Yes.
- The head chef cooks.
- The editor in chief writes articles.
- The head trader trades.
- The director of cardiology operates.
There are tons of holes you can poke in this (see comments). My point is that there isn't such a hard line between "manager" and "practitioner". Once you stop actively coding and reading the code in your project, you become disconnected from reality very quickly.
If you are involved in personally interacting with and leading a group of developers on a daily basis, you should be coding.
