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Every manager to win a title in Premier League history
Following Arsenal's triumph under Mikel Arteta, we look at all of the managers whose teams have been champions since 1992/93
Mikel Arteta is the 13th manager to win the Premier League title after Arsenal were crowned champions on Tuesday night.
The Gunners have won the competition for the first time since 2003/04, when they finished the campaign unbeaten under Arsene Wenger, and for the fourth time in their history.
Arteta is the first manager to win the Premier League with a club that he also played for in the competition. He joined Arsenal from Everton in 2011 and made 110 league appearances in five seasons before hanging up his boots in 2016.
He is the second former Premier League player to win the title as a manager, after Roberto Mancini, who won Manchester City's first title in 2011/12 following a short stint with Leicester City during his playing days.
Aged 44 years and 54 days, Arteta is the third youngest manager to win the Premier League. The first and second youngest were both Jose Mourinho, who won the title with Chelsea at the age of 42 years and 94 days in 2004/05, then 43 years and 93 days in 2005/06.
Arteta is the second Spanish manager to guide his team to Premier League title glory, following Pep Guardiola with Man City. Italy has produced the most Premier League-winning managers, four, with Carlo Ancelotti, Antonio Conte, Claudio Ranieri and Mancini all on the list. In total, managers of eight different nationalities have won the Premier League, with the others being Scottish (Sir Alex Ferguson), French (Arsene Wenger), Portuguese (Mourinho), Chilean (Manuel Pellegrini), German (Jurgen Klopp) and Dutch (Arne Slot).
Man City (Guardiola, Mancini, Pellegrini) and Chelsea (Mourinho, Ancelotti, Conte) have won the title with the highest number of different managers, three.
Mikel Arteta (Arsenal)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2025/26
After a succession of second-placed finishes, Arsenal finally went the distance under Arteta this season. The Gunners pipped Man City to top spot following their win over Burnley and Man City’s failure to beat AFC Bournemouth in the penultimate Matchweek of the season.
Sir Alex Ferguson (Manchester United)
Titles: 13
Title seasons: 1992/93, 1993/94, 1995/96, 1996/97, 1998/99, 1999/2000, 2000/01, 2002/03, 2006/07, 2007/08, 2008/09, 2010/11, 2012/13
Far and away the most successful manager in Premier League history, Ferguson guided Man Utd to 13 top-flight titles during his 27 years at the Old Trafford helm. Man Utd won the inaugural Premier League campaign in 1992/93, when they trumped Aston Villa to top spot by 10 points.
Man Utd haven’t won a top-flight title since Ferguson won the club's 20th title overall in 2012/13, his last season in charge.

Pep Guardiola (Man City)
Titles: 6
Title seasons: 2017/18, 2018/19, 2020/21, 2021/22, 2022/23, 2023/24
Guardiola has won the title in six of his 10 years at the Etihad Stadium, including a record-breaking four in a row from 2020/21 to 2023/24. His first title was also a historic one as Man City set the record for the most points (100), most away points (50), most wins (32), most goals (106) and best goal difference (+79).

Jose Mourinho (Chelsea)
Titles: 3
Title seasons: 2004/05, 2005/06, 2014/15
Mourinho made quite the impact upon his Stamford Bridge arrival back in 2004. The self-proclaimed "Special One" lived up to early expectations, guiding the Blues to the title in his debut season in London. Mourinho did so with a resolute backline as Chelsea conceded just 15 goals and lost one match.

Arsene Wenger (Arsenal)
Titles: 3
Title seasons: 1997/98, 2001/02, 2003/04
Arsenal made a left-field appointment in 1996 when they hired Wenger from Japanese club Nagoya Grampus Eight. However, "Le Professeur" excelled in north London, winning the first of his three Premier League titles in 1997/98. Wenger’s most memorable success came in 2003/04 as Arsenal went through the season unbeaten, winning 26 and drawing the other 12 of their 38 matches, as "The Invincibles" made history.

Carlo Ancelotti (Chelsea)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2009/10
Ancelotti won the Premier League in the first of his two seasons at Stamford Bridge after leaving AC Milan to take over the Chelsea reins back in 2009. The Blues wrapped up the title on the final day of the season, doing so in style as they eased to an 8-0 win over Wigan.

Antonio Conte (Chelsea)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2016/17
Conte became the second Italian to win the Premier League with Chelsea in 2016/17 as the 56-year-old's team swept all aside with Diego Costa, Eden Hazard, Cesc Fabregas and N’Golo Kante all playing key roles. An early season shift to a 3-4-3 formation after a patchy start to the campaign proved vital to the Blues' success.

Sir Kenny Dalglish (Blackburn Rovers)
Titles: 1
Title season: 1994/95
Blackburn won their one and only Premier League title back in 1994/95 as Alan Shearer and Chris Sutton fired Rovers to glory under Dalglish. Shearer, the Premier League's all-time goalscorer on 260 goals, was vital in delivering success to Ewood Park, scoring 34 times.

Jurgen Klopp (Liverpool)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2019/20
Liverpool ended a 30-year wait for the Premier League title as Klopp guided the Reds to top-flight success in 2019/20, a season disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Liverpool won the league with seven matchweeks to spare and finished on a club-record 99 points.

Roberto Mancini (Man City)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2011/12
The most dramatic Premier League finish of all time. Man City were down and out in the final knockings of the 2011/12 season before Edin Dzeko and Sergio Aguero struck in the dying embers to secure Man City’s first and only title under Mancini.

Manuel Pellegrini (Man City)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2013/14
Pellegrini made history in his debut Man City campaign. Indeed, the Chilean became the first coach from outside of Europe to win the title. He enjoyed a commendable three years in charge at the Etihad Stadium.

Claudio Ranieri (Leicester City)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2015/16
The man behind Leicester’s incredible Premier League title success, defying odds of 5000/1. Ranieri was responsible for one of the greatest sporting achievements in Premier League history as the Foxes earned glory in 2015/16.

Arne Slot (Liverpool)
Titles: 1
Title season: 2024/25
Slot became the seventh manager to win the Premier League in his first season in charge. Mohamed Salah played a starring role as the Reds became champions for the 20th time overall and the second time in the Premier League era.
(Premier League)















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