After his player career, Artur Jorge went to
Leipzig,
East Germany, to study football and training methodology. He started his managerial career working with
Vitória de Guimarães, moving on to
Belenenses,
Portimonense and then signing with Porto for the 1984–85 season, where he won three national champion titles and two Taça de Portugal titles. His greatest success was to win the
European Cup with Porto over favourites
Bayern Munich 2–1. Jorge was known as "
Rei Artur" ("King Arthur") from then on. He moved to
Racing Paris the next season, and returned to Porto in 1989–90. He then moved to
Paris Saint-Germain in 1991–92, where he won the
national championship in 1993–94. Artur Jorge moved to Benfica in 1994–95, finishing third with his team, and was replaced at the beginning of the following season. He went to become coach of several other clubs including
Académica de Coimbra,
Vitesse Arnhem,
Tenerife and
CSKA Moscow. He managed the Portugal national team, initially while still Porto coach during the 1989–90 and 1990–91 seasons, and again during the 1996–97 season. He also managed the
Switzerland team at
UEFA Euro 1996, replacing
Roy Hodgson under whom they had qualified. From 2004 he managed
Cameroon. He failed to lead his team to the
2006 FIFA World Cup. He managed Saudi club
Al-Nasr for only two cup matches and was sacked following a 4–1 defeat by lowly club Al-Faisaly. He then managed French
second division team
Créteil in 2006–07. On 27 November 2014, Artur Jorge joined Algerian club
MC Alger, ending a seven-year period without coaching. ==Death==