All Stars Get Trainer
Ghana's new coach Milovan Rajevac will work with the help of an interpreter for at least the first six months of his stay in Ghana as he seeks to pick up the pieces of his broken English.
The Serbian's English is passable according to Ghana Football Association chairman Kwesi Nyantakyie who was part of an interview panel that met Rajevac in Amsterdam.
But the Serbian and the football association will bear the cost of an interpreter to ease communication between the coach, administrators and media during the early months of his spell in Ghana.
Communication through someone else might come with its own problems, but the GFA does not envisage there will be any unique difficulties that will affect the quality of his work with the planned arrangement.
“He is not eloquent in English, but football is a universal language so we don't think there will be any problem with that”, Nyantakyie told KickOffGhana.com.
“Fabio Capello became England manager yet his English is not the greatest and Spurs hired Juande Ramos who is more fluent in Spanish,” he added.