Mano Menezes

Luiz Antônio Venker de Menezes (born 11 June 1962), known as Mano Menezes, is a Brazilian professional football coach, recently he was the head coach of Corinthians.

Mano Menezes
Menezes in 2011
Personal information
Full nameLuiz Antônio Venker de Menezes
Date of birth (1962-06-11) 11 June 1962 (age 62)
Place of birthPasso do Sobrado, Brazil
Managerial career
YearsTeam
1997–2002Guarani-VA
2002Brasil de Pelotas
2003Guarani-VA
2003Iraty
2003–200415 de Novembro
2004–2005Caxias
2005–2007Grêmio
2008–2010Corinthians
2010–2012Brazil
2012Brazil U23
2013Flamengo
2014Corinthians
2015Cruzeiro
2016Shandong Luneng
2016–2019Cruzeiro
2019Palmeiras
2020Bahia
2021Al Nassr
2022–2023Internacional
2023–2024Corinthians

He managed the Brazil national team from July 2010 until his sacking on November 2012. His nickname comes from his early childhood, when his sister used to call him "Mano", which is a popular slang term meaning "brother" in Portuguese.[1]

He was born in Passo do Sobrado, Rio Grande do Sul, and began his footballing career as a defender for Guarani de Venâncio Aires in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He gave up playing to become a physical education professional, beginning in 1986 in Rio Grande do Sul, before going on to Guarani de Venâncio Aires, Juventude and Internacional (as well as a spell in 1997 with Paulo Autuori at Cruzeiro).[2]

Early life and career

Menezes was the coach of Grêmio from 2005 through 2007. He led them to promotion in 2005 and followed that up with a third-place finish in the 2006 Série A. In 2007, he led Grêmio to the final of the Copa Libertadores. At the end of the 2007 season, he took over as coach of Corinthians and started the 2008 season with a 3–0 win over Guarani. Menezes led Corinthians to the 2008 Série B title with 25 wins, 10 draws and three losses, finishing with 85 points.[3]

Coaching career

15 de Novembro

Mano's biggest highlight during his coaching time at 15 de Novembro was during 2004 Copa do Brasil. As the trainer of the team, who has never even won the Rio Grande do Sul state championship, he made to the semifinals, beating more traditional clubs such as four-time Campeonato Brasileiro Série A champion Vasco da Gama.

Grêmio

In April 2005, Menezes was hired as coach by Grêmio to be responsible for bringing back the team to the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, which he achieved and also won the Campeonato Brasileiro Série B championship title that year in a match that became known as "The Battle of the Afflicted (Batalha dos Aflitos)", due to events that took place along the departure and the fact that this has been held in the stadium Aflitos, Náutico's stadium in Recife, Pernambuco. This episode later became a movie named Batalha dos Aflitos, released in 2007.

In 2006, he led Grêmio when they took the win in the Campeonato Gaúcho with a victory over arch-rival Internacional, the first time Grêmio had won since 2001. Also in 2006, Grêmio ranked in third in the Série A, thereby earning a place in the 2007 Copa Libertadores. In 2007 they won the Campeonato Gaúcho again and reached the final in Copa Libertadores, where they lost to Boca Juniors.

Menezes left Grêmio after 169 games, with 89 wins, 35 draws and 45 losses, a win rate of 59.56%; 302 points were earned from a total of 507. The last game played by Grêmio with him as coach was the last game of the season's Série A, on 28 November 2007, against Corinthians, the team he was to coach next. In losing that match, the Corinthians were relegated to Série B.

Corinthians

Menezes in 2009

Menezes was hired to manage the Corinthians at the end of 2007, and to raise them back up from relegation. In 2008, Corinthians played the Copa do Brasil, losing to Sport Club do Recife. That year they also took the title of Campeonato Brasileiro Série B 2008.

In May 2009, Menezes led Corinthians to become unbeaten champions of the Campeonato Paulista. On 1 July 2009, Corinthians won the Copa do Brasil against Internacional. With the win, Corinthians gained entry to the 2010 Copa Libertadores.[4]

Brazil

On 24 July 2010, the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) announced that Mano would replace Dunga as manager of the Brazil national team. He was not the CBF's first choice, but Fluminense had refused to release Muricy Ramalho the day before.[5][6] Menezes' appointment was generally well received, although some pointed out that his favoured playing style resembled Dunga's defensive style.[7] He coached his first Brazil match on 10 August 2010, a 2–0 win against the United States. For this match, he selected many young players, including Diego Tardelli, André and David Luiz, among others. In addition, Menezes selected only four players that had participated in the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa: Dani Alves, Ramires, Thiago Silva and Robinho, as well as 2010 World Cup cuts Alexandre Pato, Marcelo and Neymar.[8]

At the 2011 Copa América, Brazil went out in the quarter-finals on penalties to Paraguay after a 0–0 draw, with Brazil missing all the four of its penalties.[9] He was also the coach of the Olympic team at London 2012, hoping to win the long-awaited gold medal for Brazil, the only accolade Brazil had not won in football,[10] however they were defeated by Mexico in the final and Menezes was the target of criticism in Brazil.[11]

Following disappointing results, Menezes was sacked on 23 November 2012.[12][13][14][15]

Flamengo

In June 2013, Menezes was named as the new coach of Brazilian club Flamengo.[16]

Corinthians return

In 2014, Menezes returned to Corinthians. After helping Corinthians to a fourth-place league finish, as well as qualifying for the Copa Libertadores, on 6 December 2014 Menezes resigned as head coach of the club.[17]

Shandong Luneng

In December 2015, Shandong Luneng Taishan of the Chinese Super League announced that Menezes would be the new coach of the team.

On 21 April 2016, with a 1–0 victory over Japanese side Sanfrecce Hiroshima, Shandong Luneng returned to the knockout stage of the Asian Champions League after an 11-year absence, with one round of the group stage in advance. On 25 May, Shandong Luneng defeated Sydney FC, entering the quarter-finals of the AFC Champions League, which was the best result for the team in ACL. In contrast to the excellent performance in continental competition, Shandong fell into the relegation zone in domestic league. On 7 June 2016, Shandong Luneng Taishan announced that Mano had resigned for personal reasons and he was no longer the manager of the team.[18] He was replaced by former FC Bayern Munich and VfL Wolfsburg manager Felix Magath.[19]

Cruzeiro

After the fiasco in China, Mano returned to Cruzeiro in order to repeat the campaign of the Brasileirão 2015, when freed from relegation.[20]

Bahia

On 8 September 2020, Mano was named head coach of Bahia in the top tier, agreeing to a contract until the end of 2021. [21] On 20 December, after a 3–4 away loss against Flamengo, he was sacked.[22]

Al Nassr

On 9 April 2021, Mano was appointed as the manager of Saudi club Al Nassr.[23] On 19 September 2021, he was sacked after a 1–3 loss against Ittihad.

Internacional

On 19 April 2022, Mano was appointed head coach of Internacional back in his home country.[24] He was sacked on 17 July of the following year, after a 0–0 draw against Palmeiras.[25]

Third spell at Corinthians

On 28 September 2023, Mano returned to Corinthians, replacing sacked Vanderlei Luxemburgo.[26] He was himself dismissed on 5 February of the following year, after a 3–1 defeat to Novorizontino which saw the club drop into the relegation zone of the 2024 Campeonato Paulista.[27]

Statistics

Managerial

As of 4 February 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
PWDLWin %
Guarani-VA10 January 199722 May 2002103423031040.8
Brasil de Pelotas23 May 200230 December 20028512062.5
Guarani-VA1 January 200330 March 2003261178042.3
Iraty1 April 200330 December 20036114016.7
15 de Novembro31 December 200322 June 2004341699047.1
Caxias23 June 200420 April 2005291568051.7
Grêmio21 April 200531 December 2007166883444053.0
Corinthians1 January 200825 July 2010177974931054.8
Brazil26 July 201023 November 2012332166063.6
Brazil U23201220127601085.7
Flamengo13 June 201319 September 201322967040.9
Corinthians1 January 201431 December 201461311515050.8
Cruzeiro1 September 201531 December 201516862050.0
Shandong Luneng1 January 20167 June 201622877036.4
Cruzeiro27 July 20169 August 20192111016050047.9
Palmeiras7 September 20192 December 2019201154055.0
Bahia11 September 202020 December 2020248214033.3
Al-Nassr9 April 202120 September 202116934056.3
Internacional18 April 202217 July 202381392913048.1
Corinthians28 September 20235 February 202419658031.6
Total1,081532281268049.2

Honors

Grêmio
Corinthians
Cruzeiro
Brazil

See also

References