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Carlo Ancelotti’s appointment as head coach of the Brazil national team means that there are currently eight Italy representatives actively in charge of national team sides across the world, the same number as Germany, but there are four nations with even more national team head coaches currently under employment. 

Ancelotti was officially announced as the head coach of the Brazil national team on Monday, on a contract that will run until the end of the 2026 World Cup

He will become the only Italian head coach employed by a national team outside of Europe (currently active). 

He joins a list of currently active Italian head coaches that also includes CT Luciano Spalletti, Vincenzo Montella, Francesco Calzona, Marco Rossi, Paolo Nicolato, Emilio De Leo and Roberto Cevoli. 

Italy has the most active head coaches currently employed by nations in Europe (seven). 

As things stand, no country has more active national team head coaches across the world than France, with 14, who have three in Europe, six in Africa, four in North and Central America and one in Asia. 

Which country has the most national team managers currently active?

France – 14

Didier Deschamps (France), Rudi Garcia (Belgium), Willy Sagnol (Georgia), Herve Renard (Saudi Arabia), Isaac Ngata (Congo), Sebastien Desabre (DR Congo), Michel Dussuyer (Guinea), Corentin Martins (Madagascar), Guillaume Moullec (Mauritius), Nicolas Dupuis (South Sudan), Jean-Claude Darcheville (French Guinea), Sebastien Migne (Haiti), Marc Collat (Martinique), Johann Sidaner (New Caledonia).

Spain – 13  

Luis De La Fuente (Spain), Roberto Martinez (Portugal), Carlos Alos (Belarus), Javier Cabrera (Bangladesh), Mario Rivera (Brunei), Manolo Marquez (India), Juan Antonio Pizzi (Kuwait), Albert Capellas (Philippines), Julen Lopetegui (Qatar), Jose Lana (Syria), Aritz Lopez Garai (Mauritania), David Perez (British Virgin Islands), Thomas Christiansen (Panama), Felipe Vega-Arango (Papua New Guinea).

England – 10

Gary White (Chinese Taipei), Ashley Westweood (Hong Kong), Stephan Constantine (Pakistan), Terry Connor (Granada), Steve McClaren (Jamaica), Lee Bowyer (Montserrat), Charlie Trout (Puerto Rico), Ricky Hill (Turks and Caicos), Jake Kewley (Kiribati), Darren Bazeley (New Zealand).

Argentina – 9

Lionel Scaloni (Argentina), Ricardo Gareca (Chile), Nestor Lorenzo (Colombia), Sebastian Beccacece (Ecuador), Gustavo Alfaro (Paraguay), Marcelo Bielsa (Uruguay), Fernando Batista (Venezuela), Marcelo Neveleff (Dominican Republic), Mauricio Pochettino (USA). 

Italy – 8 

Luciano Spalletti (Italy), Marco Rossi (Hungary), Paolo Nicolato (Latvia), Emilio De Leo (Malta), Roberto Cevoli (San Marino), Francesco Calzona (Slovakia), Vincenzo Montella (Turkey), Carlo Ancelotti (Brazil). 

Germany – 8 

Julian Nagelsmann (Germany), Thomas Tuchel (England), Ralf Rangnick (Austria), Franco Foda (Kosovo), Konrad Funfstuck (Liechtenstein), Gernot Rohr (Benin), Torsten Spittler (Rwanda), Michael Nees (Zimbabwe). 

This article first appeared on Football Italia and was syndicated with permission.

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