>>whosonline<<WHO IS FAROUK MUTALLAB ? Profile of the would be Bomber:Jenifa Funke Akindele says it wasnt me that stole her husband !The Return of Jenifa coming soon:Superscreen Bomber: My "Target" was Pastor Chris:Shaibu Amodu of Naija earning peanuts of 110,000 pounds while Algeria's Rabah Sadaane earns 220,000pounds double that of amodu !A list published by the Madrid sports daily Marca shows that the England manager easily out-earns the rival coaches he will meet in South AfricaAmodu, least paid World Cup coachEver wondered why the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) is reluctant to sack Shaibu Amodu as Super Eagles' coach despite the public demand for his dismissal? Well, he is paid peanuts compared to other coaches in his position. A survey by Early Doors (ED) published in Yahoosports indicate that of all the 32 coaches who qualified their teams for the South Africa 2010 World Cup, Amodu earns the least annual salary.In fact, the second lowest paid coach of an African team, Algeria's Rabah Sadaane, earns double (£220,000) of Amodu's £110,000) yearly salary, while the highest earner, England's Fabio Capello (£6.1 million), can pay Amodu's annual salary from his weekly allowance. Has performance anything to do with the amount of money spent on a gaffer? This article thinks so. Excerpts.WHAT does Fabio Capello have in common with the managers of Brazil, Argentina, France, Chile, Cote d'Ivoire, South Korea, Denmark, Ghana, Serbia, USA, Slovenia, Paraguay, Algeria, Honduras, Slovakia, Uruguay, North Korea and Nigeria? Capello earns the same amount as all the others put together.Yes, according to Spanish paper, Marca, for the same price as the England manager you could afford a brains trust of the bosses from 18 of our World Cup rivals. The £6.1 million Capello gets paid every year is more than three times the amount earned by the next best-rewarded boss - his countryman, World Cup-winning Italy coach, Marcello Lippi.On the face of things, it looks like a shocking waste of money and another example of outrageous largesse from the suits at Wembley. But then you look at the managers of the major teams named in the above list. There's Raymond Domenech and Diego Maradona, two of world football's bigger laughing stocks, and two men who have ensured that their countries have significantly less chance of winning the tournament than they ought to.And there's Dunga, who appears to have done a good job with Brazil so far but is as yet unproven at squeaky-bum time. Capello, on the other hand, has won Serie A seven times with three teams, La Liga twice in separate spells at Real Madrid, and the Champions League twice. As and when England gets into a pickle in South Africa - and it certainly will - ED trusts that Capello will know what to do. He cannot guarantee success, but he can provide clear, logical decision-making when it matters.International football can be a frustrating business. The players you have are the players you have. If you don't have a quality goalkeeper there is nothing you can do - except possibly make overtures to a screaming mediocrity like Manuel Almunia. While clubs can spend hundreds of millions on new players, countries have much less room for maneuvering.The manager is the single most important member of staff a football team has, and that is magnified when you cannot change your players. The English FA reported operating costs of £245 million in 2008. Early Doors has no problem whatsoever with spending about 2.5 per cent of that on a manager. If - and this 'if' so big you can see it from space - you have the right manager in place, then £6 million a year is a bargain.As well as being something worth doing in its own right, winning the World Cup is the single biggest thing that can happen to boost grassroots participation, increase public goodwill and bring in global sponsors. It is the silver bullet.Early Doors reckons that England and France have roughly equivalent squads. Yet while the Three Lions are third favourites for the World Cup at a best-price 6/1, Les Bleus can be backed 18/1 - the bookies reckon that England has a 14.3 per cent chance of winning the World Cup, and the French just 5.3 per cent.Why the difference? Is France being punished for the sins of Thierry Henry? Is England just over-rated (well, a bit)? Or is it due almost entirely to the yawning gap in competence between the two managers? So, if it costs 14 times more to employ Capello than Domenech, fine. Put simply, any time you have the chance to spend £6 million-a-year on somebody who makes you three times more likely to win the World Cup, you have to do it.World Cup Managers' Pay League (in order of appearanceFabio Capello (England) - £6.1 million, Marcello Lippi (Italy) - £1.8 million, Bert van Marwijk (The Netherlands) - £1.7 million, Ottmar Hitzfeld (Switzerland) - £1.6 million, Joachim Loew (Germany) - £1.4 million, Vicente Del Bosque (Spain) - £1.4 million, Carlos Queiroz (Portugal) - £1.2 million, Pim Verbeek (Australia) - £1.1 million, Javier Aguirre (Mexico) - £1.1 million, Carlos Alberto Parreira (South Africa) - £1.1 million, Dunga (Brazil) - £750,000 and Diego Maradona (Argentina) - £740,000.Takeshi Okada (Japan) - £740,000, Ricki Herbert (New Zealand) - £740,000, Otto Rehhagel (Greece) - £710,000, Paul Le Guen (Cameroon) - £590,000, Marcelo Bielsa (Chile) - £520,000, Vahid Halilhodzic (Cote d'Ivoire) - £460,000, Raymond Domenech (France) - £440,000, Huh Jung Moo (South Korea) - £370,000, Morten Olsen (Denmark) - £350,000, Milovan Rajevic (Ghana) - £330,000 andRadomir Antic (Serbia) - £280,000.Bob Bradley (USA) - £250,000, Matjaz Kek (Slovenia) - £220,000, Gerardo Martino (Paraguay) - £220,000, Rabah Saadane (Algeria) - £220,000, Reinaldo Rueda (Honduras) - £220,000, Vladimir Weiss (Slovakia) - £190,000, Oscar Tabarez (Uruguay) - £180,000, Kim Jonh Hun (North Korea) - £150,000 and Shaibu Amodu (Nigeria) - £110,000.The Top 201. Fabio Capello (England) £6,098.6002. Marcello Lippi (Italy) £1,848,4003. Bert van Marwijk (Holland) £1,663,6004. Otmar Hitzfeld (Switzerland) £1,602,0005. Joachim Loew (Germany) £1,417,5006. Vicente Del Bosque (Spain) £1,355,8007. Carlos Queiroz (Portugal) £1,232,7008. Pim Verbeek (Australia) £1,121,600=9. Javier Aguirre (Mexico) £1,109,100=9. Carlos Alberto Parreira (South Africa) £1,109,10011. Dunga (Brazil) £755,250=12. Diego Maradona (Argentina) £739,900=12. Takeshi Okada (Japan) £739,900=12. Ricki Herbert (NZ) £739,90015. Otto Rehhagel (Greece) £708,90016. Paul Le Guen (Cameroon) £591,70017. Marcelo Bielsa (Chile) £523,80018. Vahid Halilhodzic (Ivory Coast) £456,00019. Raymond Domenech (France) £443,80020. Huh Jung-moo (South Korea) £369,800Top 12 Coaches in the world12. Mike D’AntoniSalary: $6 millionMike D’Antoni turned the Phoenix Suns around. Then, it all fell apart. After that, the storied Chicago Bulls came calling with a bit more money. But who can say no to coaching in the world’s media capital? After struggling for an identity, the New York Knickerbockers landed their elusive coach. Now the Big Apple has a new punching bag.11. Arsene WengerSalary: $7 millionThe French manager’s patented approach of crafting young players into superstars keeps Arsenal on top. Wenger turned down a pile of money from Real Madrid in the summer of 2009, endearing him to fans for years to come.10. Guus HiddinkSalary: $7.3 millionHiddink made South Korea the first Asian country to reach the World Cup semifinals in 2002. He also led Australia to its first World Cup appearance in 32 years. Today, Guus is looking to work the same magic with the Russian national team. That said, it should be noted that the weather in South Korea and Australia is relatively warm. Just sayin’.9. Louis Van GaalSalary: $7.62 millionThe Netherlands native has won a Champion’s league and two La Liga titles. Bayern Munich ponied up the cash to get their hands on the title winner. Locals call him “The Van” because he “carries” teams to championships.8. Manuel PellegriniSalary: $8 millionAfter managing Chile International, Pellegrini took the reigns of Real Madrid, the world’s richest team, in the summer of 2009. The team spent over $500 million for top players in 2009. He makes about 1/62 of that amount. Good luck.7. Roberto ManciniSalary: $8.8 millionRoberto here doesn’t work for Inter Milan anymore. They booted him after he mouthed off about his team after a bad loss last year. He didn’t know a few choice cuss words could get him fired. Maybe modeling is in his future, no?6. Carlo AncelottiSalary: $9.5 millionThis spry 50-year-old was one of only six coaches to win the Champions League both as a player and coach. The Chelsea F.C. manager has also been seen in local press with two devastating beauties entering a ‘no-tel’ hotel. As you might imagine, it hasn’t hurt his public standing.5. Sir Alex FergusonSalary: $10.2 millionThis legend has coached Manchester United since 1986. His team has won 11 Premier League, 5 FA Cup, 3 League Cup, and two Champions League titles. Ferguson is widely considered one of the best Futbol managers in the world.4. Phil JacksonSalary: $10.3 millionJackson has coached the greatest players in the world (Jordan, Kobe) while managing to control the craziest players (Rodman, Shaq). He also navigated his way to 9 NBA championships. Heck, he might deserve that $10 million per year–not that the “Zen Master” cares about money.3. Fabio CapelloSalary: $12.9 millionWhen you manage the English national team, you get national kind of money. Capello guided the team to 2010 World Cup qualification. To the Brits, that is worth double the money.2. Jose MourinhoSalary: $16.3 millionMourinho is one of the most controversial and talented club managers in the world. He took Intern Milan’s lower pay offer, but still turned them into a Chelsea-capable team. He will still be cussing at the refs in 3 different languages.1. Luiz Felipe ScolariSalary: $24.05 millionYou take a legendary the legendary Brazillian soccer team to a World Cup win. The industry rewards you with a management position at Chelsea F.C., one of the world’s best clubs. What to do for an encore? Go coach in Uzbekistan, of course. Just imagine how much $24 million is worth there
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