Portal dos Dragões
·13 June 2026
André Villas-Boas: “Carlos Martingo is one of our own, fully deserved”

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Yahoo sportsPortal dos Dragões
·13 June 2026

André Villas-Boas introduced Carlos Martingo as the future head coach of FC Porto’s handball team from 2026/27 onward and made one central point crystal clear: this promotion comes from within and is rooted in a deep knowledge of the club. Standing alongside the coach, the president highlighted his connection to the club, his understanding of the current squad and the players of the future, as well as the conviction that he has the technical ability to lead the project. In essence, he painted the picture of a man shaped by the blue-and-white standard of excellence and guaranteed: “It is a more than deserved step.”
When explaining the choice, André Villas-Boas, FC Porto’s president, presented it as continuity and identity rather than a simple change of role. The tone was one of total confidence in someone who knows the corridors, the dressing room and the internal logic of a sport in which the club wants to continue its project.
Asked about the reasons for handing leadership to Carlos Martingo, Villas-Boas was clear and based the decision on his track record and the knowledge he has built up within the structure.
“It is a more than deserved step. He is someone who knows the Club deeply, not only our players in the current squad, but also the players of the future, in whom FC Porto believes to carry the handball project forward, and he is a man of the house,” he said. “He has brought us many titles, obviously in his previous role as assistant coach, with different coaches, and now takes on the role of head coach, which is a position he reaches in a deserved way and with a project that we want to sustain, based on the good FC Porto handball player, national and with potential, obviously without neglecting the international reinforcements that are necessary, but above all starting from the knowledge of Carlos Martingo and the entire FC Porto structure, as well as the personality and character that an FC Porto player must always show on the court.”
More than rewarding a career path, the president outlined an idea of continuity: the bet on the new leader is linked to an internal culture, a player profile and a way of being. Carlos Martingo’s name thus appears as the link between the recent past and future ambition.
When the conversation turned to the weight of Porto identity, Villas-Boas reinforced the importance of that emotional connection coexisting with the ability to lead.
“Being a Porto supporter helps, because he feels FC Porto, suffers with FC Porto and knows perfectly well the level of demand in this club. That is how he was as an assistant and that is how he will be as head coach,” he stressed. “His Porto spirit is always present, in the way he suffers and feels the victories, and that is what we also want to carry forward over time. Of course he has the responsibility of leading an entire project, but we have absolutely no doubts about the technical skills he has to command the handball team.”
In this reading, Porto identity does not appear as a romantic accessory, but as a factor of identification with the demands of the role. At the same time, Villas-Boas made a point of ruling out any idea that this was merely a sentimental choice, tying his confidence to the technical plan.
As for the impact that this profile could have on the team’s collective performance, the president pointed to Carlos Martingo’s ability to bring to the bench the same competitive attitude he showed on the court.
“I think there is a very characteristic profile of players who know what FC Porto is, who understand what this institution demands, not only in football but also in the other sports. Everything is based on a culture of winning that begins with the supporters and our history, which we have built over time,” he said. “Carlos Martingo, having worn that skin as a player and now wearing it as head coach, I have absolutely no doubt that he will make the players rise above themselves on the court for FC Porto.”
It was at that point that the message came full circle: from identity to performance, from the memory of a player to the responsibility of a head coach. Villas-Boas made it clear that he expects to see on the bench the extension of a culture that, at FC Porto, is never separated from the obligation to compete at the highest level.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.







































