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Jose Mourinho: Managerial Statistics
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Jose Mourinho began focusing on coaching and impressed with brief but successful managerial periods at
Benfica and União de Leiria, taking the latter to their highest ever league finish.

He returned to
Porto in early 2002 as head coach, winning the Primeira Liga, Taça de Portugal, and UEFA Cup in
2003. In the next season Mourinho guided the team to victory in the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira, to the top of
the league for a second time, and won the highest honour in European club football, the UEFA Champions
League.

Mourinho moved to
Chelsea the following year and won the Premier League title, the club's first league title in 50
years, and the League Cup in his first season. In his second year Chelsea retained the Premier League and in
2006-07 he took the club to an FA Cup and League Cup double, though they finished as league runners-up.

He often courted controversy for his outspokenness, but his victories at Chelsea and Porto established him as
one of the world's top football managers. Mourinho left Chelsea in September 2007.

In 2008 Mourinho signed a three-year contract with Serie A club
Internazionale. Within three months he had won
his first Italian honour, the Supercoppa Italiana, and completed the season by winning the Serie A title. In 2009-
10 Inter became the first Italian club to win the treble of Serie A, Coppa Italia and the UEFA Champions League,
the first time Inter had won the latter competition since 1965.

In doing so, Mourinho became the third manager in football history to win the UEFA Champions League with two
different teams, after Ernst Happel and Ottmar Hitzfeld.

He won the first ever FIFA Ballon d'Or Best Coach Award in 2010. He then signed with
Real Madrid in 2010,
winning the Copa del Rey in his first season.

The following year he won the La Liga and became the fourth coach, after Tomislav Ivić, Ernst Happel, and
Giovanni Trapattoni, to have won league titles in at least four different countries: Portugal, England, Italy, and
Spain, also becoming the first manager to win the traditional top three European league championships.