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Guto Ferreira
 
Guto Ferreira
Ferreira in 2023
Personal information
Full name Augusto Sérgio Ferreira
Date of birth (1965-09-07) 7 September 1965 (age 58)
Place of birth Piracicaba, Brazil
Managerial career
Years Team
1985–1993 XV de Piracicaba (youth)
1995–1996 São Paulo (youth)
1997–2000 Internacional (youth)
2000–2002 Internacional (assistant)
2002 Internacional
2003 Noroeste
2003–2004 Penafiel
2004 Naval
2005 Corinthians Alagoano
2007 15 de Novembro-RS
2008–2010 Internacional (assistant)
2008 Internacional (interim)
2011 Mogi Mirim U20
2011 Mogi Mirim
2011 Criciúma
2011 ABC
2012 Mogi Mirim
2012–2013 Ponte Preta
2013–2014 Portuguesa
2014 Figueirense
2014–2015 Ponte Preta
2015–2016 Chapecoense
2016–2017 Bahia
2017 Internacional
2018 Bahia
2018 Chapecoense
2019–2020 Sport Recife
2020–2021 Ceará
2021–2022 Bahia
2022 Coritiba
2023 Goiás
2023 Ceará
2023–2024 Coritiba

Augusto Sérgio "Guto" Ferreira (born 7 September 1965) is a Brazilian professional football coach.

Career

Born in Piracicaba, São Paulo, Ferreira began his career with hometown side XV de Piracicaba. After a quick spell at Guarani as a performance analyst, he joined São Paulo's youth sides in 1995.

In 2000, after spending three years with the youth teams, Ferreira was named assistant coach of Internacional; in 2002, he was named interim after the dismissal of Ivo Wortmann. He won that year's Campeonato Gaúcho and was permanently appointed as head coach on 4 June 2002,[1] but was still sacked on 26 August.[2]

On 15 May 2003, Ferreira was appointed head coach of Noroeste.[3] The following 17 August he moved abroad, joining Segunda Liga side F.C. Penafiel.

On 4 February 2004, Ferreira was dismissed.[4] He was appointed at the helm of Associação Naval 1º de Maio on 4 March,[5] but was relieved of his duties on 12 September.

In 2005 Ferreira returned to Brazil, being appointed at Corinthians Alagoano.[6] After a spell at 15 de Novembro-RS, he returned to Internacional in 2008, again as an assistant; he was also an interim in June 2008, after the departure of Abel Braga.[7]

In the following two years, Ferreira managed Mogi Mirim (two stints),[8] Criciúma[9] and ABC.[10] On 24 September 2012, he was appointed head coach of Ponte Preta.[11]

Ferreira was dismissed on 6 June 2013,[12] and on 28 July he was named Portuguesa head coach, with the side seriously threatened with relegation.[13] He managed to finish 12th with the club, but the side ultimately suffered relegation due to irregularly fielding in a player; in the following February, he resigned.[14]

On 24 July 2014, immediately after leaving Figueirense,[15] Ferreira returned to Ponte.[16] He was sacked on 3 August 2015,[17] and was appointed head coach of Chapecoense on 14 September.[18]

On 24 June 2016, Ferreira left Chape after agreeing to a deal with Bahia.[19] He left the club in the same manner the following 30 May, after returning to Inter, now in the first team.[20]

On 11 November 2017, after a 1–1 draw against Vila Nova and thus losing the leadership of 2017 Campeonato Brasileiro Série B, Ferreira was relieved from his duties.[21] On 26 December, he returned to Bahia,[22] but was sacked the following 3 June.[23]

Ferreira as head coach of Sport Recife in 2020

On 7 August 2018, Ferreira was appointed head coach of Chape for the second time,[24] but was dismissed on 15 October.[25] On 20 February of the following year, he took over Sport Recife,[26] helping in their promotion to the first division at the end of the season but being dismissed on 13 February 2020 after a poor start of the campaign.[27]

On 18 March 2020, Ferreira was named Ceará head coach in the place of Enderson Moreira.[28] He was sacked by the club on 29 August of the following year, after nearly 100 matches in charge.[29]

On 6 October 2021, Ferreira returned to Bahia for a third spell, replacing Diego Dabove.[30] He was kept in charge of the club despite their relegation, but was dismissed on 26 June 2022.[31]

On 16 August 2022, Ferreira returned to the top tier after being announced as head coach of Coritiba.[32] On 9 December, despite avoiding relegation, he was sacked,[33] and was announced in charge of fellow top tier side Goiás the following day.[34]

On 10 April 2023, after losing the 2023 Campeonato Goiano, Ferreira was sacked by Goiás,[35] and returned to Ceará on 29 June.[36] On 29 August, he was dismissed by the latter club.[37]

Ferreira returned to Coxa on 27 November 2023, with their relegation already confirmed.[38] He was sacked the following 3 May, after a poor start in the 2024 Série B.[39]

Coaching statistics

As of 6 May 2024.
Coaching record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record Ref
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Internacional Brazil 24 May 2002 26 August 2002 8 4 2 2 16 13 +3 050.00 [40]
Penafiel Portugal 17 August 2003 4 February 2004 20 9 6 5 30 22 +8 045.00 [41]
Naval Portugal 4 March 2004 12 September 2004 10 2 4 4 11 14 −3 020.00 [41]
Corinthians Alagoano Brazil January 2005 28 February 2005 8 3 3 2 15 7 +8 037.50
15 de Novembro-RS Brazil January 2007 17 February 2007 7 1 3 3 7 13 −6 014.29 [42]
Internacional (interim) Brazil 1 June 2008 12 June 2008 1 0 0 1 1 3 −2 000.00 [40]
Mogi Mirim Brazil 9 February 2011 28 April 2011 12 5 3 4 16 13 +3 041.67
Criciúma Brazil 13 June 2011 3 August 2011 11 5 3 3 9 7 +2 045.45 [43]
ABC Brazil 15 August 2011 31 August 2011 4 0 2 2 4 10 −6 000.00 [44]
Mogi Mirim Brazil 13 December 2011 23 September 2012 35 18 9 8 58 42 +16 051.43
Ponte Preta Brazil 24 September 2012 6 June 2013 41 19 11 11 50 39 +11 046.34 [12]
Portuguesa Brazil 28 July 2013 2 February 2014 36 11 10 15 45 42 +3 030.56
Figueirense Brazil 30 April 2014 24 July 2014 11 3 1 7 8 13 −5 027.27 [45]
Ponte Preta Brazil 24 July 2014 3 August 2015 66 32 17 17 99 70 +29 048.48 [17]
Chapecoense Brazil 14 September 2015 24 June 2016 51 23 18 10 78 41 +37 045.10 [46]
Bahia Brazil 24 June 2016 30 May 2017 57 31 15 11 94 37 +57 054.39 [22]
Internacional Brazil 30 May 2017 11 November 2017 33 17 9 7 46 25 +21 051.52 [21]
Bahia Brazil 26 December 2017 3 June 2018 33 18 6 9 53 27 +26 054.55 [23]
Chapecoense Brazil 7 August 2018 15 October 2018 13 4 1 8 12 20 −8 030.77 [47]
Sport Recife Brazil 20 February 2019 13 February 2020 54 25 23 6 77 41 +36 046.30 [48]
Ceará Brazil 18 March 2020 29 August 2021 94 41 30 23 135 94 +41 043.62 [29]
Bahia Brazil 6 October 2021 26 June 2022 47 20 10 17 61 41 +20 042.55 [31]
Coritiba Brazil 16 August 2022 9 December 2022 16 6 2 8 16 26 −10 037.50 [49]
Goiás Brazil 10 December 2022 10 April 2023 25 16 6 3 44 16 +28 064.00 [50]
Ceará Brazil 29 June 2023 29 August 2023 12 4 5 3 11 9 +2 033.33
Coritiba Brazil 27 November 2023 3 May 2024 21 9 5 7 32 21 +11 042.86
Total 726 326 Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Guto_Ferreira
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