portuguese football coach

Faria and the second or paternal family name is Caixinha. In this portuguese name, the beginning or maternal family name isand the second gear or paternal family name is Pedro Miguel Faria Caixinha ( portuguese : [ ˈpeðɾu kajˈʃiɲɐ ] ; born 15 November 1970 ) is a portuguese professional football director, presently in charge of Liga MX club Santos Laguna.

Reading: Pedro Caixinha

He started coaching in his late twenties, acting an assistant with Sporting, Al-Hilal, Panathinaikos, Rapid București and the Saudi Arabia national team. In 2010 he became a full-time director, going on to work with a host of clubs in respective countries, including Santos Laguna, Al-Gharafa, Rangers, Cruz Azul and Al Shabab .

portugal [edit ]

After an retiring career as a player, Beja -born Caixinha started managing at the old age of 28, his first appointee being with his last club, hometown ‘s C.D. Beja, where he was in charge of his youth sides for four years. In 2003, he moved to the seniors with amateurs Clube de Futebol Vasco district attorney Gama in neighbouring Vidigueira. After that sole season, Caixinha started a professional relationship with José Peseiro that would last until the end of the decade, with the early dissemble as adjunct to the latter in several clubs – chiefly Sporting CP – and the Saudi Arabia national team. [ 1 ] In the 2010–11 season he returned to head coaching duties and made his Primeira Liga debut, leading U.D. Leiria to the one-tenth position. Caixinha resigned after entirely three games into the stick to campaign, amidst rumor of respective months due in wages to both him and the players. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] He promptly signed for fellow league team C.D. Nacional, [ 4 ] helping the Madeirans rank one-seventh after winning ten of his 21 games in charge. On 11 October 2012, Caixinha resigned after entirely picking up five points from six league games, which left the club placed second from the bottom in the league. [ 5 ]

Santos Laguna [edit ]

late into October 2012, Caixinha accepted an offer from Mexico ‘s Santos Laguna. [ 6 ] In his first national tournament, he qualified the team for the Clausura Liguilla in the Liga MX [ 7 ] and besides reached the final of the region ‘s most important club competition, the CONCACAF Champions League. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Caixinha left on 15 August 2015, after winning three major titles. [ 10 ] [ 11 ]

Rangers [edit ]

On 11 March 2017, Caixinha joined scottish Premiership club Rangers on a three-year deal, [ 12 ] becoming its 17th permanent wave director in the work ; caretaker Graeme Murty took control of an Old firm game played the following day, with Caixinha starting exploit on 13 March. [ 13 ] His debut came five days late, in a 4–0 base acquire against Hamilton Academical. [ 14 ] On 29 April 2017, Caixinha oversaw a record home get the better of for the club against Celtic, by a 1–5 scoreline. [ 15 ] On 17 May they lost to Aberdeen at Ibrox for the first base clock time in 26 years, [ 16 ] finally finishing in third place 39 points behind champions Celtic. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] To kickstart 2017–18, Caixinha oversaw Rangers in the club ‘s first european campaign since 2012, as they entered the foremost qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League and faced Luxembourg ‘s FC Progrès Niederkorn, winning 1–0 at dwelling but losing 2–0 away in the overrule fixture against a team that had previously never won a match, and scored entirely one goal, in european competition. [ 19 ] Later that season, he led the side past both Dunfermline Athletic and Partick Thistle in the hard stages of the Scottish League Cup, before succumbing to a 2–0 frustration at Hampden to Motherwell in the semi-final ; the game saw both him and opposing coach Stephen Robinson sent to the stands for their behavior on the touchline. [ 20 ] On 26 October 2017, after a 1–1 home draw with last-placed Kilmarnock, Caixinha was sacked by Rangers after only 229 days in charge, becoming the shortest-serving coach in the history of the club. His reign was described as “ a desperate mess from start to finish ”, by BBC Scotland ‘s Tom English. [ 21 ]

Cruz Azul [edit ]

On 5 December 2017, Cruz Azul announced the appointment of Caixinha for the approaching Clausura tournament. [ 22 ] His team won the Copa MX in Apertura 2018, with a 2–1 concluding succeed over C.F. Monterrey on 31 October. [ 23 ] In the same stage, they besides reached the league concluding, where they lost 2–0 on aggregate to Mexico City equal Club América. [ 24 ] Caixinha added another respect on 14 July 2019, winning the Supercopa MX with a 4–0 kill of Club Necaxa in Los Angeles. [ 25 ] In the class ‘s Apertura the side won good twice in the opening eight games, and he resigned on 2 September following a 1–1 draw with C.D. Guadalajara. [ 26 ]

Al Shabab [edit ]

On 20 July 2020, Caixinha signed a biennial contract with Saudi Professional League club Al Shabab FC. [ 27 ] The following 5 January, he was dismissed after being ousted from the Arab Club Champions Cup. [ 28 ] [ 29 ]

managerial statistics [edit ]

As of match played 5 January 2021[30][31]

Managerial record by team and tenure

Team

From

To

Record

P
W
D
L
Win %

União de Leiria

10 July 2010[32]

7 September 2011[33]
36
9
9
18
0 25.00
Nacional

31 October 2011[34]

11 October 2012[5]
35
15
8
12
0 42.86
Santos Laguna

20 November 2012[35]

15 August 2015[36]
121
54
36
31
0 44.63
Al-Gharafa

30 December 2015[37]

9 March 2017[38]
39
17
8

14
0 43.59
Rangers

13 March 2017[12]

26 October 2017

27
14
5
8
0 51.85
Cruz Azul

5 December 2017

2 September 2019

71
33
20
18
0 46.48
Al Shabab

20 July 2020

5 January 2021

22
8
8
6
0 36.36

Total

333
139
90
104
0 41.74

Honours [edit ]

Santos Laguna
Cruz Azul

References [edit ]

Read more: Willem Dafoe