Julen Lopetegui was announced new Real Madrid coach last week. Let's have a look at those he would need to beat to become truly great.

5. Zinedine ZIDANE (winrate 69,8%)

Titles at Real Madrid: 1 La Liga, 1 Supercopa de España, 3 UEFA Champions League, 2 UEFA Super Cup, 2 FIFA Club World Cup.

The Frechmen arrived and left in style becoming the first ever coach to win 3 Champions Leagues in a row. Zizou has never been eliminated from the tournament so far in his career. Perhaps his only regret is just one La Liga title. Zidane would have to admit his teams lacked stability that stopped them in 2 of 3 seasons in Spain. But in the Champions League Real are the new invincibles. A feat Lopetegui will be unlikely to repeat. However winning 204 of 149 games might be a reachable goal.

4. Luis CARNIGLIA (1957-59, winrate 70,59%)

Titles at Real Madrid: 1 La Liga, 2 European Cup

The Argentinian, who was a top coach of the time, lead Real to European Cup finals against Milan (won 3-2) and Reims (won 2-0), but poached just 1 La Liga. Some were saying Alfredo Di Stefano was much more of a boss to the team. However, Carniglia's winrate proves the whole thing worked. He won 48 of 68 matches in charge of Real.

3. José MOURINHO (2010-13, winrate 71,91%)

Titles at Real Madrid: 1 La Liga, 1 Copa del Rey, 1 Supercopa de España

The Special One was not completely helpless both in terms of trophies and winrate (128 wins in 178 matches). But allegedly the Portuguese failed to provide football sexy enough for a club like Real in spite of top players on board. Winning by parking the bus was good for three trophies, but exits in elusive Champions League were probably decisive blows.

2. Carlo ANCELOTTI (2013-2015, winrate 74,79%)

Titles at Real Madrid: 1 Copa del Rey, 1 UEFA Champions League, 1 UEFA Super Cup, 1 FIFA Club World Cup

Don Carlo won it all but for La Liga. His real grabbed victories in 89 of 119 matches, but the most important was Lisbon UCL final when extra-time was needed to beat cross-town rivals Atletico Madrid. Long-sought Champions League title did not save the Italian though. Although he proved his reputation of top coach in both trophies and winrate.

1. Manuel PELLEGRINI (2009-10, winrate 75%)

Titles at Real Madrid: none

Chilean coach managed to win 36 of his 48 matches at Real with a 119-48 goal difference. Still he failed to take any trophies. La Liga was lost by 3 points to Barcelona (in spite of more than 100 goals scored and an astonishing 96 points taken). Copa Del Rey turned out to be an enigmatic flop when Los Blancos fell 0-4 at Alcorcon. A consolation win 1-0 at Bernabeu did not help much. Lyon in the Champions League was too strong in Round of 16 (0-1, 1-1). No wonder Pellegrini had to step down in spite of the highest ever winrate in the history of the club among those who coached Real more than 1 match.