Paulo Autuori

Brazilian football manager From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paulo Autuori

Paulo Autuori de Mello (born 25 August 1956), known as Paulo Autuori, is a Brazilian football executive and coach. He is the current manager of Peruvian club Sporting Cristal.

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...
Paulo Autuori
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Autuori in 2011
Personal information
Full name Paulo Autuori de Mello
Date of birth (1956-08-25) 25 August 1956 (age 68)
Place of birth Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Team information
Current team
Sporting Cristal (manager)
Managerial career
Years Team
1986–1987 Vitória Guimarães (assistant)
1987–1989 Nacional
1989–1990 Vitória Guimarães
1990–1993 Marítimo
1993–1995 Marítimo
1995 Botafogo
1996–1997 Benfica
1997 Cruzeiro
1997–1998 Flamengo
1998 Botafogo
1999 Internacional
1999 Santos
1999–2000 Cruzeiro
2000 Vitória Guimarães
2001 Alianza Lima
2001 Botafogo
2002 Sporting Cristal
2003–2005 Peru
2005 São Paulo
2006 Kashima Antlers
2007 Cruzeiro
2007–2009 Al-Rayyan
2009 Grêmio
2009–2011 Al-Rayyan
2011–2012 Qatar U23
2012–2013 Qatar
2013 Vasco da Gama
2013 São Paulo
2014 Atlético Mineiro
2015 Cerezo Osaka
2016–2017 Atlético Paranaense
2018 Ludogorets Razgrad
2019 Atlético Nacional
2020 Botafogo
2020–2021 Athletico Paranaense
2021 Athletico Paranaense (interim)
2022–2023 Atlético Nacional
2023 Cruzeiro (interim)
2025– Sporting Cristal
Close

Early life

A football fan since early childhood and a futsal player, Autuori had to give up his dream of becoming a professional footballer after contracting poliomyelitis in his teens.[1] The disease left him with an atrophied leg and a permanent limp on his walk, which prevented him from playing. However, he did not give up his dream of being part of the footballing world, and decided to learn other aspects of the game, specifically becoming a manager.[2]

Autuori graduated in Physical Education at Universidade Castelo Branco; and attended a Sport Admninstration course at PUC-RJ and a Soccer Coach Course at UERJ.

Coaching career

Summarize
Perspective

Autuori began his career as a fitness coach, working at Portuguesa-RJ, America-RJ, São Bento, Marília,[3] Bonsuccesso and Botafogo before meeting Marinho Peres, who invited him as a part of his staff at Portuguese side Vitória de Guimarães in 1986.[1] In 1987, he became manager of his own right, after being named at the helm of Nacional in the Segunda Divisão.

In 1989, after achieving promotion in his first year and a 10th-place finish in his second, Autuori returned to Vitória, now being appointed manager of the side. He left the club on 25 September 1990, after a 0–0 draw with Gil Vicente,[4] and took over fellow top tier side Marítimo shortly after.

Autuori left the Leões do Almirante Reis in June 1993, but returned to the club in December, replacing compatriot Edinho. On 12 July 1995, shortly after leaving Marítimo, he returned to Botafogo as the head coach of the club,[5] and led them to the 1995 Campeonato Brasileiro title.

On 26 December 1995, Autuori left Fogão and agreed to a contract with Benfica for the 1996–97 season.[6] After officially taking over on 11 July 1996, he only lasted 23 matches before being sacked on 19 January 1997.[7]

On 21 February 1997, Autuori was appointed Cruzeiro head coach, replacing Oscar Bernardi. In August, prior to the second leg of the 1997 Copa Libertadores finals, it was reported that he had agreed to a deal with Flamengo;[8] after winning the title, he moved to the latter and led them to the 1997 Campeonato Brasileiro final stages.[9]

On 12 March 1998, Autuori resigned from Flamengo, being replaced by Joel Santana,[10] and returned to Botafogo fifteen days later.[11] He left the latter on 26 September,[12] and took over Internacional ahead of the 1999 season.

After resigning from Inter on 3 August 1999, Autuori replaced Émerson Leão at Santos twenty days later.[13] On 24 November, however, he left the latter to return to Cruzeiro,[14] but resigned from the club on 23 April 2000.[15]

On 6 May 2000, Autuori returned to Portugal and Vitória,[16] but resigned on 19 November following a 4–0 home loss to Benfica.[17] On 3 July 2001, after a brief spell at Peruvian side Alianza Lima, he returned to Botafogo for a third spell,[18] but also resigned on 13 October.[19]

On 14 January 2002, Autuori returned to Peru after being appointed Sporting Cristal manager.[20] On 6 January 2003, he was announced as the manager of the Peru national team.[21]

Despite winning the opening match of the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (4–1 over Paraguay), Autuori left the nation on 25 April 2005, with the reasoning being that he declined to declare in front of a Congress, due to the Peru national team scandals.[22][23] Four days later, he replaced Leão as head coach of São Paulo back in his home country.[24]

Autuori won the 2005 Copa Libertadores and the 2005 FIFA Club World Championship with Tricolor, but left the club on 29 December 2005, after accepting an offer from Japanese club Kashima Antlers.[25] He left Kashima on 1 December 2006,[26] and agreed to return to Cruzeiro for his third spell at the club four days later.[27]

Autuori resigned from Cruzeiro on 29 April 2007, after a 4–0 loss to rivals Atlético Mineiro in the first leg of the 2007 Campeonato Mineiro finals.[28] He later moved to Qatar to manage Al-Rayyan,[29] leaving the club in May 2009 after not renewing his contract.

On 14 May 2009, Autuori returned to his homeland after being announced as head coach of Grêmio.[30] On 12 November, however, he left the club,[31] and returned to Al-Rayyan nine days later; with the latter side, he resigned during the half-time of a match in February 2010,[32] but opted to stay after a meeting afterwards.[33]

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Autuori during a training session of the Qatar national team in 2012

On 27 August 2011, Autuori left Al-Rayyan to take over the Qatar under-23 team, replacing Frenchman Bernard Simondi.[34][35] On 20 February 2012, despite failing to qualify for the 2012 Summer Olympics, he was confirmed as manager of the Qatar national team.[36] He was fired by the QFA on 15 January 2013, after his side failed to qualify for the knockout round of the 2013 Gulf Cup.[37]

Shortly after leaving Qatar, Autuori was hired by Vasco da Gama as their head coach on 23 March 2013.[38] He resigned on 9 July 2013,[39] and returned to São Paulo two days later.[40]

On 9 September 2013, Autuori was sacked by São Paulo after a 2–0 loss against Coritiba, a result that kept the club in relegation zone of the 2013 Série A, and was replaced by Muricy Ramalho.[41] On 20 December, he was announced by Atlético Mineiro's president Alexandre Kalil as the new head coach of the club for the 2014 season.[42]

Sacked by Galo on 24 April 2014,[43] Autuori returned to Japan on 20 December, after being announced as manager of Cerezo Osaka.[44] After departing the club on 17 November 2015,[45] he was named Atlético Paranaense head coach on 7 March of the following year.[46]

On 23 May 2017, Autuori became a director of football at Furacão, after the club appointed Eduardo Baptista as head coach.[47] He left the club on 28 November 2017, as his contract was due to expire,[48] and joined Fluminense in the following month, also as a director; he left the latter on 28 May 2018.[49]

On 5 June 2018, Autuori was announced as the new Director of football in the Bulgarian champion Ludogorets Razgrad, but on the next day he was presented as the new manager of the team, since Dimitar Dimitrov wanted to leave the club.[50] He stepped down from his position in October 2018, citing personal reasons.[51]

On 2 November 2018, Autuori moved to Colombia and was appointed manager of Atlético Nacional.[52] He resigned the following 24 May,[53] before becoming a director of football at Santos in July 2019.[54]

After leaving Peixe at the end of the 2019 season, Autuori returned to coaching duties on 13 February 2020, after being presented back at Botafogo.[55] Sacked on 1 October,[56] he returned to Athletico on 22 October; initially a technical director, he was later named head coach for the remainder of the season.[57]

Back to his director role in February 2021, Autuori was an interim head coach in September 2021, after the departure of António Oliveira. On 24 February 2022, he was presented at Goiás as technical coordinator,[58] but left on 24 March as head coach Bruno Pivetti was sacked.[59]

On 26 March 2022, Autuori returned to Internacional, now as technical coordinator.[60] He left the club on 3 October, after returning to Atlético Nacional as manager.[61]

Autuori resigned from the Verdolagas on 6 July 2023,[62] and returned to Cruzeiro on 4 August, as technical director.[63] On 14 November, he was named head coach of the club until the end of the season,[64] and managed to narrowly avoid relegation before returning to his previous role.

On 28 April 2024, after the sale of Ronaldo's shares of Cruzeiro's SAF, Autuori left the club.[65] On 9 May, he joined Coritiba as technical director.[66]

On 16 April 2025, Autuori returned to Sporting Cristal after nearly 13 years, being named manager of club.[67]

Managerial statistics

As of 25 April 2025[68]
More information Team, From ...
Team From To Record
GWDLWin %
Nacional 1987 1989 80391724048.75
Vitória de Guimarães 1989 23 September 1990 83352226042.17
Marítimo 24 September 1990 June 1993 104422240040.38
Marítimo December 1993 June 1995 23995039.13
Botafogo 12 July 1995 26 December 1995 3116105051.61
Benfica 11 July 1996 19 January 1997 231445060.87
Cruzeiro 21 February 1997 13 August 1997 3717911045.95
Flamengo 14 August 1997 12 March 1998 45191412042.22
Internacional 1999 3 August 1999 50281210056.00
Santos 23 August 1999 24 November 1999 18657033.33
Cruzeiro 24 November 1999 23 April 2000 291667055.17
Alianza Lima 7 December 2000 1 June 2001 231472060.87
Botafogo 1 June 2001 13 October 2001 278514029.63
Sporting Cristal 14 January 2002 31 December 2002 50241214048.00
Peru 6 January 2003 25 April 2005 38121115031.58
São Paulo 29 April 2005 29 December 2005 55261118047.27
Kashima Antlers 29 December 2005 1 December 2006 3418412052.94
Cruzeiro 5 December 2006 29 April 2007 201154055.00
Al-Rayyan 2 May 2007 17 May 2009 67331420049.25
Grêmio 13 May 2009 11 November 2009 42161313038.10
Al-Rayyan 11 November 2009 26 August 2011 67361219053.73
Qatar 19 February 2012 14 January 2013 39101613025.64
Vasco da Gama 22 March 2013 9 July 2013 6213033.33
São Paulo 11 July 2013 9 September 2013 14248014.29
Atlético Mineiro 20 December 2013 24 April 2014 8341037.50
Cerezo Osaka 16 December 2014 17 November 2015 41171311041.46
Atlético Paranaense 7 March 2016 23 May 2017 92382529041.30
Ludogorets Razgrad 6 June 2018 9 October 2018 221444063.64
Atlético Nacional 2 November 2018 24 May 2019 289109032.14
Botafogo 13 February 2020 1 October 2020 237124030.43
Athletico Paranaense 22 October 2020 26 February 2021 2611510042.31
Athletico Paranaense (interim) 9 September 2021 1 October 2021 2002000.00
Atlético Nacional 3 October 2022 6 July 2023 3817165044.74
Cruzeiro (interim) 14 November 2023 6 December 2023 6240033.33
Sporting Cristal 16 April 2025 present 1010000.00
Total 1,265545339381043.08
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Honours

Botafogo
Cruzeiro
Alianza Lima
Sporting Cristal
São Paulo
Al Rayyan
Atlético Paranaense
Ludogorets Razgrad
Atlético Nacional

References

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