep Guardiola called “one of the most influential managers of the last 20 years,” remains a strong contender for both jobs.In Catalonia, Barcelona have been making eyes at Girona’s Michel. Sebastian Hoeness, Paulo Fonseca, Thiago Motta and Will Still have flocks of admirers, and maybe we should all be paying more attention to whatever Eric Roy’s got cooking at Brest.So is that it — have we cracked the not-so-secret formula to finding Europe’s next top manager?Well, hang on a second.One important trait for a good sports stat is stability, or how much it varies from season to season. If last year’s performance can’t predict next year’s because the number is too sensitive to context, you probably don’t want to make it the sole basis for any expensive hiring decisions.By that standard, our manager metric is a bust. For head coaches who change jobs, there’s no correlation whatsoever between the previous year’s performance above or below expectations at their old club and their first season at their new club. Even though goal difference added seemed pretty good at identifying this season’s hottest managers, it has zero predictive value for new hires.When Chelsea spent £21.5 million to sign Graham Potter, he was coming off one of the best runs by any head coach in the last seven years: in 2020-21 and 2021-22, Brighton finished 22 and 13 adjusted goals better than expected. His seven months in London went, er, not quite as well.Brighton, meanwhile, signed Roberto De Zerbi even though his final season at Sassuolo had been about average compared to their squad value. He’d had a pretty good season the year before that, and a respectable stint outside the top five leagues at Shakhtar Donetsk in between, but nothing that might have hinted that his first season at Brighton would be the fourth-best out of hundreds in our dataset.What can explain the difference between these two very different hiring stories? Maybe there’s a clue in how Brighton’s famously analytical owner Tony Bloom explained his process. “I am confident,” he said of the De Zerbi hire, “his style and tactical approach will suit our existing squad superbly.” De Zerbi (facing camera) and Potter in 2022 (Bryn Lennon/Getty Images)Smart clubs don’t just hire successful managers in hopes that they possess some innate knowledge of how to win. They’re careful to match a coach’s tactics to the players they already have, knowing that changing styles will cost them money and time.“I don’t want to have to replace 15 players or something like that over two years,” says one veteran analytics consultant, who requested anonymity to protect client relationships. “Because then it becomes a project of just kind of cycling through players and hoping things work out.”Not every club is as careful about this step as Brighton. Chaudhuri explains that searches often start with a “performance piece” to determine whether managers are making the most of their current squad, but “then you have a playing style piece, which clubs generally tend to be quite vague on how they want to play. They say, ‘We want games to be attractive and exciting,’ whatever that means. And then you go, ‘Okay, tell us what you think that looks like.’”The other consultant agrees. “I had this meeting yesterday, I gave five candidates, like, ‘What do you think of these five?’” he says. “And he was like, ‘Well, I like these four.’ But I said, ‘One of these four is actually not the style you said you want.’”Figuring out which managers have exceeded expectations is the easy part. You can watch their players flinging them into the air at a trophy celebration and envision your club doing the same next season. But success, on its own, is fickle. It also tends to be expensive. The right question isn’t “How do we know if a manager is good?” but “How do we know if a manager will be good for this group of players?”The secret ingredient in hiring the right coach is style — and not just the kind that comes with really good hair.(Header photo: Lars Baron/Getty Images)The Athletic recently profiled six of European football’s most innovative up-and-coming managers. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', 'https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js'); fbq('init', '207679059578897'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); [ad_2] Source link
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szabadrugas · 3 months
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i wonder what andre villas-boas is up to these days
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jordandhallu · 11 months
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Is this the end of Tottenham Hotspur’s relationship with Mauricio Pochettino?
Former Spurs boss, Mauricio Pochettino recently put pen to paper and signed a deal to become Chelsea FC’s new coach.
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Pochettino or ‘Poch’ as he’s known, has been out of a job since his departure from Ligue 1 side, Paris Saint-Germain and although Spurs were in the hunt for a manager this summer, Poch made the move to London rivals, Chelsea.
Despite some groans about disloyalty from the North London clubs’ fans, it isn’t exactly difficult to see why Poch decided to go to the blue side of London. After all, there’s reports that Tottenham chairman, Daniel Levy, never even reached out to the Argentinian.
Mauricio Pochettino was appointed as Spurs manager in 2014 and after bringing forward a lot of young talent, helped them to finish in the top 4 on four occasions with a record highest position finish of 2nd in 2016/17. Irony being that they lost out on the title to Chelsea, who were being managed then by Antonio Conte.
Poch also took Spurs to their first UEFA Champions League final in 2019 where they lost 2-0 against fellow English team, Liverpool. A league cup final and an FA Cup semi-final were also amongst his achievements.
Although Pochettino revived the out of favour, ageing side inherited from Tim Sherwood, Tottenham’s trophy cabinet did not see a new addition during his time as boss, and hasn’t done since their League Cup victory in 2008 against, who else? Chelsea.
Poch was sacked in November of 2019 which faced mixed reactions from the fans. Just 4 months on from the Champions League final, he had only won 4 matches in the lead up to his departure.
Some Spurs fans believed it was time for a change whilst some thought it was too soon and wanted to give him time.
Ever since he left Hotspur Way, fans have been pleading for him to return. After an unsuccessful 4 years with 4 changes of hand (including caretaker managers), Tottenham just haven’t looked the same since the Argentinian was in charge.
Managers like Jose Mourinho & Antonio Conte have failed to find success and were both forced out of the club by Daniel Levy for not only not getting the right results, but for playing bland, negative football which was so different to ‘The Tottenham Way’ of fast attacking play that has been distilled into the culture of the club.
For some fans, Pochettino’s appointment at Chelsea gave flashbacks of a certain centre back who left Spurs to sign for rivals Arsenal in 2001 but for others, this is just a case of a common manager swap between the White and Blue sides of London. Poch isn’t the first manager that has been employed by both Spurs & Chelsea and most probably won’t be the last. Names include the aforementioned Antonio Conte & Jose Mourinho as well as Andre Villas-Boas & Glenn Hoddle, although these four all managed the Blues before heading to Spurs.
So with it a seemingly common occurrence, why does this time feel different? Is it because this is the first time in the Premier League era that a manager has gone from Spurs to Chelsea instead of vice versa? Perhaps it’s because the Tottenham fans wanted him back so desperately after a very close relationship prior. No matter the reason, fuel would have definitely been added to the fire after Spurs fans heard what Pochettino had to say in his first interview as Chelsea boss. “It was easy to say yes to Chelsea. We’ll work hard, play in a way the fans can enjoy football.
“In the last 10, 12, 15 years, Chelsea is the greatest team in England.”
It’s understandable as to why these comments have rubbed the Spurs fans the wrong way – claiming that Chelsea have been the greatest team in England over a period that saw himself manage their London rivals. Should he have said this after having such a close relationship with Spurs?
The fact is, Chelsea have been a more successful club in the time period that he mentioned. Whether they have been ‘the greatest team in England’ is a separate debate.
Some may feel that Poch is just doing his job as the new manager. Of course he is going to want to get the fans on his side from as early on as possible, especially since the same fans most likely spent the majority of the last 8-10 years hating him. Poch isn’t going to say or hint in any way that he still likes Tottenham, if that is even the case so why would Spurs fans be disappointed in him pledging his loyalty to his new team? His move to Chelsea and these comments have definitely had an impact on the fans more so because Tottenham are in a struggle of their own right now. It seems likely that although still bitter, these fans would have turned their heads quicker if Spurs were doing considerably better than Chelsea. But since they are both looking to recover from poor seasons where they finished outside of the European spaces, there will definitely be a battle for who can perform better. The only difference in the clubs being that Chelsea are likely to spend a lot more than Tottenham in the transfer windows, potentially giving them an edge.
One thing is for sure, this fixture looks certain to raise some tension this season. Could we see an interaction similar to the infamous Tuchel & Conte handshake scenario from last season between Pochettino and new Spurs boss, Ange Postecoglou? Maybe a second instalment of “Battle of the Bridge”. How the fans and Poch react in their future meetings will tell us everything we need to know. It’s to be expected that the words “He’s magic, you know… Mauricio Pochettino” will still be sung but will be heard from West London instead of North, where it was only just recently chanted a matter of months ago.
Tottenham Hotspur face Chelsea in the Premier League on the 4th November at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and on the 24th February at Stamford Bridge.
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qudachuk · 1 year
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The 34-year-old Portuguese coach was sacked just eight months after the Blues bought him out of his Porto contract.
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denisvoytov · 2 years
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Happy birthday Andre Villas-Boas!!! 45🥳⚽️ #andrevillasboas #fczenit #андревиллашбоаш https://www.instagram.com/p/Cj2tYMZo2lg/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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kobimepohe · 2 years
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Defensa nacional del peru pdf
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hutrust · 2 years
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Frederic longuepee bio
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Japan right-back Hiroki Sakai was tripped up in the Angers box and the France attacker scored his fifth goal of the season. The former West Ham playmaker doubled the advantage after 41 minutes slotting his third penalty of the season. Payet played his free-kick quickly to find midfielder Sanson who side-footed cooly past Ludovic Butelle. Villas-Boas´ men claimed the lead after 17 minutes as Sanson registered his second goal in four league games. The Portuguese boss kept faith with the side which beat Brest 2-1 on Friday electing against giving match-winner Nemanja Radonjic a spot in the starting lineup.Īngers boss Stephane Moulin made five changes from the weekend´s loss to Nice as Ismail Traore took over the captaincy from Thomas Mangani. Midfielder Dimitri Payet was involved in both goals at Angers, setting up Morgan Sanson for the opener before converting from the penalty spot as Andre Villas-Boas´ side extended their unbeaten run to five. Nicolas De Preville and a double from Brazilian midfielder Otavio made sure of all three points moving Paulo Sousa´s side up to third in the table, five points behind Marseille. He saved his best finish for this third effort firing high above Paul Bernardoni eight minutes into the second half for his first hat-trick in senior football. Maja claimed his first after 24 minutes and added a second to double his tally for the season 13 minutes later. The supporters, who climbed down onto the field after 11 minutes, were targeting club president Frederic Longuepee after being refused from flying a banner calling for his resignation.
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cloudyaozora · 2 years
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Loyal Portuguese?
Loyal Portuguese? Buzzing, Wolves start talks with Martins to take on Laj Italian journalist Nicolo Shira has เว็บบาคาร่า reported that Wolves have begun talks with former Olympiakos manager Pedro Martins to take over after sacking Bruno Laj.Wolves recently fired Laj from his position. After winning only 1 of the first 8 games of the Premier League until falling into the relegation zoneWolves are expected to appoint a new manager within the week. The legal casino has released several favorites, including Ruben Amorim from Sporting Lisbon, Sergio Conceicao from Porto, Julen Lopetegui from Sevilla.In addition, the names of Ange Postecoglou, Jean Dyche, Andre Villas-Boas, Leonardo Jardim and Rafael Benitez are also included.However, the latest The report states that Wolves are eyeing Martins and are now open to talks with the Portuguese.
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teamroscoes · 3 years
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heroesoffootball · 3 years
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