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Jorge Jesus

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Jorge Jesus
ComIH
Jesus in 2020
Personal information
Full name Jorge Fernando Pinheiro de Jesus
Date of birth (1954-07-24) 24 July 1954 (age 70)
Place of birth Amadora, Portugal
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)[1]
Position(s) Right midfielder
Team information
Current team
Al Hilal (manager)
Youth career
1969–1971 Estrela da Amadora
1971–1973 Sporting CP
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1973–1976 Sporting CP 12 (1)
1973–1974Peniche (loan)
1974–1975Olhanense (loan) 29 (5)
1976–1977 Belenenses 13 (0)
1977–1978 Riopele 28 (3)
1978–1979 Juventude de Évora
1979–1980 União Leiria 22 (1)
1980–1983 Vitória Setúbal 38 (4)
1983–1984 Farense 24 (0)
1984–1987 Estrela da Amadora
1987–1988 Atlético
1988–1989 Benfica Castelo Branco
1989–1990 Almancilense
Managerial career
1990–1993 Amora
1993–1996 Felgueiras
1997–1998 Felgueiras
1998 União Madeira
1998–2000 Estrela da Amadora
2000–2002 Vitória Setúbal
2002–2003 Estrela da Amadora
2003–2004 Vitória Guimarães
2005 Moreirense
2005–2006 União Leiria
2006–2008 Belenenses
2008–2009 Braga
2009–2015 Benfica
2015–2018 Sporting CP
2018–2019 Al Hilal
2019–2020 Flamengo
2020–2021 Benfica
2022–2023 Fenerbahçe
2023– Al Hilal
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Jorge Fernando Pinheiro de Jesus ComIH (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈʒɔɾʒɨ ʒɨˈzuʃ];[2] born 24 July 1954) is a Portuguese professional football manager and former player, who is the manager of Saudi Pro League club Al Hilal.

He started his career with Sporting CP, going on to play for 12 other clubs in 17 years as a professional, which included nine Primeira Liga seasons.

Jesus began a coaching career in 1990, and his first stop in the main category was with Felgueiras in the 1995–96 campaign. He went on to work with several teams, arriving at Benfica in 2009 and winning ten trophies (a club record for a single manager, winning all domestic trophies at least once) as well as reaching two UEFA Europa League finals with them in six seasons. He became manager of Flamengo in 2019 and won the Copa Libertadores and Campeonato Brasileiro Série A in his first year. He returned to Benfica in 2020 and did not win a single trophy despite a Portuguese record investment during the COVID-19 pandemic.

He was twice considered one of the ten best club coaches in the world by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics, in 2013 (eighth place)[3] and in 2019 (7th place).[4]

Playing career

[edit]

Jesus, son of Virgolino António de Jesus who played for Sporting CP in the 1940s, was born in Amadora, Lisbon, and finished his football formation with the same club, making his top flight debut with Olhanense on loan from the Lions.

He played with Sporting's first team in the 1975–76 season, appearing in 12 matches and starting once as the Lisbon club finished in fifth place.[5] Subsequently, released, he played in the country's top flight in seven of the following eight years, representing Belenenses, Grupo Desportivo Riopele, Juventude de Évora, União de Leiria, Vitória de Setúbal and Farense, amassing totals in the category of 166 games and 14 goals.

Jesus retired in 1990 at the age of 36, after spells in the second (mainly with his hometown Estrela da Amadora) and third levels.

Managerial career

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

After starting as a manager with lowly Amora, Jesus moved in December 1993 to Felgueiras as a replacement for Rodolfo Reis, helping the club promote to the top flight in his second season and being in and out of the team until January 1998, with Felgueiras back in division two.[6][7]

Subsequently, he led former team Estrela da Amadora to two consecutive eighth-place finishes in the first division and, in quick succession, managed both Vitória de Setúbal and Amadora, celebrating top flight promotions with both even though he was fired by the latter in March 2003.[8][9] In 2003–04 he helped Vitória de Guimarães narrowly avoid relegation, finishing two points ahead of first relegated team Alverca.[10]

In the following four years, always in division one, Jesus was in charge of Moreirense (suffering relegation), União de Leiria and Belenenses, finishing fifth with the latter and qualifying to the UEFA Cup, and adding a presence in the 2007 Portuguese Cup final, losing 0–1 to Sporting.[11][12]

On 20 May 2008, one day after leaving Belenenses, Jesus took over at Braga, leading the Minho side to the fifth position in the league and the round-of-16 in the UEFA Cup.[13] Highlights in the latter competition included a 3–0 home win against Portsmouth[14] and a last-minute 0–1 defeat to Milan at the San Siro.[15] He won the last edition of the UEFA Intertoto Cup, something never achieved by other Portuguese club.[16]

Benfica

[edit]
Jesus in 2011

2009–10: First season

[edit]

On 17 June 2009, Jesus replaced Quique Flores at the helm of Benfica.[17] In his first year, he led Benfica to the first division title after a five-year wait, with only two league defeats and 78 goals scored,[18] also reaching the quarter-finals in the Europa League, losing to Liverpool on a 3–5 aggregate score (this would be the last match Benfica would lose in a run that lasted 27 games); he quickly implemented a 4–1–3–2 formation which resulted in highly attractive football.[19]

On 5 October 2009, Jesus achieved his 100th victory in the Portuguese League, in a 3–1 home win against Paços de Ferreira.[20] The following month he experienced his first Derby de Lisboa, which ended in a 0–0 away draw; at the end of the victorious campaign, which also brought the domestic League Cup, the coach was rewarded with a new contract extension, running until 2013.[21][22]

2010–2013: European improvement and domestic disappointment

[edit]

After a 2–0 win at VfB Stuttgart in that season's Europa League (4–1 on aggregate), Benfica's first ever victory in Germany, Jesus surpassed the record held by Jimmy Hagan's 1972–73 team, with 16 consecutive wins.[23] During the league campaign, which started without departed Ángel Di María and Ramires, the lack of rotation caused[citation needed] a major fatigue in the most used players.[24][25] At the end of the season, Benfica only won the League Cup[26] despite setting a domestic record of 18 consecutive wins in all competitions.

In the 2011–12 season, Jesus guided Benfica to the second place in the league. He led the team to a club's fourth League Cup,[27] and to the knockout rounds of the 2011–12 Champions League, defeating Zenit Saint Petersburg first,[28][29] before losing to Chelsea, in the quarter-finals.[30]

Director of football António Carraça (left) and Jesus (right) in a match at Spartak Moscow in October 2012

On 10 December 2012, after a 3–1 away victory against Sporting, Jesus became the most successful Portuguese coach in the capital derby with seven wins in a total of nine, surpassing Toni (6/10).[31] On 26 January of the following year he defeated former side Braga at the Estádio Municipal de Braga for the first time, after three defeats and one draw.[32] He briefly led the league with a five-point advantage[33] but did not maintain it, finishing in the second place again.

On 15 March 2013, in a match against Bordeaux in the campaign's Europa League, Jesus reached the 200 game-milestone with Benfica, becoming the sixth coach in the club's history to do so.[34] During the season, he led the club to its first European final in 23 years: after coming third in its group in the UEFA Champions League, the side reached the final of the Europa League, losing 1–2 to Champions League winners Chelsea.[35][36] Domestically, Benfica finished second in the league despite leading up to second to last day,[37] and reached the final of the Portuguese Cup, their first since 2004–05, suffering an unexpected defeat at the hands of Guimarães;[38] these losses added great pressure on the coach, as the club ended the season trophyless for the first time since 2007–08.[39]

2013–2015: Six pieces of silverware

[edit]

On 4 June 2013, Jesus renewed his contract for a further two seasons.[40] When police attempted to clear Benfica supporters from the pitch at the end of a match at Guimarães in September, he became physically involved, taking the side of supporters while obstructing the police.[41] The Portuguese Football Federation gave him a 30-day suspension, which meant he would miss four league matches, and fined him €5,355.[42] On 11 February 2014, Jesus won his tenth game (2–0) against Sporting, which draw two and won only one as an opposing coach.[43] On 20 March, he surpassed John Mortimore's 1985–86 record of 918 minutes without conceding a goal at home matches.[44]

Jesus led Benfica to its 33rd title on 20 April 2014, and became the second Portuguese coach to win two national championships for the club after Toni.[45] Four days earlier the team had beat Porto 3–1 in spite of being reduced to ten men with 1 hour left to play, thus reaching the final of the Portuguese Cup for the second consecutive time.[46] On 28 April 2014, Jesus managed to put Benfica in another final, that of the domestic League Cup, eliminating Porto at the Dragão on penalties in spite of being reduced to ten men with 1 hour left to play again.[47] The trophy was won at Leiria on 7 May against Rio Ave, securing his fourth in the competition and the club's fifth.[48] On 1 May 2014, Jesus helped the club progress to its second consecutive Europa League final, by defeating Juventus 2–1 on aggregate after a goalless draw in Turin.[49] The Portuguese lost on penalties 13 days later in the same city to Sevilla[50][51] and he stated that referee Felix Brych overlooked three penalty decisions for Benfica.[52] On 18 May 2014, after seeing out Rio Ave in the Portuguese Cup final, Jesus became the first Portuguese coach and the seventh overall to win the double for Benfica (the tenth in the club's history).[53] He also became the first coach in Portugal to conquer the domestic treble in one season (the club's first ever).[54]

Jesus in a 2014–15 UEFA Champions League match at Zenit Saint Petersburg

On 10 August 2014, Jesus won his first Supertaça, as he surpassed János Biri as the coach with most matches at Benfica (273) and also tied with Cosme Damião in number of trophies won (8), surpassing both János Biri and Otto Glória. With that victory, he became the first coach to win Primeira Liga, Taça de Portugal, Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira and Taça da Liga (furthermore, in a year).[55][56][57] He continued to break club records, becoming the coach with most victories (195) on 27 September 2014, in a win against Estoril.[58] On 18 January 2015, Jesus reached the 300th game milestone at Benfica, with the highest winning percentage since Jimmy Hagan in the early 1970s,[59] and on 26 April he surpassed Otto Glória as the coach with the most league matches at Benfica.[60] On 17 May 2015, Jesus guided the club to its second consecutive league title, making it the first time Benfica won back-to-back league titles since 1984 (31 years), after Sven-Göran Eriksson, and became the first Portuguese coach to win two consecutive league titles at Benfica.[61][62][63] On 29 May 2015, he won his fifth Taça da Liga (the club's sixth), and became the Benfica coach with most titles won (10) and the only to win 3 titles in two consecutive seasons.[64][65] On 4 June 2015, Benfica announced they had concluded negotiations on a possible renewal of contract with Jesus, whose contract ended on 30 June.[66]

Sporting CP

[edit]

On 5 June 2015, Jesus signed a three-year contract with Benfica's Lisbon rivals Sporting CP,[67] starting his functions on 1 July[68] and earning €5 million per year.[69] His first official match as Sporting coach was a Derby de Lisboa encounter with Benfica in the 2015 Supertaça, which Sporting won 1–0.[70] Despite a positive start, he then failed to qualify for the UEFA Champions League and did not win any other trophy, finishing second in the Primeira Liga with 86 points (a club record), two points behind Benfica.

In May 2016, Jesus renewed his contract with Sporting and started earning €6 million a year until 2019.[71] However, the 2016–17 season was trophyless.

In the following season, on 15 May 2018, Jesus, along with assistant coach Raul José and several players, was injured following an attack by around 50 supporters of Sporting at the club's training ground after the team finished third in the league and missed out on the UEFA Champions League qualification.[72][73][74] Five days later, Sporting lost the Portuguese Cup final to Aves, making Jesus the first manager to have lost in the final with three clubs.[75]

Al-Hilal

[edit]

On 5 June 2018, Jesus left Portugal for the first time in his career and took charge of Saudi incumbent national champions Al Hilal.[76] In his first game on 17 August, he won the Saudi Super Cup with a 2–1 victory over Al-Ittihad in London.[77] Although he had a record of sixteen wins and only one defeat in twenty matches, he was sacked by the chairman on 26 January 2019 following contractual disagreements.[78]

Flamengo

[edit]
Jesus in 2020

On 1 June 2019, Jesus was appointed manager of Brazilian club Flamengo for a year.[79] Upon signing, he was met with a negative reaction by fans, former Flamengo players and commentators, who believed that he was too old and could not adapt to Brazilian football; when the team beat opponents, their managers would credit the results to Flamengo's players and finances rather than to Jesus.[80] He reacted to this atmosphere by saying "I did not come to take anybody's place or to teach anyone. I am neither better nor worse, I work according to a methodology. I would like to remind my Brazilian colleagues that we had a Brazilian [manager] in the national team, Scolari. He was admired by the Portuguese managers. He and many others who worked in Portugal...All of us in Portugal tried to learn from them, there was never this verbal aggression that there is against me. I don't understand these closed minds, even from some who are now at home, wearing gloves and shaking".[80]

In his first game on 10 July, the team drew 1–1 at Athletico Paranaense in the first leg of the quarter-finals of the Copa do Brasil.[81] Four days later in his first Campeonato Brasileiro Série A game, he beat Goiás 6–1 at the Maracanã Stadium.[82]

Jesus' Flamengo won the 2019 Copa Libertadores, defeating Argentina's River Plate 2–1 with a late comeback in the final in Lima, Peru, on 23 November. He was the first foreign manager to win any international trophy with a Brazilian team, the fifth to win the Copa Libertadores with a foreign club, and the second European coach, as well as the second non-South American native, to accomplish the feat, after then-Yugoslav Mirko Jozić with Chile's Colo-Colo in 1991;[80] he was also the fourth Portuguese to become club continental champion, following Artur Jorge, Manuel José, and José Mourinho.[83] Within 24 hours of winning the continental title, Flamengo also won the national championship, when then second-placed Palmeiras lost 2–1 to Grêmio. He was the second foreign manager, and the first non-South American, to win the Brazilian championship after Argentine Carlos Volante in the debut edition in 1959,[84] the first foreign manager to win it since the round-robin format was introduced, the first manager from his country to win a league title in South America, and the third Portuguese to win a national championship in the Americas, after Guilherme Farinha and Pedro Caixinha.[85]

On 30 December 2019, President of Portugal Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa awarded to Jesus the Order of Prince Henry commander medal (ComIH). He said that Jesus' achievements aided Portugal's reputation abroad.[86]

On 17 July 2020, Jesus left Flamengo.[87] He won five trophies with the Brazilian club, winning 43 of the 57 games in charge of the Rubro-Negro.[87]

Return to Benfica

[edit]

Jesus returned to Benfica on 3 August 2020, signing a two-year contract with the club.[88] Despite a €105 million investment, the biggest ever in Portuguese football,[89] the season started with Benfica's elimination in the Champions League third qualifying round and continued with a loss at the Super Cup, an elimination from the League Cup, and a fourth place at the end of the league's first round. With his fourth loss at the Portuguese Cup final, Jesus equalled the record of José Maria Pedroto and Fernando Vaz.[90]

After a rocky start to the 2021–22 campaign, which saw the 'águias' being beaten 1–0 by Portimonense and 3–1 by Sporting CP in the league – both at home - and suffer a 3–0 defeat at Porto's home ground in the Portuguese Cup round of 16, Jorge Jesus left Benfica by mutual consent on 28 December 2021, just two days shy of another trip to the Dragão.[91] He was replaced by then Benfica B coach, Nélson Veríssimo.[92]

Fenerbahçe

[edit]

Jesus arrived at Istanbul on 31 May 2022, and toured the stadium on 1 June 2022. On 2 June, Jesus was appointed as the manager of Fenerbahçe on a one-year deal.[93][94]

Jesus won the 2022–23 Turkish Cup, defeating İstanbul Başakşehir with a score of 2–0 in the final on 11 June 2023, with Fenerbahçe winning their first trophy in 9 years back after the 2014 Turkish Super Cup.[95] After the match, Jesus announced that he would leave the club.[96]

Return to Al Hilal

[edit]

On 1 July 2023, Al Hilal announced the reappointment of Jesus as their manager for the 2023–24 season.[97] He was originally reported to be a candidate for the vacant coaching position of Saudi Arabia prior to the appointment.[98]

On 26 February 2024, Al Hilal won a record 14th consecutive Saudi Pro League match with a 2–0 victory against Al-Ettifaq, surpassing rival Al-Nassr's previous league record of 13 consecutive wins achieved from November 2013 to February 2014.[99] On 5 April, following a 4–1 victory over Al-Khaleej, Al Hilal set a new world record for consecutive matches won by a men's top-flight professional football club across all competitions with 32, breaking the record of 31 previously set by Irish club Belfast Celtic in 1948.[100] Al Hilal's streak would end at 34 consecutive wins, after losing 4–2 away to Al Ain in the first leg of the Champions League semi-finals on 17 April.[101] On 24 May, the Guinness World Records officials traveled to Al Hilal stadium to deliver the certificate that consecrates this record, with Jesus receiving it alongside Fahad Bin Saad Bin Nafel, the club's president.[102] In his first full season with the club, Jesus led Al Hilal to three trophies, the 2023 Saudi Super Cup, beating Al-Ittihad 4–1 in the final, the 2023–24 King Cup, beating Al-Nassr in the final following a penalty shoot-out, and the 2023–24 Saudi Pro League, surpassing the 100-goal mark for the season and finishing with a record 96 points, 14 points ahead of their closest rivals Al Nassr.[103]

On 17 August 2024, Jesus won the 2024 Saudi Super Cup again, after defeating Al Nassr with a score of 4–1 in the final.[104] On 22 October, Jesus' Al Hilal defeated the current Asian champions Al Ain 5–4 in a match marked by the return of Neymar after being in the sidelines for more than a year due to injury. This was also Jesus' 81st victory with Al Hilal, thus becoming the most successful coach in the club's history, achieving this tally in fewer than 100 matches (96 in total).[105]

Personal life

[edit]

Jesus married his second wife, Ivone, and the couple had a son, Mauro. From his previous marriage, he had a daughter Tânia and a son Gonçalo.[106]

He had over €1 million invested in the Banco Privado Português (BPP) when it went bankrupt in 2009.[107] He recovered eighty percent of that amount in March 2014.[108]

Managerial statistics

[edit]
As of 8 November 2024[109][110]
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Amora 1 July 1990 4 February 1993 103 41 34 28 132 92 +40 039.81
Felgueiras 14 December 1993 12 May 1996 97 38 28 31 119 106 +13 039.18
Felgueiras 18 February 1997 12 January 1998 34 17 6 11 41 32 +9 050.00
União Madeira 10 February 1998 23 March 1998 6 1 1 4 5 13 −8 016.67
Estrela da Amadora 6 June 1998 15 May 2000 75 23 30 22 83 84 −1 030.67
Vitória Setúbal 3 October 2000 21 January 2002 51 23 10 18 84 64 +20 045.10
Estrela da Amadora 30 January 2002 5 March 2003 41 21 9 11 51 41 +10 051.22
Vitória Guimarães 8 December 2003 10 May 2004 22 7 6 9 17 22 −5 031.82
Moreirense 4 April 2005 22 May 2005 7 2 3 2 9 7 +2 028.57
União Leiria 26 September 2005 11 May 2006 30 13 6 11 43 35 +8 043.33
Belenenses 12 May 2006 19 May 2008 70 31 16 23 87 74 +13 044.29
Braga 20 May 2008 16 June 2009 48 24 13 11 68 30 +38 050.00
Benfica 16 June 2009 4 June 2015 321 225 51 45 674 249 +425 070.09
Sporting CP 5 June 2015 5 June 2018 158 99 26 33 302 146 +156 062.66
Al Hilal 5 June 2018 30 January 2019 25 20 4 1 65 21 +44 080.00
Flamengo 1 June 2019 17 July 2020 57 43 10 4 129 47 +82 075.44
Benfica 3 August 2020 28 December 2021 83 52 17 14 182 80 +102 062.65
Fenerbahçe 2 June 2022 12 June 2023 56 38 10 8 126 58 +68 067.86
Al Hilal 1 July 2023 Present 77 66 8 3 211 60 +151 085.71
Career totals 1,361 784 288 289 2,429 1,261 +1168 057.60

Honours

[edit]

Managerial

[edit]

Braga[111]

Benfica[111]

Sporting CP

Al Hilal

Flamengo

Fenerbahçe

Individual

[edit]

Orders

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ "jesus". infopédia (in Portuguese). Retrieved 8 February 2015.
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  62. ^ "Jorge Jesus é o primeiro treinador português a ser bicampeão pelo Benfica" [Jorge Jesus is the first Portuguese coach to be bicampeão for Benfica] (in Portuguese). RTP. 18 May 2015. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  63. ^ Pimentel, José Nuno (17 May 2015). "Benfica retain Portuguese crown". UEFA. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
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  67. ^ "Oficial: Jorge Jesus assina por três temporadas" [Official: Jorge Jesus signs for three seasons] (in Portuguese). A Bola. 5 June 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  68. ^ "Contrato de trabalho desportivo de treinador profissional" [Professional manager work contract] (PDF) (in Portuguese). 5 June 2015. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
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  75. ^ "É histórico: Jesus já perdeu com três cores diferentes no Jamor" [It is historic: Jesus has already lost with three different colors at Jamor]. zerozero (in Portuguese). 21 May 2018. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  76. ^ "Jorge Jesus oficializado no Al-Hilal" [Jorge Jesus officially at Al-Hilal]. Jornal de Notícias (in Portuguese). 5 June 2018. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
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  79. ^ "Jorge Jesus é o novo técnico do Flamengo" [Jorge Jesus is the new manager of Flamengo] (in Portuguese). Clube de Regatas do Flamengo. 1 June 2019. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
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  81. ^ "Jorge Jesus estreia-se pelo Flamengo com empate na Copa do Brasil" [Jorge Jesus debuts for Flamengo with draw in Copa do Brasil]. Jornal de Notícias (in Portuguese). 11 July 2019. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  82. ^ "Flamengo estreia Jorge Jesus no Brasileiro, e jornais portugueses destacam 'casa cheia e impressionante'" [Jorge Jesus debuts with Flamengo in the Brazilian league, and Portuguese newspapers highlight 'impressive full house'] (in Portuguese). ESPN. 14 July 2019. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  83. ^ Almeida, Isaura (23 November 2019). "Jesus atingiu a glória que só de Artur Jorge, Mourinho e Manuel José tinham conseguido" [Jesus reached the glory that only Artur Jorge, Mourinho and Manuel José had achieved] (in Portuguese). Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  84. ^ Signor, Luiz (25 November 2019). "Jesus só precisa de 25 jogos para repetir argentino e fazer história" [Jesus only needed 25 games to repeat Argentine and make history] (in Portuguese). One Football. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
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  86. ^ a b "Marcelo já condecorou Jorge Jesus: "Contribuiu para projetar o prestígio de Portugal no Mundo"" [Marcelo gave award to Jorge Jesus: "He contributed to projecting Portugal's prestige to the world"]. Sábado (in Portuguese). Retrieved 30 December 2019.
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  90. ^ ""É uma época perdida. Estamos tristes, acreditávamos que íamos ganhar". Ninguém perdeu mais finais da Taça do que Jesus" ["It is a lost season. We are sad, we believed we were going to win". Nobody has lost more Taça finals than Jesus]. Observador (in Portuguese). 23 May 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  91. ^ "Benfica and Jorge Jesus part company after cup defeat to Porto". AS.com. 28 December 2021. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  92. ^ "OFICIAL: Jorge Jesus deixa o Benfica" [OFFICIAL: Jesus leaves Benfica] (in Portuguese). CNN Portugal. 28 December 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  93. ^ "Teknik Yönetime İlişkin Açıklama" (in Turkish). Kamuyu Aydınlatma Platformu. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
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  95. ^ "61. Ziraat Türkiye Kupası Fenerbahçe'nin" [Fenerbahçe win the 61st Turkish Cup edition]. Turkish Football Federation (in Turkish). 11 June 2023. Retrieved 12 June 2023.
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  106. ^ "Família de Jorge Jesus em peso no Dragão" [Jorge Jesus' family takes over Dragão] (in Portuguese). O Jogo. 1 May 2010. Archived from the original on 4 May 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  107. ^ "Jorge Jesus tem um milhão de euros congelados no BPP" [Jorge Jesus has one million euros frozen in BPP] (in Portuguese). IOnline. 20 August 2009. Archived from the original on 17 August 2009. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
  108. ^ "Jesus recupera 800 mil euros do BPP" [Jorge Jesus recovers €800,000 from BPP] (in Portuguese). Diário de Notícias. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
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  115. ^ "Prémios Oficiais Liga Portugal 2015" [Official Awards Liga Portugal 2015] (in Portuguese). LPFP. 4 July 2015. Archived from the original on 4 July 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
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  117. ^ "Arábia Saudita: Jorge Jesus eleito melhor treinador de outubro" [Saudi Arabia: Jorge Jesus elected best manager of October]. CNN Portugal (in European Portuguese). 1 November 2023. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
  118. ^ "Jorge Jesus repete prémio de treinador do mês na Liga saudita" [Jorge Jesus repeats Saudi League's manager of the month award]. CNN Portugal (in European Portuguese). 5 December 2023. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
  119. ^ "Jorge Jesus eleito o treinador do mês pela terceira vez seguida" [Jorge Jesus elected manager of the month for third time in a row]. CNN Portugal (in European Portuguese). 4 January 2024. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
  120. ^ "IFFHS AWARDS 2019 – THE WORLD'S BEST CLUB COACH : JÜRGEN KLOPP (GERMANY/FC LIVERPOOL)". IFFHS. 26 November 2019. Archived from the original on 22 March 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  121. ^ Jorge Jesus vence o Globo de Ouro[permanent dead link]
  122. ^ Globos de Ouro 2016: Os vencedores
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