Kasperczak spent the first fifteen years (1978–1993) of his coaching career in France, managing
FC Metz,
AS Saint-Étienne,
Racing Strasbourg,
Racing Club de Paris,
Montpellier HSC and
Lille OSC. His biggest success was winning
Coupe de France with FC Metz in
1984. Next, Kaspeczak managed two African national teams: first,
Ivory Coast (1993–1994), achieving third place in the
1994 African Cup of Nations, and later
Tunisia (1994–1998), which finished second in the
1996 Cup. Kasperczak also coached Tunisia at the
1996 Summer Olympics and the
1998 FIFA World Cup in France. During the tournament, Kasperczak was fired and replaced by
Ali Selmi, after Tunisia lost the chance to pass the
group stage, losing to
England (0–2) and
Colombia (0–1). Later, Kasperczak managed
SC Bastia (1998),
Al Wasl FC (1999–2000),
Morocco national team (2000),
Shenyang Haishi (2000–2001) and
Mali national team (2001–2002). Mali won the fourth place at the
2002 African Cup of Nations under his coaching. In 2002, Kasperczak came back to his native Poland, and spend the next three years as head coach of
Wisła Kraków. Wisła won three league titles under his coaching. In 2006, Kaspeczak began managing
Senegal (2006–2008), however he quit his post during the
2008 African Cup of Nations following a poor run of results which saw them with 1-point in 2 games in a group they had been expected to win. On 16 September 2008, he took over as manager of
Górnik Zabrze. He left Górnik Zabrze on 3 April 2009, when the club was officially relegated from Ekstraklasa to I liga, the second division. On 15 March 2010,
Wisła Kraków reached an agreement with Kasperczak to appoint him as the new manager. ==Career statistics==