GHANA COACH:
Ratomir Dujkovic
Sometimes it pays to wait to get the big payoff. Consider
the case of Ratomir Dujkovic, for example. The Serbian
native has bounced around the coaching ranks for years
trying to make a name for himself and transform one
of soccer's minnows into a World Cup team.
He guided the National Teams of Venezuela and Myanmar
(formerly Burma) before landing with Rwanda. There,
he directed the surprising side into the 2004 Nations
Cup over Ghana. Impressed, Ghana soccer officials signed
the 60-year-old Dujkovic, and he took on the challenge
of a country that has had so much promise and several
well-known stars, yet consistently failed to qualify
for the World Cup, usually due to poor management off
the field. As for his three predecessors, German Ralf
Zumdick started the merry-go-round as he left and became
an assistant coach at Hamburg in December, 2003. Portuguese
native Mariano Barretto was there for nine months before
he quit to join Maritimo in Portugal.
Sam Arday ran the show as a caretaker coach for one
qualifier before Dujkovic took over in December, 2004.
As it turned out, Dujkovic could have become history
himself in February, 2006 because some fans wanted his
head after a disappointing showing in the African Nations
Cup. How quickly some people forget. "I know the
Ghanaians are frustrated, but he was the first ever
coach to guide Ghana to the World Cup finals,"
midfielder Michael Essien said.
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