In 1999, while injured at Sãocarlense, Mancini took over as an interim coach for ten days,[2] but according to himself, he never effectively coached the club.[3]
Coaching career
In May 2004, while still actively playing for Paulista, Mancini opted to retire after receiving a coaching offer.[4] He was crowned champions of the 2005 Copa do Brasil with the side before accepting an offer from Al Nasr SC in April 2007.[5]
On 10 December 2007, Mancini returned to Brazil after being appointed head coach of former club Grêmio.[6] He was sacked the following 14 February, despite being unbeaten,[7] and was named Vitória head coach on 25 March.[8]
On 15 February 2009, Mancini left Vitória and was announced as head coach of Santos.[9] Relieved from his duties on 13 July,[10] he returned to Vitória on 12 August.[11]
On 11 December 2009, Mancini was appointed head coach of Vasco da Gama,[12] but was dismissed on 25 March of the following year.[13] On 15 April 2010 he was presented at another club he represented as a player, Guarani,[14] but after failing to avoid relegation, he resigned on 5 December.[15]
On 26 September 2011, after a short stint at Ceará,[16] Mancini was appointed as new head coach of Cruzeiro.[17] The following 10 May, he resigned after being knocked out of two competitions in the same week.[18]
On 15 May 2012, Mancini signed with Sport (another club he represented as a player) until the end of the year.[19] He was sacked on 11 August,[20] and joined Náutico the following 1 February.[21]
Dismissed on 8 April 2013,[22] Mancini was appointed at the helm of Atlético Paranaense on 10 July,[23] with the club in the relegation places. He managed to reach the finals of the 2013 Copa do Brasil, while also finishing third in the league; his contract, nonetheless, was not renewed.
After two consecutive relegations with Botafogo[24] and Vitória,[25] Mancini was appointed as new head coach of Chapecoense on 9 December 2016.[26] He was relieved from his duties on 4 July 2017, after a 3–3 draw against Fluminense.[27]
On 25 July 2017, Mancini returned to Vitória for a fourth stint,[28] and managed to narrowly avoid relegation at the end of the season. On 29 July of the following year, after a 4–0 loss at Atlético Paranaense, he was dismissed.[29]
On 2 January 2019, Mancini joined São Paulo FC as the club's technical coordinator.[30] On 14 February, he was named interim coach after the club announced a deal with Cuca, out due to health problems;[31] in April, as Cuca was given the green light to manage, he returned to his previous role.
On 14 October 2019, after leaving São Paulo, Mancini was appointed head coach of Atlético Mineiro until the end of the season,[32] and left the club after four wins in 13 matches. On 25 June 2020, he replaced dismissed Cristóvão Borges at the helm of fellow top tier side Atlético Goianiense.
On 12 October 2020, Mancini was appointed head coach of Corinthians, signing a contract until the end of 2021.[33] On 16 May of the following year, after being knocked out of the 2021 Campeonato Paulista, he was sacked.[34]
On 19 June 2021, Mancini was appointed head coach of another top tier side, América Mineiro.[35] He resigned on 14 October,[36] and was named at the helm of Grêmio for a second spell just hours later.[37]
Mancini was unable to avoid Grêmio's relegation, and was subsequently sacked on 14 February 2022.[38] On 12 April, he returned to América in the place of Marquinhos Santos.[39]
On 7 August 2023, Mancini was dismissed by América after a poor league run.[40] Late in the month he returned to Ceará, with the club in the second division.[41]
Mancini was sacked from Ceará on 26 June 2024, after four winless matches,[42] and returned to Atlético Goianiense on 4 July.[43] He was also dismissed from the latter on 4 August, after seven winless matches in charge,[44] and moved to neighbouring Goiás two days later.[45]
Mancini led Goiás to seven consecutive wins in the last seven matches of the season, but announced his departure from the club 21 November 2024, three days before the season's end.[46]
^"São Paulo contrata Cuca" [São Paulo sign Cuca] (in Brazilian Portuguese). São Paulo FC. 14 February 2019. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
^"Vagner Mancini é o novo técnico do Atlético" [Vagner Mancini is Atlético's new manager] (in Brazilian Portuguese). Clube Atlético Mineiro. 14 October 2019. Retrieved 14 October 2019.