Jump to content

Miguel Muñoz Trophy: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
copy edit
copy edit, links
Line 2: Line 2:
{{notability|date=September 2019}}
{{notability|date=September 2019}}


[[File:Guardiola 2010 neutral-bgr.jpg|right|thumb|[[Pep Guardiola]] is a two-time winner of the Primera División award, with Barcelona.]]
[[File:Marcelino García Toral.jpg|right|thumb|[[Marcelino García Toral|Marcelino]] is a three-time winner, winning [[La Liga]]'s award with both Recreativo and Valencia, and the Segunda División award with Zaragoza.]]
[[File:Sev tren 2016 (3).jpg|right|thumb|[[Unai Emery]] is a two-time winner of the Segunda División award, with Lorca Deportiva and Almería.]]
[[File:AsierGaritano.png|right|thumb|[[Asier Garitano]] joins Marcelino as the only other manager to win in both leagues, with Leganés.]]
[[File:AsierGaritano.png|right|thumb|[[Asier Garitano]] is one of only two managers to win both awards, with Leganés.]]
[[File:Guardiola 2010 neutral-bgr.jpg|right|thumb|[[Pep Guardiola]] is a two-time winner of the award for [[La Liga]], with Barcelona.]]
[[File:Marcelino García Toral.jpg|right|thumb|[[Marcelino García Toral|Marcelino]] is a three-time winner, winning the Primera División award with both Recreativo and Valencia, and the Segunda División award with Zaragoza.]]
[[File:Sev tren 2016 (3).jpg|right|thumb|[[Unai Emery]] is a two-time winner of the award for [[Segunda División]], with Lorca Deportiva and Almería.]]
The '''Miguel Muñoz Trophy''' ({{lang-es|Trofeo Miguel Muñoz}}) is a [[association football|football]] award for team managers in Spanish football, established by Spanish newspaper [[Marca (newspaper)|MARCA]] in 2006, in memory of the legendary [[Real Madrid C.F.|Real Madrid]] manager [[Miguel Muñoz]].
The '''Miguel Muñoz Trophy''' ({{lang-es|Trofeo Miguel Muñoz}}) is a [[association football|football]] award for team managers in Spanish football, established by Spanish newspaper [[Marca (newspaper)|MARCA]] in 2006, in memory of the legendary [[Real Madrid C.F.|Real Madrid]] manager [[Miguel Muñoz]].



Revision as of 09:23, 16 June 2020

Marcelino is a three-time winner, winning La Liga's award with both Recreativo and Valencia, and the Segunda División award with Zaragoza.
File:AsierGaritano.png
Asier Garitano joins Marcelino as the only other manager to win in both leagues, with Leganés.
Pep Guardiola is a two-time winner of the award for La Liga, with Barcelona.
Unai Emery is a two-time winner of the award for Segunda División, with Lorca Deportiva and Almería.

The Miguel Muñoz Trophy (Template:Lang-es) is a football award for team managers in Spanish football, established by Spanish newspaper MARCA in 2006, in memory of the legendary Real Madrid manager Miguel Muñoz.

The award is based on MARCA's subjective scoring system: in which a manager is scored out of three, each match, for his team's performances. The manager with the highest points total, in each of La Liga and the Segunda División, is declared their respective league's winner at the end of the season.

La Liga

Season Manager Club Score
2005–06 Germany Bernd Schuster Getafe 63
2006–07 Spain Juande Ramos Sevilla 63
Spain Marcelino Recreativo Huelva 63
2007–08 Chile Manuel Pellegrini Villarreal 69
2008–09 Spain Pep Guardiola Barcelona 77
2009–10 Spain Pep Guardiola Barcelona 77
2010–11 Portugal José Mourinho Real Madrid 72
2011–12 Portugal José Mourinho Real Madrid 77
2012–13 Spain Tito Vilanova Barcelona 252
2013–14 Argentina Diego Simeone Atlético Madrid 269.5
2014–15 Italy Carlo Ancelotti Real Madrid 247.5
2015–16 Argentina Diego Simeone Atlético Madrid 243.5
2016–17 Spain José Luis Mendilibar Eibar 67
Spain Asier Garitano Leganés 67
2017–18 Spain Marcelino Valencia 69
2018–19 Spain Pepe Bordalás Getafe

Segunda División

Season Manager Club Score
2005–06 Spain Unai Emery Lorca Deportiva 76
2006–07 Spain Unai Emery Almería 78
2007–08 Spain Manuel Preciado Sporting Gijón 77
2008–09 Spain Marcelino Zaragoza 78
2009–10 Spain Luis García Plaza Levante 81
2010–11 Spain José Ramón Sandoval Rayo Vallecano 85
2011–12 Spain Juan Antonio Anquela Alcorcón 84
2012–13 Spain Fran Escribá Elche 293.5
2013–14 Spain Gaizka Garitano Eibar 272
2014–15 Spain Abelardo Fernández Sporting Gijón 287.5
2015–16 Spain Asier Garitano Leganés 266.5

See also