Jurgen Klopp's impact on Liverpool during four years in charge has been transformative, but the man in the opposing dugout in Saturday's Club World Cup final has needed just a few short months to make history at Flamengo.
Jorge Jesus was only appointed by the Rio de Janeiro giants in June, the arrival of the white-haired 65-year-old Portuguese coach raising eyebrows in Brazil.
He immediately made his mark and in the last month has seen the country's best-supported side win the Copa Libertadores for just the second time and then claim a first Brazilian title in a decade, finishing 16 points clear.
Jesus has overseen just two defeats in 29 league games and his team are now one win away from lifting the Club World Cup after defeating Al-Hilal 3-1 on Tuesday.
Only the small matter of Klopp's Liverpool stands between them and a first victory for South America in this competition since Corinthians beat Chelsea in 2012.
"This is the most important game of my career. It is the cherry on the cake of Flamengo's season, the biggest final I have been involved in," said Jesus.
Those comments in some ways speak to the importance of this occasion in South America, with the Club World Cup their one chance to compete with Europe's giants.
Interest in this competition is always muted in Europe, especially as it comes in the middle of the club season. Meanwhile, the number of Flamengo fans visible around Doha, decked out in red and black, confirms what this event means to them.
"This is the game of our lives and we will be at our very best," said the former Atletico Madrid and Chelsea full-back Filipe Luis to Globoesporte.
Jesus has taken them there, to their 74th and final game in 2019, having become a rare foreign coach to work in Brazil, never mind succeed.
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"If there was not a European coach it would already be difficult. Jorge Jesus is very, very experienced and was very successful in Portugal and now in Brazil as well, so we have a lot of respect for that."
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