South Africa 2010 World Cup: Salaries of 32 national coaches released


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Futebolfinance.com has published the salaries of coaches of all the national football teams who will be taking part in the South Africa 2010 World Cup. Proving that coaching in Africa can be quite attractive, Paul Le Guen, Cameroonian coach, takes number sixteen position among the 32 national team coaches. Following North Korea and surprisingly in last position is Nigeria.

A line up of the 32 National football coaches taking part in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa and their gross annual incomes.

1. Fabio Capello, England: 8.800.000 €

2. Marcelo Lippi, Italy : 3.000.000 €

3. Joachim Loew, Germany :2.500.000 €

4. Berter Van Marwijk, Netherlands :1.800.000 €

5. Ottmar Hitzfeld, Switzerland: 1.750.000 €

6. Vicente Del Bosque, Spain :1.500.000 €

7. Carlos Queiroz, Portugal :1.350.000 €

8. Pim Verbeek, Australia :1.200.000 €

9. Carlos Parreira, South Africa: 1.200.000 €

10. Javier Aguirre, Mexico : 1.200.000 €

11. Carlos Dunga, Brazil : 800.000 €

12. Diego Maradona, Argentina : 800.000 €

13. Takeshi Okada, Japan : 800.000 €

14. Ricki Herbert, New Zealand : 800.000 €

15. Otto Rehhagel, Greece : 750.000 €

16. Paul Le Guen, Cameroon : 650.000 €

17. Marcelo Bielsa, Chile : 575.000 €

18. Raymond Domenech, France : 560.000 €

19. Vahdi Halilhodzic, Ivory Coast : 505.000 €

20. Huh Jung Moo, South Korea: 405.000 €

21. Morten Olsen, Denmark : 390.000 €

22. Milovan Rajevac, Ghana : 365.000 €

23. Radomir Antic, Serbia : 305.000 €

24. Bob Bradley, USA : 275.000 €

25. Matjaz Kek, Slovenia : 245.000 €

26. Gerardo Martino, Paraguay : 245.000

27. Rabah Saadane, Algeria : 245.000 €

28. Reinaldo Rueda, Honduras : 240.000 €

29. Vladimir Weiss, Slovakia : 215.000 €

30. Oscar Tabarez, Uruguay : 205.000 €

31. Kim Jong Hun, North Korea: 170.000 €

32. Shaibu Amodu, Nigeria : 125.000 €

 Visit Futebolfinance.com

2010 World Cup  South Africa's preparation to host the games on African soil for the first time but also individual African countries' determination to take part in the historic event. Five African countries - Cameroon, Nigeria, Algeria, South Africa and Ghana - are selected to join twenty seven teams from around the world to battle it out on the football pitch for the gold trophy. One by one, the African teams are eliminated, but Africans will not be bogged down as they rally behind their compatriots on the wings of the vuvuzela, a far cry from the near diplomatic row between Algeria and Egypt during the qualifiers. Ghana are the last team to leave but not before African unity becomes reality...
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