Carlos Queiroz

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Carlos Queiroz
Iran-Morocco 2018 FIFA World Cup press conference 5.jpg
Carlos Queiroz (2018)
Personnel
Surname Carlos Manuel Brito Leal Queiroz
birthday March 1, 1953
place of birth NampulaMozambique
position goalkeeper
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1984 DG Estoril Praia (assistant coach)
1989-1991 Portugal U20
1991-1993 Portugal
1994-1996 Sporting Lisbon
1996 NY / NJ MetroStars
1996-1997 Nagoya Grampus Eight
1999 United Arab Emirates
2000-2002 South Africa
2002-2003 Manchester United (assistant coach)
2003-2004 real Madrid
2004-2008 Manchester United (assistant coach)
2008-2010 Portugal
2011-2018 Iran
2019– Colombia

Carlos Manuel Brito Leal Queiroz (born March 1, 1953 in Nampula , Mozambique ) is a Mozambican - Portuguese football coach . He won several awards as a youth coach and is considered the discoverer of the Portuguese "golden generation" of the 1990s, which includes players like Luís Figo and Rui Costa . He led the Portuguese U-20 national soccer team to two world championship titles in 1989 and 1991.

Career

He made no name for himself as a player. In his youth he was a goalkeeper at Ferroviário de Nampula, a railway association in the then Portuguese colony of Mozambique. He then moved to Portugal at the time of Mozambique's independence.

With Queiroz, the South African national team qualified for the 2002 World Cup . Queiroz resigned before the tournament - due to a disagreement with then sports director Jomo Sono . He went to Manchester United as assistant coach to Sir Alex Ferguson and won the English league title in the 2002/03 season. The success sparked interest from Real Madrid , who replaced their coach Vicente del Bosque with Queiroz at the beginning of the 2003 season. In spite of everything, Queiroz did not have any success with the “Royal”, after 10 months he returned to Manchester United in July 2004, where he had a three-year contract as assistant coach.

In July 2008 he moved back to Portugal as the successor to the Brazilian Luiz Felipe Scolari , who took over the coaching position at the English top club FC Chelsea , as coach of the Portuguese national team . After the successful time under Scolari, Queiroz led the national team to the 2010 World Cup with difficulty and could not convince with his team at the finals. Queiroz was initially banned from the anti-doping agency for six months because of insulting officials during doping controls before the World Cup. The Portuguese football association FPF drew conclusions from this and released the coach from his duties on September 9, 2010.

On April 4, 2011, he signed a three and a half year contract as Iran's coach. After the historic defeat on September 11, 2012 against Lebanon during the World Cup qualification in Beirut, he came under fire. He countered and accused the AFC of not working according to international standards. His team beat their main competitor South Korea in the next game and qualified as group winners for the World Cup finals. On June 19, 2014, he announced that he would be leaving the Iranian Football Association after the 2014 World Cup in Brazil . There was a U-turn in mid-September 2014. Suddenly, both sides found a financial basis to continue the cooperation. Queiroz accepted the association's improved offer and extended his contract until the 2018 World Cup . In 2017 he led the national team to a World Cup finals for the second time after winning Asian Group A first.

On February 7, 2019, he was introduced by the national association in Bogotá as the person responsible for the Colombian national soccer team .

title

Web links

Commons : Carlos Queiroz  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. "Carlos Queiroz inherits Scolari" - Article on kicker.de (accessed on July 11, 2008)
  2. ^ Association dismisses Queiroz
  3. Carlos Queiroz: "There is no tomorrow in football" - Source nahostfussball.com ' ( Memento from September 28, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) (accessed October 25, 2012)
  4. Kicker online : World Cup splitter: Queiroz stops - Hazard exercises humility from June 19, 2014
  5. reuters.com: Queiroz ends contract saga by signing Iran deal (September 17, 2014) , accessed on October 11, 2019
  6. reuters.com: Queiroz to quit as Iran coach after World Cup (May 24, 2018) , accessed on October 11, 2019