Ricardo Moniz

Dutch football player and manager (born 1964) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ricardo Moniz (born 17 June 1964) is a Dutch football manager and former player who is the head coach of Slovak club Trenčín.[2]

Date of birth (1964-06-17) 17 June 1964 (age 61)
Place of birth Rotterdam, Netherlands
Position Defender
Current team
Trenčín (manager)
Quick facts Personal information, Date of birth ...
Ricardo Moniz
Moniz in 2012
Personal information
Date of birth (1964-06-17) 17 June 1964 (age 61)
Place of birth Rotterdam, Netherlands
Position Defender
Team information
Current team
Trenčín (manager)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1981–1984 Eindhoven 71 (13)
1984–1988 HFC Haarlem 95 (9)
1988–1991 RKC Waalwijk 67 (12)
1991–1992 Eeklo 18 (1)
1992–1993 Helmond Sport 22 (4)
Total 273 (39)
Managerial career
1994–1997 RKSV Nuenen
2004–2005 Jong PSV
2008–2010 Hamburger SV
2010 Hamburger SV (caretaker)
2010–2011 Red Bull Salzburg
2011–2012 Red Bull Salzburg
2012–2013 Ferencváros
2014 Lechia Gdańsk
2014 1860 Munich
2015 Notts County
2016–2017[1] Eindhoven
2017–2018 Randers
2018 Trenčín
2019–2020 Excelsior
2022–2023 Zalaegerszeg
2023 Slaven Belupo
2024–2025 Zürich
2025– Trenčín
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
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Playing career

Coaching career

Moniz was formerly a skills trainer at Tottenham Hotspur,[4] leaving the club in May 2008 after three seasons.[5]

Moniz is one of the few proteges of the skills training guru Wiel Coerver which is aimed at improving technical ability over tactical ability.[6] He was previously an academy coach at PSV Eindhoven.[7]

On 8 June 2008, he signed a new contract to be the new skills and talent coach next to head coach Martin Jol at Hamburger SV.[8] On 26 April 2010, he was named the interim head coach by Hamburger SV, replacing Bruno Labbadia for the last two games in the season 2009/2010.[9][10] He was in that position until Armin Veh was hired on 24 May 2010.[11]

Salzburg

Ricardo was then appointed the Global Director of Youth Development for Red Bull, responsible for academies in four continents. After the resignations of Huub Stevens and Dietmar Beiersdorfer on 8 April 2011, Moniz was named the new head coach of Red Bull Salzburg.

Ricardo won the League and Cup double with Red Bull Salzburg. Becoming the first manager in Salzburg history (Austria and Red Bull Salzburg) to achieve a league and cup double.

In June 2012, he resigned after internal differences.[12]

Ferencváros

On 21 August 2012, Ricardo Moniz was appointed as the new manager of the Hungarian League club Ferencváros.[13] At FTC, his devotion to football became immediately popular among fans and many successes followed. Yet, struggling with difficult circumstances, on 2 December 2013, Moniz was sacked by Ferencváros due to poor performance of the team.[14]

Ricardo was voted the Austrian manager of the year for the 2011/2012 season and achieved the Hungarian Players Union Manager of the Year in 2012/2013.[citation needed]

Gdansk

On 27 March 2014, he was named a new coach of Lechia Gdańsk,[15] and successfully brought them to their highest ever league position, of 4th. On 4 June 2014, he resigned from his position for personal reasons.[16] Shortly after resigning from Lechia, he became new manager of 1860 Munich,[17] where he made the then 18 year old Julian Weigl captain.[18] Moniz was sacked on 24 September 2014.[19]

Notts County

On 7 April 2015, Moniz was appointed manager of the League One club Notts County on a three-year contract.[20] He was sacked on 29 December 2015 with Notts 15th in League Two.[21]

Eindhoven

In July 2016, he became new manager of Eindhoven. He left the club at the end of the 2016–17 season.[22]

Randers

On 8 October 2017, Ricardo Moniz was signed up as new manager of Danish Superliga club Randers.[23] He was sacked by the Randers board of directors on 26 January 2018, after only nine games as head coach.[24]

Trencin

On 2 June 2018, Moniz was appointed the new head coach of Slovak Super Liga club Trenčín.[25] In October 2018, after only a few months in charge, he announced that he was leaving the club, citing widespread corruption in Slovak football as the reason.[26]

Excelsior

On 8 April 2019, Excelsior confirmed the appointment of Ricardo Moniz as their head coach until the end of the season.[27]

On 28 January 2020, Excelsior decided to terminate the contract with Ricardo Moniz, after disappointing results in the 2019-2020 Eerste Divisie.[28]

Zalaegerszeg

On 25 May 2022, it was announced that Moniz had been appointed head coach of Hungarian Nemzeti Bajnokság I club Zalaegerszeg.[29]

In the 2022-23 Nemzeti Bajnokság I season, Zalaegerszeg hosted Honvéd. During the match, Honvéd fans shouted racist comments.[30] After the match, Moniz heavily criticized the referee for not terminating the match.[31]

In October 2022, Moniz was suspended by the Hungarian Football Federation.[32][33]

In an interview, published on Nemzeti Sport, Moniz said that Zalaegerszeg cannot purchase top players, therefore, a bigger emphasis should be placed on the youth academies.[34]

On 25 February 2023, Moniz paid tribute to Miklós Lendvai, who died at the age of 48, by beating Fehérvár in the 2022-23 Nemzeti Bajnokság I season.[35] Moniz was dismissed from Zalaegerszegi TE FC in April 2023.

Slaven Belupo

Moniz takes over as coach of the Croatian club Slaven Belupo on 15 June 2023. He was sacked on 4 September 2023 after only one win in seven games.[36]

Zürich

On 20 October 2023 he joined the backroom staff of Swiss club Zürich.[37] In January 2024, he became coach of Zürich's youth team.[38] On 22 April 2024, he was appointed the interim head coach of Zürich for the final five games of the season.[39] His permanent appointment as head coach was announced on 24 May 2024. He signed on a two-year deal.[40] In the 2024–25 Swiss Super League, FC Zürich missed qualification to the Championship Group and ended the season in 7th place. He was dismissed from his position following the conclusion of the season on 27 May 2025.[41]

Trencin

In June 2025, Moniz returned to Slovak club FK AS Trenčín as head coach. He had previously managed the top-tier side from July to October 2018.[42]

Personal life

Moniz was born in the Netherlands to a Surinamese father, and an Indonesian mother of Chinese descent.[43]

Coaching record

As of 23 August 2025
More information Team, From ...
Team From To Record
G W D L Win % Ref.
Hamburger SV 26 April 2010[10] 24 May 2010[11] 3111033.33 [44]
Red Bull Salzburg 29 April 2011 12 June 2012[12] 62371411059.68 [45][46]
Ferencváros 21 August 2012[13] 2 December 2013[14] 61341314055.74 [47][48]
Lechia Gdańsk 27 March 2014[15] 4 June 2014[16] 10532050.00 [49]
1860 Munich 4 June 2014[17] 24 September 2014[19] 8233025.00 [50]
Notts County 7 April 2015 29 December 2015 3411815032.35 [51]
Eindhoven 1 July 2016 19 May 2017 4016816040.00 [citation needed]
Randers 8 October 2017 26 January 2018 9315033.33 [citation needed]
Trenčín 1 July 2018 28 October 2018 251258048.00 [citation needed]
Excelsior 8 April 2019 28 January 2020 3213811040.63 [citation needed]
Zalaegerszeg 1 July 2022 24 April 2023 3313713039.39 [citation needed]
Slaven Belupo 1 July 2023 4 September 2023 7133014.29 [citation needed]
Zürich 22 April 2024 27 May 2025 5223920044.23 [citation needed]
Total 37617183122045.48
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Honours

References

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