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The 'Vitor Matos' Managerial Thread

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In March 2024 we had a Portuguese analyst working for the Swans - Oscar Botelho - who we were led to believe was involved with us signing Gonzalez Franco. Before Gorridge's time at the club but I believe Adam Worth was on the club's books at the time and one wonders if contact was made with Vitor at Maritimo via Botelho.

Here is the write-up by the Swans at the time - 17/3/2024
Meet 43 year old Óscar Botelho, a Portuguese football analyst who is now working with the Swans.

He is a former scout who holds a UEFA 'A' Licence coaching badge and a BSc in Sports and Physical Education. He spent 5 years working with Proeleven, a football player and coaches career management agency, before becoming a sports commentator/analyst with the Lisbon based TSF radio station, before leaving at the end of last month.
 
Maybe that's the key, he has a way to get players who are unproven to be ready. Might be something we was missing. Who knows. As I said I'm trying to find positives in this. We have no choice and it would be wrong for me to overly judge. I have to have faith in the club. They have the research and know how.
Unproven but with loads of talent unlike our lot.
 
I want to acknowledge that like with every managerial appointment, especially for an unknown, there is a chance it can go well and be a success. But this is a crazy choice and I fear we are not doing it for the right reasons. He has been very active in the media building his reputation and it feels like we are basing it more on that and hearsay than any track record as a coach, just like Klopps other assistant who failed when he became a manager in Austria or the coach who just got sacked by Ajax. Maritimo have had an okay start to the season but do not look like they have been an exceptional team and they are playing against kids teams as a newly relegated side with a big budget.


It can not be a coincidence that he managed to have this interview article written about him full of praise and suddenly he is in line for our job a couple of days later when we know he was not in line when it was first published. I worry our inexperienced team have been duped by a media creation and have rushed into a decision because it is a simple one to complete and they were let down by Hellberg. I hope I am wrong and people can point and laugh about this in a years time.

All that being said at least it is not Martin.

"There are a couple of key principles around his playing style, highlighted by statistics that show Maritimo are the team with the lowest passes allowed per defensive action (6.49) in the division. He wants his team to be as dominant as possible and disorganise the opposition, to counter-press aggressively when out of possession and to play each game like it is a final."

"Matos likes the underdog tag, though, and believes it helps retain focus. His team are on the same points as second-placed, Torreense, and just two points off Sporting’s B-team, who lead the way. Maritimo have conceded the fewest shots (93) and have the second highest ball possession figures (55.6 per cent) which shows Matos’ methods are working."

That's a summary from the article regarding the meat and veg. The rest is nostalgia fluff related to LFC.
 
Co-incidentally I came across this podcast / interview on Training Ground Guru and Vitor Matos
The following is just half of the text from the podcast.

Starting in coaching​

Vitor Matos: I was a player at a really low level. Around 2003/4, when José Mourinho started at Porto, it was a big boom in Portugal. He was someone with a different background, with a different idea in terms of training, in terms of the game for that time.

It really opened my mind and passion for being in football and I started to love coaching. From that moment on, all my development was in that way.

At 18, I started taking the UEFA courses in Portugal and at the same time started University. Then I got the opportunity to go to Porto’s youth teams. I was brought there by Professor Vítor Frade and Luís Castro, who was the Technical Director.

That’s where I met Pep Lijnders, who was already at Porto. He was the head of developing the technical part of the players and was working with every team at the club.

He was someone with a lot of passion, like he is still; someone full of energy in terms of developing, with a love for the players and for the talent of the players. That’s why I believe we connected so well.

We started sharing ideas, sharing opinions, connecting, and it became a really good and close friendship. Pep is someone who really passionate about coaching. He always tries to improve the team and the players, he tries to be better every day.

I would say he has a lot of creativity in terms of finding solutions for different problems that come from the game. That was something that always brought us together. Pep is always a big reference for me.

Influence of Vitor Frade​

Vítor Frade was my teacher at University. I knew him before, from the influence he had on Rui (Faria) and José Mourinho as well. When I started researching about football and training, I found this idea, tactical periodisation, that came from Vitor Frade.

That’s how I decided to go to the University of Porto, where I met him. It was completely overwhelming, blowing your mind for a different way of viewing football and viewing training.

Until that moment, the physical part of the game was what conducted the (training) process and was the main idea. From that moment on, when I met Professor Vítor Frade, it showed me a completely different way; a way related with complexity, a systemic approach.

More than developing by only one dimension, the physical part, it’s about playing and developing under an idea — the game idea of the coach.

That information, of the brain, is what influences the fitness part of the player. That was a completely different view that I fell in love with, because it’s intuitive for the coach, it helps you to organise your game idea and to develop your game idea with your team. That is the main idea, to develop the tactical culture of your team.

Why are there so many good Portuguese coaches?​

Football is a big thing in Portugal in terms of the passion people have about it – similar to in England.

If you ask me why there are so many Portuguese coaches having success in different countries, in different contexts, there was a big influence from different names. That helped a lot to open doors for others.

Carlos Queiroz was a big influence in terms of coach developing and then José Mourinho, in terms of developing culture. With the way he stepped up and won so much, it created a big boom and opened doors for everyone.

And in the background you have Vítor Frade, in terms of ideas and process and how he opened the mind and the view of the game and training.

Why aren't there more top English managers?​

I don’t have an answer to that. I believe there are good English managers. For example, Porto had Bobby Robson, one of the best managers we had in the club, and he influenced so much the culture of the club and the country as well.

Mourinho worked with him, Vítor Frade as well. So you see already the influence that an English coach has here in Portugal.

You have good coaches, you have Eddie Howe, who just won the Carabao Cup, you have Brendan Rodgers, you have Russell Martin, a new upcoming coach with a completely different approach than the traditional English way of seeing the game.

I think there are a lot of good managers, and I believe that it will happen the same (as in Portugal). Football is like a cycle – if there is someone with success in a country or league or competition, it opens the door for a different one, that’s always the case.

Using these managers as a reference in terms of developing coaches in England, I think that is a big thing. That was one of the things that, for me, was really important – how it was so much work around José Mourinho in Portugal, how it was so much work around different coaches who were in a high level, that allowed a new generation of coaches to learn and reflect and improve.
 
Oh god....this line from that interview of his doesn't bode well!!

"You have good coaches, you have Eddie Howe, who just won the Carabao Cup, you have Brendan Rodgers, you have Russell Martin, a new upcoming coach with a completely different approach than the traditional English way of seeing the game."
 
He may turn out to be the next Roberto Martinez for us. I don’t think there’s anything in his managerial stats/data to suggest he’s going to be good or bad so he must have impressed our decision makers with something else we don’t know about
He's cheap, he's available and no one else wants him?

A quick way to get the Heggburg off their faces?
 
Here is Vítor Matos's press conference style - translated. Not the best example but the only one in English.

 
Probably needs to get the grey streaks out of his hair/beard to really get the Martin kids on board, but decent first impression there on the main markers we're looking at.
 
If this is true, it's so odd that I'm not even sure what to say about it. We'd be hiring someone primarily on the basis that Jurgen Klopp used to park his car in the same car park. Makes Sheehan look like a 30 year managerial veteran.

Still, it's true that managerial appointments are a complete crapshoot, so f*ck it, let's do it and hope we've struck oil on this one. If not, I think Gorringe and his crew will be told to clear their desks.
 

Bristol City v Swansea City

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