The Philips Sports Manager of the Year is an award for the person considered the most outstanding Irish sports manager or coach of a particular year.
The award is contested by the twelve winners of the year's Philips Sports Manager of the Month Awards, which are open to Irish sports managers, trainers or coaches, or overseas-born managers of Irish teams.
Because the annual ceremony is traditionally held in early December each year, the December winner from the previous year is eligible to compete.
Unusually, the award was instigated not by a sporting body or journalists' association, but by the event sponsors themselves, Philips in 1982.
There have been joint-winners twice. First in 1990, as the achievement of Cork GAA winning the first All-Ireland hurling and football double in exactly 100 years saw respective managers Fr. Michael O'Brien and Billy Morgan honoured. It happened again in 2015 when Irish soccer manager Martin O'Neill and Northern Irish soccer manager Michael O'Neill shared the award for qualifying their respective sides for the 2016 UEFA European Football Championship.
Jack Charlton is the most honoured manager since the award's inception, having won it four times during his tenure as Ireland soccer manager. Declan Kidney is the only person to have won the award for achievements with two different teams at different levels, while Brian Kerr was honoured for success with three different Irish national soccer teams. Joining Charlton, Kidney and Kerr as multi-award winners are Kilkenny hurling supremo Brian Cody and Dublin football supremo Jim Gavin.
Year | Winner | Team | Sport[1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | Hurling | |||
1983 | Brendan Edwards | Irish men's amateur golf | Golf | |
1984 | Kerry[2] | Gaelic football | ||
1985 | Rugby Union | |||
1986 | Association football | |||
1987 | Association football | |||
1988 | Association football | |||
1989 | Association football | |||
1990 | Gaelic football and hurling | |||
1991 | Gaelic football | |||
1992 | Gaelic football | |||
1993 | Jack Charlton | Association football | ||
1994 | Eddie Jordan | Formula One | ||
1995 | Ger Loughnane | Hurling | ||
1996 | Liam Griffin | Hurling | ||
1997 | Brian Kerr | Republic of Ireland U20 | Association football | |
1998 | Brian Kerr | Republic of Ireland U16 & U18 | Association football | |
1999 | Seán Boylan | Gaelic football | ||
2000 | John Oxx | Sinndar's trainer | Horse racing | |
2001 | Mick McCarthy | Association football | ||
2002 | Joe Kernan | Gaelic football | ||
2003 | Brian Cody | Kilkenny[3] | Hurling | |
2004 | Eddie O'Sullivan | Rugby Union | ||
2005 | Mickey Harte | Tyrone[4] | Gaelic football | |
2006 | Declan Kidney | Rugby Union | ||
2007 | Paul Doolin | Association football | ||
2008 | Declan Kidney | Munster[5] | Rugby Union | |
Declan Kidney | Ireland[6] | Rugby Union | ||
2010 | Liam Sheedy | Tipperary[7] | Hurling | |
2011 | Giovanni Trapattoni | Republic of Ireland[8] | Association football | |
2012 | Billy Walsh and Pete Taylor | Ireland[9] [10] | Boxing | |
2013 | Jim Gavin | Dublin[11] | Gaelic football | |
2014 | Joe Schmidt | Ireland[12] | Rugby Union | |
2015 | Martin O'Neill and Michael O'Neill | Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland[13] | Association football | |
2016 | Stephen Kenny | Dundalk[14] | Association football | |
2017 | Micheál Donoghue | Galway[15] | Hurling | |
2018 | Joe Schmidt | Ireland[16] | Rugby Union | |
2019 | Jim Gavin | Dublin[17] | Gaelic football |
Rank | Manager | Wins | |
---|---|---|---|
1st | Jack Charlton | 4 | |
2nd | Declan Kidney | 3 | |
3rd | Brian Kerr Joe Schmidt Jim Gavin | 2 |
Sport | Wins | |
---|---|---|
Association football | 12 | |
Gaelic football | 8 | |
Hurling | 7 | |
Rugby Union | 7 | |
Boxing | 1 | |
Formula One | 1 | |
Golf | 1 |