out now?


  • Total voters
    166
  • Poll closed .
Oct 26, 2009
322
There is always a language barrier for every foreign coach, unless he spent significant amount of time in Italy, whether as a player or is fluent for some other reason. We don't need a coach that will need a translator standing beside him, that would be disastrous. Imagine that kind of guy holding preparations before the game, or during the course of the game giving them instructions. Not feasible. Milan learned that lesson rather well.
well, in that case Laudrup was available :smoke:
 

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only-juve

Senior Member
Jan 5, 2008
7,451
There is always a language barrier for every foreign coach, unless he spent significant amount of time in Italy, whether as a player or is fluent for some other reason. We don't need a coach that will need a translator standing beside him, that would be disastrous. Imagine that kind of guy holding preparations before the game, or during the course of the game giving them instructions. Not feasible. Milan learned that lesson rather well.
That language barrier argument is really outdated.

All top English clubs have 0 problem with foreigner managers for years now. Madrid, Barcelona, PSG even Bayern Munich did it !

One of the main reasons for the decline of the Serie A in the past 10-15 is exactly that mentality. English clubs have learned that lesson 20 years ago and since then they've been in the rise and Italians been heading south.
 

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