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UEFA Women's Coach of the Year Award

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
UEFA Women's Coach of the Year
Sponsored byESM
Presented byUEFA
First awarded2020
Last awarded2023
Most awardsNetherlands Sarina Wiegman
(2nd awards)
Websiteuefa.com
UEFA Club Football Awards

The UEFA Women's Coach of the Year Award is an association football award given to the manager coaching a women's football club in Europe that is considered the best in the previous season of both club and national team competition. The award, created in 2020 by UEFA in partnership with European Sports Media (ESM) group, was announced alongside the UEFA Men's Coach of the Year Award.[1]

Criteria

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According to UEFA, for this award, "coaches in Europe, irrespective of nationality, [are] judged in regard to their performances over the whole season in all competitions – both domestically and internationally – at either club, or national team level."[2]

Voting

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For the inaugural award, the eight coaches from the clubs that participated in the quarter-finals of that year's UEFA Women's Champions League, along with 20 sports journalists selected by the European Sports Media group specializing in women's football, provided a list of their three best-ranked coaches from one to three, with the first player receiving five points, the second three points and the third one point. Coaches were not allowed to vote for themselves. The three coaches with the most points overall were shortlisted, and the winner was announced during the group stage draw of the next season's UEFA Champions League.[1]

Award history

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Winners

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Season Coach Team(s) managed
2019–20 France Jean-Luc Vasseur France Lyon
2020–21 Spain Lluís Cortés Spain Barcelona
2021–22 Netherlands Sarina Wiegman  England
2022–23 Netherlands Sarina Wiegman  England

Finalists

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  Winner   Shortlisted

2019–20

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Rank Coach Points[3] Team(s) managed
1 France Jean-Luc Vasseur 122 France Lyon
2 Germany Stephan Lerch 78 Germany VfL Wolfsburg
3 Spain Lluís Cortés 36 Spain Barcelona
4 England Emma Hayes 28 England Chelsea
5 Netherlands Sarina Wiegman 22 Netherlands Netherlands
6 France Olivier Echouafni 18 France Paris Saint-Germain
7 Germany Jens Scheuer 15 Germany Bayern Munich
8 Australia Joe Montemurro 5 England Arsenal
9 Scotland Scott Booth 4 Scotland Glasgow City
10 Spain Dani González 3 Spain Atlético Madrid

2020–21

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Rank Coach Points[4] Team(s) managed
1 Spain Lluís Cortés 151 Spain Barcelona
2 England Emma Hayes 78 England Chelsea
3 Sweden Peter Gerhardsson 37  Sweden
4 France Olivier Echouafni 24 France Paris Saint-Germain
5 Germany Jens Scheuer 17 Germany Bayern Munich
6 Italy Rita Guarino 10 Italy Juventus
Sweden Anna Signeul  Finland
8 Netherlands Sarina Wiegman 7  Netherlands
9 England Gareth Taylor 5 England Manchester City
10 Spain Jorge Vilda 3  Spain

2021–22

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Rank Coach Points[5] Team(s) managed
1 Netherlands Sarina Wiegman 200  England
2 France Sonia Bompastor 94 France Lyon
3 Germany Martina Voss-Tecklenburg 71  Germany
4 Spain Jonatan Giráldez 27 Spain Barcelona
5 Germany Tommy Stroot 22 Germany VfL Wolfsburg

2022–23

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Rank Coach Points[6][7] Team(s) managed
1 Netherlands Sarina Wiegman 211  England
2 Spain Jorge Vilda 163  Spain
3 Spain Jonatan Giráldez 139 Spain Barcelona
4 Sweden Peter Gerhardsson 62  Sweden
5 England Emma Hayes 56 England Chelsea
6 Italy Alessandro Spugna 12 Italy Roma
7 Sweden Jonas Eidevall 11 England Arsenal
8 Germany Tommy Stroot 9 Germany VfL Wolfsburg
9 France Sonia Bompastor 7 France Lyon
10 England Marc Skinner 0 England Manchester United

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Shortlist of nominees for 2019/20 UEFA club competition awards revealed". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 17 September 2020. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  2. ^ "UEFA Women's Coach of the Year nominees: Cortés, Lerch, Vasseur". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 23 September 2020. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Jean-Luc Vasseur wins UEFA Women's Coach of the Year award". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 1 October 2020. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Lluís Cortés wins 2020/21 UEFA Women's Coach of the Year award". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 26 August 2021. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  5. ^ "England's Sarina Wiegman wins 2021/22 UEFA Women's Coach of the Year award". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 25 August 2022. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  6. ^ "2022/23 UEFA Women's Coach of the Year nominees announced: Jonatan Giráldez, Jorge Vilda, Sarina Wiegman". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 25 August 2023. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  7. ^ "Sarina Wiegman wins 2022/23 UEFA Women's Coach of the Year award". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 31 August 2023. Retrieved 31 August 2023.