Who is the youngest Premier League manager of all time? We look back across the history of the competition to give you a run down of the 10 youngest to take charge of a match.
Ryan Mason (29y, 312d)
Tottenham Hotspur vs. Southampton (21 April 2021)
Following the sacking of José Mourinho, Tottenham gave the reins to former midfielder Ryan Mason as caretaker manager for the remaining six matches of the 2020-21 Premier League season.
On the day of his first game in charge, Mason was just 29 years, 312 days old and he became the only manager in Premier League history to be under 30 years old. He was only the second person since the Football League resumed in 1946-47 to manage a top-flight game while in their 20s after Frank Sibley, whose first game was in August 1977 vs. Aston Villa, also at the age of 29, as QPR boss.
Spurs won Mason’s first match 2-1 thanks to goals from Gareth Bale and Son Heung-min – both former teammates of Mason’s at the club. Mason named four players in the starting XI whom he played alongside during his own Premier League career: Hugo Lloris (49 times), Eric Dier (44), Toby Alderweireld (22) and Son (14); he never actually played alongside Bale in the Premier League but did feature with – and replace as a substitute – the Welshman in the UEFA Europa League in 2012-13.
Mason went on to manage six league games overall for Spurs in this spell, securing four wins with one coming against the next Spurs manager in a 2-0 victory over Nuno Espírito Santo’s Wolves’. Tottenham scored 14 goals in these six matches, with only Manchester City (16) scoring more over the period that Mason led Spurs from the dugout for the first time.
Of course, he also took charge of Spurs for the final six games of the 2022-23 campaign following the respective sackings of Antonio Conte and then Cristian Stellini. Mason, aged 31 at the time, won just two of those games and suffered defeats to Liverpool, Aston Villa and Brentford as he could only lead them Tottenham to an eighth-placed finish.
Fabian Hürzeler (31y, 173d)
Everton vs. Brighton & Hove Albion (17 August 2024)
Brighton & Hove Albion appointed Fabian Hürzeler as head coach ahead of the 2024-25 season as the replacement for Roberto De Zerbi.
At just 31 years and 173 days old on the day of his first game, the German set a new record as the youngest permanent (if we can really consider any Premier League manager/coach “permanent” these days…) manager in the competition’s history when he took charge of the Seagulls’ season opener away at Everton. He also became the first boss in Premier League history who was born after the competition was formed.
Hürzeler joined from St. Pauli after guiding the hipsters’ favourites to promotion to the Bundesliga in 2023-24.
Not only is he the second-youngest manager – interim or otherwise – in Premier League history, he was also younger than five of his first-team squad when he was appointed at the Amex Stadium.
Attilio Lombardo (32y, 67d)
Crystal Palace vs. Aston Villa (14 March 1998)
Crystal Palace were rooted to the bottom of the Premier League table when Steve Coppell was moved into a director of football role at the club, with Italian Attilio Lombardo being given a surprise position as caretaker player-manager.
The former Sampdoria man was in charge for six games, with Thomas Brolin as his assistant (and translator) and secured two wins with twice as many losses before Ray Lewington took over for the final three matches of the 1997-98 campaign.
Lombardo’s first game in charge of the Eagles came in a 3-1 defeat at Aston Villa in March 1998, with the coach just 32 years, 67 days old. He was only the second Italian to manage a Premier League game after Gianluca Vialli became the first a month earlier at fellow London club Chelsea.
Upon being appointed, it was clear Lombardo didn’t foresee a long-term role in the position, stating: “I am looking forward to the challenge, but my intention is not to remain as player-manager. This is a temporary measure and hopefully we will have a new manager taking over so I can go back to being a player, even if Palace are relegated.” Luckily for him, it was a short experience.
Chris Coleman (32y, 313d)
Fulham vs. Newcastle United (19 April 2003)
When Chris Coleman was handed the caretaker manager role at Fulham in April 2003, the west London side were in danger of dropping out of the Premier League with just two places between them and the relegation zone. Jean Tigana had just been sacked following a run of three successive defeats without scoring a goal, but 32-year-old Coleman helped steer them clear of the bottom three.
The Welshman had only announced his retirement as a player six months prior and managed to seal a win in his first game in charge, beating Newcastle United 2-1 at Craven Cottage. He went on to lose just one of his five games as caretaker boss in 2002-03, winning three times. This proved enough to convince Fulham to name him as permanent manager ahead of 2003-04.
Coleman remained Fulham manager for four more years, before his dismissal in April 2007 following a miserable run of just one victory in 15 top-flight games. He was replaced by Lawrie Sanchez.
The former Wales international is yet to manage in the Premier League again since that 152-game spell, but he did lead his country to Euro 2016, their first major international tournament in 58 years, and guided them all the way to the semi-finals. However, after failing to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, he left the job in November 2017.
Gianluca Vialli (33y, 227d)
Chelsea vs. Leicester City (21 February 1998)
The mid-late 1990s checklist to be in charge of Chelsea was a simple one:
– Have you had a very good playing career?
– Can you still play a bit?
– Are you in your 30s?
Gianluca Vialli became the third successive player-manager appointed by Chelsea, following Glenn Hoddle in 1993 and Ruud Gullit in 1996. Vialli was the youngest of the trio, being just 33 years, 227 days old on the date of his first game as manager in February 1998. It wasn’t the best start, with Chelsea losing 2-0 away to Leicester City, but things got better with time.
The first Italian to manage in the Premier League, Vialli led Chelsea to glory in the League Cup and European Cup Winners’ Cup in his first three months at the helm; the 1998 UEFA Super Cup and the 1999-00 FA Cup would follow. The Super Cup win saw Vialli become the youngest coach to win a major UEFA competition at the time, at just 33 years, 308 days old.
Vialli took charge of 94 games in the Premier League for the Blues, with his sacking coming just five games into the 2000-01 campaign, one of the earliest Premier League dismissals ever. Across his spell as player-manager, Vialli chipped in with five goals and four assists in just 1,372 minutes on the pitch. You won’t get that from Mauricio Pochettino.
André Villas-Boas (33y, 301d)
Chelsea vs. Stoke City (14 August 2011)
Thirteen and a half years after Vialli’s appointment, Chelsea gave the job to another 33-year-old coach – this time to one with slightly more pedigree as a top-flight coach, however.
André Villas-Boas had spent only one season in charge of FC Porto, but what a season it was. He won the league title by 20 points while remaining undefeated, followed by the Portuguese Cup and UEFA Europa League titles. In winning the Europa League, he broke Vialli’s record as the youngest coach to win a major European competition, aged just 33 years and 213 days old when they defeated Braga 1-0 in Dublin.
His time at Stamford Bridge didn’t go so well, lasting only six months at the club before being sacked in February 2012 and replaced by caretaker manager Roberto Di Matteo. The Italian went on to win the Champions League only three months later on the foundations that Villas-Boas built.
On the day of his first Premier League game – a disappointing 0-0 draw away at Stoke City – Villas-Boas was 33 years and 301 days old, meaning he is still the fifth youngest to take charge of a Premier League match.
Since leaving Chelsea, the Portuguese has led Spurs, Zenit, Shanghai SIPG and Marseille but won fewer trophies (three) since leaving Portugal as he did in one season at Porto (four).
Who Else?
Yet another Chelsea manager features in this list of the youngest managers in Premier League history, with Dutch legend Ruud Gullit the seventh youngest to take charge of a Premier League game. He was only 33 years, 352 days old on the day of his first English top-flight game as manager, drawing 0-0 with Southampton at The Dell in August 1996.
Kevin MacDonald presided over Leicester City’s 2-1 home win over Arsenal in November 1994 just a day after his 34th birthday. In between the tenures of Brian Little and Mark McGhee, he was to oversee four games for the Foxes with just one win to his name.
Scottish manager Alex Neil orchestrated promotion through the Championship play-offs in his first season as Norwich City boss but was unable to stop the Canaries from suffering relegation in the 2015-16 Premier League campaign. His first game as manager in the top flight was a 3-1 loss to Crystal Palace at 34 years, 60 days old.
Stuart Pearce rounds off the top 10 and was another interim manager. He led Nottingham Forest to a 2-1 victory over Arsenal at the City Ground in December 1996 aged 34 years, 241 days following the departure of Frank Clark. Even after this managerial spell, Pearce spent four more seasons as a player in the top flight, with two years at both West Ham and Manchester City. The former England international had his longest spell as a Premier League boss at City between March 2005 and May 2007, leading them on 85 occasions in the top division and averaging a measly 1.19 points per game.
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